Respiration ppt
Download
Report
Transcript Respiration ppt
Lungs
spongy texture, honeycombed
with moist epithelium
exchange surface, but
also creates risk:
entry point for
environment
into body
AP Biology
2005-2006
Alveoli
Gas exchange across thin epithelium of
millions of alveoli
AP Biology
total surface area in humans ~100 m2
2005-2006
Mechanics of breathing
Air enters nostrils
filtered by hairs, warmed & humidified
sampled for odors
Pharynx glottis larynx (vocal cords)
trachea (windpipe) bronchi bronchioles
air sacs (alveoli)
Epithelial lining covered by cilia & thin film
of mucus
AP Biology
mucus traps dust, pollen, particulates
beating cilia move mucus upward to pharynx,
where it is swallowed
2005-2006
Negative pressure breathing
Breathing due to changing pressures in lungs
air flows from higher pressure to lower pressure
pulling air instead of pushing it
AP Biology
2005-2006
Autonomic breathing control
Medulla sets rhythm & pons moderates it
coordinate
respiratory,
cardiovascular
systems &
metabolic
demands
Don’t
have to
think to
breathe!
Nerve sensors in
walls of aorta &
carotid arteries in
neck detect
O2 & CO2 in blood
AP Biology
2005-2006
Medulla monitors blood
Monitors CO2 level of blood
measures pH of blood & cerebrospinal
fluid bathing brain
CO2 + H2O H2CO3 (carbonic acid)
if pH decreases then
increase depth & rate
of breathing & excess
CO2 is eliminated in
exhaled air
AP Biology
2005-2006
Diffusion of gases
Concentration & pressure drives
movement of gases into & out of blood
at both lungs & body tissue
capillaries in lungs
AP Biology
capillaries in muscle
O2
O2
O2
O2
CO2
CO2
CO2
CO2
blood
lungs
blood
body
2005-2006
Pressure gradients
Lungs
AP Biology
2005-2006
Hemoglobin
Why use a carrier molecule?
O2 not soluble enough in H2O for animal needs
hemocyanin in insects = copper (bluish)
hemoglobin in vertebrates = iron (reddish)
Reversibly binds O2
AP Biology
loading O2 at lungs or gills &
unloading in other parts of body
2005-2006
Hemoglobin
Binding O2
loading & unloading from Hb protein depends on
cooperation among protein’s subunits
binding of O2 to 1 subunit induces remaining subunits
to change shape slightly increasing affinity for O2
Releasing O2
AP Biology
when 1 subunit releases
O2, other 3 quickly follow
as shape change lowers
affinity for O2
Heme group
2005-2006
Oxygen Transport
How is oxygen transported throughout
the body?
Erythrocytes, RBC’s, attach oxygen to
hemoglobin proteins
As hemoglobin and oxygen combine
the blood turns bright red
AP Biology
2005-2006
Carbon Dioxide Transport
Most CO2 is converted to bicarbonate.
This conversion releases H+ ions into
the blood.
AP Biology
2005-2006
Transporting CO2 in blood
Dissolved in blood plasma
Bound to Hb protein
Bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) & carbonic acid (H2CO3)
in RBC
AP Biology
enzyme: carbonic anhydrase reduces CO22005-2006
Adaptations for pregnancy
Mother & fetus exchange O2 across placental tissue
why would mothers Hb give up its O2 to baby’s Hb?
Both anemia and relative iron deficiency are common during
pregnancy. Low hemoglobin concentrations are a normal physiologic
response to the expansion in plasma volume that occurs during
pregnancy. The normal pattern is for hemoglobin concentrations to fall
by about 20 g/L, reaching a nadir in the second trimester, and to return
to near pre-pregnancy levels by term.<1> Pregnant women are
generally considered to be anemic when hematologic indices fall two or
more standard deviations below "normal" levels, although definitions for
normal vary. In pregnancy, women require a greater amount of iron due
to an expanded red blood cell volume, the needs of the fetus and
placenta, and blood loss at delivery.
AP Biology
2005-2006