Topic 7 - Mass Transport Flashcards

1
Q

Red blood cells contain enzymes, but these enzymes cannot be replaced. Why?

A

No ribosomes for protein synthesis.
No golgi apparatus to modify the proteins.
No mitochondria to release ATP

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2
Q

For primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary level of protein structure, explain:

General protein structure
and
Protein structure in haemoglobin.

A

Primary - sequence of amino acids.
Two alpha and two beta polypeptide chains.

Secondary - Alpha helix and B pleated sheets (joined by hydrogen bonds).
Each polypeptide is coiled into a helix.

Tertiary - 3D shape, joined by disulfide bridges, hydrogen and ionic bonds.
Each polypeptide chain is folded into a precise shape.

Quaternary- Each polypeptide chain is associated with a haem group containing a ferrous iron (Fe+2). All 4 polypeptides are linked to form a spherical shape.

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3
Q

How many oxygen molecules can each human haemoglobin molecule carry?

A

4

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4
Q

What is the role of haemoglobin?

A

To transport oxygen from the lungs to the respiring tissues.

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5
Q

What is ‘Affinity’?

A

An attraction between molecules that results in the formation of a new molecule.

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6
Q

Why do large organisms need a transport system?

A

In small animals that have a large SA:V, they can supply oxygen and nutrients and get rid of waste with just diffusion. Larger animals have a small SA:V so diffusion is too slow to meet the needs. Therefore, they need a transport system to carry all they need to and from the exchange surfaces (it’s a long distance).

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7
Q

What determines whether a transport system needs a pump?

A
  • The surface area to volume ratio.
  • How active the organism is.
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8
Q

Describe why:
Water
A closed system
A mechanism for moving transport medium
Unidirectional flow
and Controlling the flow rate
is important in mammalian transport systems.

A
  • Readily dissolves substances and moves around easily.
  • Forms a branching network to distribute transport medium around organism.
  • Within vessels - moves it around faster than diffusion.
  • Maintains the mass flow movement in one direction.
  • To suit changing needs of different parts of the organism
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9
Q

Why is a closed, double circulatory system important in mammals?

A
  • When blood is passed through lungs, pressure is reduced.
  • Low pressure would cause slow circulation.
  • Instead, blood returns to the heart and pressure increases before being circulated.
  • Substances are delivered to parts of the body quickly.
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10
Q

Starting from the left side, label the heart.

A

1) Aorta
2) Pulmonary veins
3) Left atrium
4) Atrioventricular valve
5) Left ventricle
6) Septum
7) Tendon
8) Papillary muscle
9) Right ventricle
10) Atrioventricular valve
11) Right atrium
12) Semi-lunar valve
13) Pulmonary artery
14) Vena cava

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11
Q

How does blood flow through the human heart?

A

The right side receives deoxygenated blood from the body and pumps it through the pulmonary circulation so that the haemoglobin can be oxygenated. The left side receives oxygenated blood from the lungs and pumps it through the aorta to the systemic circulation.

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12
Q

What is diastole?

A

Semi-lunar valves are closed, preventing the backflow of blood into the ventricles. The pressure in the atrium exceeds that of the ventricles, so the atrioventricular valves are open.

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13
Q

What is astrial systole?

A

The walls of the atria contract simultaneously, blood is forced into the ventricles. During this stage the muscular walls of the ventricle are relaxed.

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14
Q

What is ventricular systole?

A

The ventricle walls contract. The AV valves are forced shut and are prevented from inverting by the tendinous chords. The pressure in the ventricles exceeds the blood vessels. Pressure in aorta and pulmonary artery exceeds ventricles so the semi-lunar valves close and prevent any backflow.

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15
Q

Why is the maximum ventricular pressure greater than atrial pressure?

A

Ventricle has a thicker wall of muscle that can contract more, thus has more pressure.

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16
Q

1) When the left ventricle pressure exceeds atrium, the —– valve —–?
2) When the pressure in the ventricle is higher than the aorta, the — valve —-?
3) When the pressure in ventricle decreases, the —– valve ——?
4) When the ventricle pressure is less than the atrium, the —– valve ——?

A

1) AV Valve closes
2) Semi-lunary valve opens
3) Semi-lunar valve closes.
4) AV valve opens.

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17
Q

What is cardiac output?

A

Volume of blood pumped by one ventricle in one minute.

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18
Q

How do you calculate cardiac output?

A

Heart rate x stroke volume

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19
Q

What are the functions for:
Artery
Arterioles
Capillaries
Veins

A
  • Main transporters of oxygenated blood, limit blood flow to certain organs.
  • Diameter is adjusted to regulate blood flow.
  • Diffusion occurs across thin walls, tiny vessels that link arterioles to veins.
  • Carry blood from capillaries back to the heart.
20
Q

Does the elastic tissue of arteries stretch and recoil or contract or relax?

A

Stretch and recoil - it is not a muscle!

21
Q

How is the thick muscle layer of an artery related to its function?

A

Can constrict and dilate to control volume of blood passing through.

22
Q

How is the thick elastic layer of an artery related to its function?

A

Blood pressure needs to be kept high. Elastic wall stretched at systole and springs back at diastole. Helps maintain blood pressure and smooth pressure surges.

