liver Flashcards
1
Q
what is excretion
A
- removal of waste products of metabolism from the body
2
Q
main metabolic waste products in mammals
A
- CO2 : from cellular respiration + excreted from lungs
- bile pigments : breakdown of Hb from old RBC in the liver + excreted in the bile via gall bladder.
- urea : break down of excess Aa from liver + excreted by kidneys in urine.
3
Q
what is a hepatocyte
A
- cells that make up most of liver
- carries out most of homeostatic functions of the liver
4
Q
structure of the liver
A
- hepatocytes have large nuclei (active DNA transcription) , Golgi apparatus (protein packaging and modification) and lots of mitochondria (active)
- metabolically active cells
- they can divide and replicate
- blood from the hepatic artery and the hepatic portal vein are mixed in sinusoids (spaces surrounded by hepatocytes)
- the mixing increases oxygen content of the blood from HPV
- supplies hepatocytes with enough O2 for needs
- sinusoids have Kupffer cells which are the macrophages of the liver
- they ingest foreign particles and help protect against disease
- bile , from the breakdown of blood, is secreted from the hepatocytes into canaliculi.
- bile drains into bile ductules and then taken to the gall bladder.
5
Q
how is the liver adapted for its function
A
- blood from HPV brings products of digestion and cell metabolism to the liver
- blood from HA bring o.blood to the liver
- blood from HPV and HA combine in sinusoids
- giving raw materials and oxygen to hepatocytes.
- Kupffer cells act as macrophages and ingest foreign particles and protect from disease.
- HPV removes deoxygenated blood carrying detoxification products (urea away from liver)
6
Q
how does the liver control carbohydrate metabolism
A
- when BGC rises, insulin levels rise
- hepatocytes are stimulated to convert glucose into glycogen
- when BGC falls, glucagon levels rise
- hepatocytes convert the glycogen back into glucose.
7
Q
deamination of excess Aa
A
- remove and amine group from a molecule
- convert into ammonia and then into urea
- urea is toxic in high concentrations
- the urea is excretes by the kidneys
- any excess Aa are used in cellular respiration
- ## converted into lipids for storage
8
Q
transamination
A
- the conversion of one Aa into another
- overcomes problems of not having the required balance of Aa in a diet
9
Q
ornithine cycle
A
- set of enzyme controlled reactions
- where the ammonia produced in deamination is converted into urea
10
Q
detoxification
A
- liver can detoxify substances
- breakdown of hydrogen peroxide
- by product of metabolic pathways in the body
- hepatocytes contain catalase which split hydrogen peroxide into oxygen + water
- liver breaks down ethanol (drinks)
- hepatocytes have alcohol dehydrogenase
- ethanol broken down into ethanal
- ethanal converted into ethanoate
- ethanoate can be used in cellular respiration/build up of fatty acids.
- Ethanol is absorbed and concentrated in the liver so an excess of toxic ethanol could affect liver cells first.