Physiology - General Principles Flashcards
How is water distributed through the body compartments and how is it affected by age and gender
- total body fluid makes up 60% of total body weight
- total body fluid is 1/3 extracellular and 2/3 intracellular
ECF = 20% of total body weight (15% interstitial fluid, 5% plasma) ICF = 40% of total body weight
age: total body water decreases with age
gender: total body water is higher in males
What are the buffer systems in blood
carbonic acid/bicarbonate
plasma proteins
haemoglobin (deoxygenated is better)
How does the carbonic acid/bicarbonate system work
H2O + CO2 ⥧ H2CO3 (carbonic acid) ⥧ H+ + HCO3-
Describe the henderson-hasselbalch equation
used to determine the concentration of weak acid in solution
pH = pKa + log([A-] / [HA])
What is osmolarity, what contributes to it and what is normal serum osmolarity
definition: the number of osmoles of solute per litre of solution
factors: mainly Na+, K+, Cl-, HCO3-, but also urea, glucose, proteins
normal serum value: 290mOsmol/L
How does plasma differ from intracellular fluid in terms of composition
- intracellular: low Na+, high K+, low calcium, low chloride, high proteins
- extracellular: high Na+, low K+, high calcium, high chloride
What are the phases of protein synthesis
1) transcription: produces mRNA from DNA
2) translation: produces proteins from mRNA, occurs along the ribosome with post-translation modification in ER
Describe the process of secretion of proteins from cells
- polypeptide sequences are cleaved off (prohormone becomes hormone)
- some proteins have leader sequences that target the golgi apparatus and are then secreted by exocytosis
- some proteins are secreted from the cytoplasm via ATP dependant membrane transporters
Describe the different ways in which a substance can cross a cell membrane
1) passive
- diffusion = small non-polar molecule passively cross a membrane by diffusion down its electrochemical gradient
- facilitated diffusion = use specific transmembrane proteins, substance moves down its electrochemical gradient
2) active
- endocytosis/exocytosis = substances engulfed or expelled
- ion channels = ligand gated, voltage gated
- carriers = substances bind to molecules that then change configuration and moves substance into the cell
Explain the process of secondary active transport and provide examples
-transport of substance down its electrochemical gradient provides energy to transport another against its gradient
examples:
- co-transport = glucose + Na+, Cl- + Na+
- counter-transport = Ca+2 + Na+, H+ + Na+
Describe the sodium potassium pump
- antiport, uses ATP to move 3 Na+ out of a cell and 2 K+ into a cell via a carrier protein
- has transmembrane alpha and beta subunits, only the alpha subunit involved in transport
- binding site for Na+ and ATP is intracellular, binding site for K+ is extracellular
How do cells communicate with each other
- neuronal (synaptic) = uses neurotransmitters released at synaptic junctions
- endocrine = uses hormones to reach cells via circulating blood
- paracrine = products diffuse in ECF to affect nearby cells
- autocrine = chemical messengers bind to receptors on same cell
- gap junctions = allow transfer of chemical messenger directly from one cell to a neighbouring cell
How do receptors respond to variations in messengers
- downregulation = number of receptors decreases when messenger is in excess
- upregulation = number of receptors increases when messenger is deficient
How do messengers act
-activate receptors = receptor kinases, nuclear receptors, ion channel receptors, g proteins
- first messengers = act as extracellular ligands that activates a second messenger
examples: adrenaline, acetylcholine, dopamine, histamine, substance p - second messengers = intracellular signalling molecules that activate downstream pathways
examples: cAMP, cGMP, IP3, DAG
Describe the synthesis, metabolism and function of cAMP
synthesis: formed inside the membrane, adenylyl cyclase converts ATP to cAMP, which activates protein kinase A
metabolism: cAMP is metabolised by phospho-diesterase
function: intracellular 2nd messenger that stimulates protein synthesis and activates intracellular enzyme systems