23
Q

How is the thick wall of an artery related to its function?

A

Resists the vessel bursting under pressure.

24
Q

How does the aortic semi-lunar valve relate to the artery’s function?

A

To stop blood flowing backwards.

25
Q

How is the thick muscle layer of the arterioles related to its function?

A

Restricts flow of blood and controls its movements into capillaries that supply tissues with blood.

26
Q

How is the thin elastic layer of the arterioles related to its function?

A

Blood pressure is lower, doesn’t need thick walls.

27
Q

How is the thin muscle layer of the veins related to its function?

A

Carry blood away from tissues, constriction and dilation cannot control blood flow to tissues.

28
Q

How is the thin elastic layer of the veins related to its function?

A

Low blood pressure - will not cause them to burst, too low to create recoil action.

29
Q

How is the thin wall of the veins related to its function?

A

Pressure in veins is low, no risk of bursting. Also allows them to be flattened, aiding flow of blood.

30
Q

How are the valves present in the veins related to its function?

A

Ensures blood does not flow backwards as pressure is low. Veins compress when muscles contract, pressurising the blood - these valves ensure it travels towards the heart.

31
Q

How are the walls being only one cell thick in capillaries related to their function?

A

Allows for diffusion.

32
Q

How does the number of capillaries relate to their function?

A

Many of them - increased SA.

33
Q

How does the spaces between the endothelial cells relate to the capillaries function?

A

Highly permeable - allows substances to pass.

34
Q

What is hydrostatic pressure?

A

Capillaries are narrower than the arterioles so pressure builds up which forces water out of blood plasma.

35
Q

What is ultrafiltration?

A

Pressure pushes water and small molecules out of capillary leaving cells and large proteins behind.

36
Q

How does tissue fluid return to the circulatory system?

A
  • Most water is returned to blood plasma via capillaries.
    1) Loss of water from capillaries at arteriole end reduces hydrostatic pressure inside them.
    2) Hydrostatic pressure at venule end of capillary higher outside, water is forced in.
    3) Osmotic forces pull water back into capillaries as WP in capillary at venule end is lower.
    4) Remaining tissue fluid enters lymph vessels - drain back into the veins close to the heart.
37
Q

How is water transported up the xylem?

A

1) Water evaporates from leaves.
2) Water molecules form hydrogen bonds between one another, stick together via cohesion.
3) Water forms continuous unbroken column.
4) As water evaporates in leaves, water molecules drawn up xylem as result of cohesion.
5) Column of water is therefore pulled up xylem by transpiration - transpiration stream.
6) Places xylem under negative pressure so there is tension within xylem - cohesion-tension theory.

38
Q

What is some evidence to support cohesion-tension theory?

A
  • Changes in diameter of tree trunks according to rate of transpiration.
  • If xylem vessel is broken and air enters, tree can no longer draw up water because column is broken.
39
Q

How is a potometer used?

A

1) Leafy shoot cut underwater.
2) Potometer filled with water.
3) Leafy shoot fitted to potometer.
4) Potometer removed and all joints sealed with waterproof jelly.
5) Distance moved by air bubble in given time is measured a few times and mean is calculated.
6) Once air bubble nears junction of reservoir tube and capillary tube, tap on reservoir is opened and syringe is pushed down until bubble is pushed back to start of scale.

40
Q

How is sucrose transferred from photosynthesising tissue into sieve tube elements?

A

1) Hydrolysis of ATP used to make H+ ions out of companion cell.
2) H+ conc. in source increases, makes conc. gradient for H+.
3) H+ flows down conc. gradient into companion cell. Cotransport - sucrose is carried too.
4) Conc. of sucrose increases in companion cell.
5) Sucrose carried into sieve tube by facilitated diffusion.

41
Q

How does sucrose and organic matter move through the phloem via mass transport? SOURCE

A

1) Sugars made at source. Moved by active transport into phloem cells (via companion cells).
2) WP in phloem decreases.
3) Water moves via osmosis from xylem to phloem.
4) Hydrostatic pressure in phloem increases.

42
Q

How does sucrose and organic matter move through the phloem via mass transport? SINK

A

1) Sucrose unloaded (involves active transport).
2) WP in phloem increases.
3) Transpiration pull in xylem.
4) Water moves from phloem into xylem.
5) Hydrostatic pressure is low.

43
Q

How are sieve cells adapted for mass transport?

A

Have thick walls which leads to more flow due to strong walls being able to resist high pressure.

44
Q

How are companion cells adapted for transport of sugars between cells?

A

Companion cells have mitochondria which release energy.

45
Q

Describe the ringing experiment.

A

1) Section of outer layer of stem removed around circumference.
2) Area above missing ring swells.
3) Samples of liquid rich in sugar.
4) Some non-photosynthetic tissues below ring die - bits above swell.
5) Conclusion = phloem and not xylem that transports organic substances around plant.

46
Q

How does the tracer experiment provide evidence for translocation?

A

1) Plants supplied with radioactive CO2.
2) Incorporated into glucose during photosynthesis.
3) Sugars can be tracked as they move through plant (autoradiography).
4) Results used to show organic substances are transported in phloem.
5) Shows transport is bi-directional.