5.1.2 Excretion as an example of homeostatic control Flashcards
(44 cards)
What is excretion?
- the removal of metabolic waste from the body
What are the main excretory products?
- carbon dioxide from respiration
- nitrogen-containing compounds, such as urea
- other compounds, such as bile pigments found in faeces
What excretory organs are there?
Lungs:
- every living cell produces carbon dioxide as a result of respiration
- it is passed on from cells into the bloodstream, where it is transported to the lungs
- diffuses into alveoli to be breathed out
Liver:
- produces bile for excretion with faeces
- converts excess amino cidsrtourea by the process of deamination (nitrogen-containing part combines with carbon dioxide)
Kidneys:
- urea passed into the bloodstream to the kidneys
- removed from blood then excreted via the urethra
Skin:
- sweat contains salts, urea, water, uric acid and ammonia
Why is excretion important?
- some metabolic products are toxic
- they interfere with cell processes by altering pH,or act as inhibitors
Why is it important to remove CO2 and nitrogenous compounds?
CO2:
- most carbon dioxide is transported in the blood as H2CO3 ions, which then dissociates to released hydrogen ions
- occurs inside red blood cells, under influence of enzyme carbonic anhydrase
- hydrogen ions affect pH of the cytoplasm of red blood cells
- also interact with bonds with haemoglobin, changing its 3D shape
- this reduces the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen
- may combine with haemoglobin to form haemoglobinic acid
- carbon dioxide can also combine with haemoglobin to form carbaminohaemoglobin
- reduces oxygen transport
- reduces in blood pH may cause headaches, drowsiness, tremor etc
Nitrogenous compounds:
- body cannot store excess amino acids
- they are transported to liver and the toxic amino group is removed (deamination) to form ammonia, then converted to urea
- remaining keto acids used in respiration to release energy or to be converted to carbohydrate or fat for storage
Why is it essential to ensure that the liver has good blood supply?
- hepatocytes carry out many hundred of metabolic processes
- internal structure of the liver ensures that as much blood flows past as many liver cells as possible
- enables liver cells to remove excess or unwanted substances from blood and return substances to the blood to ensure concentrations are maintained
What two sources supply the liver with blood and what other vessel is connected to the liver?
Hepatic artery:
- oxygenated blood from the heart travels from the aorta via the hepatic artery into the liver
- supplies oxygen for aerobic respiration
Hepatic portal vein:
- deoxygenated blood from the digestive system enters via the hepatic portal vein
- blood is rich in products of digestion
- may also contain toxic compounds
- blood leaves liver via hepatic vein which then rejoins the vena cava and blood returns to normal circulation
Bile duct:
- carries bile from liver to gall bladder, where it is stored
- also contains some excretory products such as bilirubin

What is the structure of the liver?
- liver is divided into loves which are further divided into lobules, which are cylindrical
- as hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein enter the liver, they split into smaller and smaller vessels
- blood from the two vessels is mixed and pass a chamber called a sinusoid, which is in close contact with hepatocytes
- Kupffer cells move about within the sinusoids, to breakdown and recycle old red blood cells
- bile canaliculi join to form bile duct

What is the structure and function of liver cells?
- cuboidal shape with many microvilli on their surface
- many metabolic functions such as protein synthesis, transformation and storage of carbohydrates, synthesis of cholesterol and bile salts, detoxification etc
- cytoplasm is dense and specialised in certain organelles
What does the liver do?
- control blood glucose levels, amino acid levels, lipid levels
- synthesis of bile, plasma proteins, cholesterol
- synthesis of red blood cells in the foetus
- storage of vitamins A, D and B12, iron, glycogen
- detoxification of alcohol, drugs
- breakdown of hormones
- destruction of red blood cells
Describe the storage of glycogen in the liver
- liver stores sugars in the form of glycogen
- able to store around 100-120g of glycogen
- glycogen forms granules in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes
Describe detoxification in the liver
- toxins can be rendered harmless by oxidation, reduction, methylation etc
- the enzyme catalase: converts hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water (it has a high turnover number)
- cytochrome P450: a group of enzymes used to breakdown drugs such as cocaine
Describe the detoxification of alcohol in the liver
- alcohol is broken down in the hepatocytes by the enzyme ethanol dehydrogenase
- this forms ethanal
- which is dehydrogenated further by the enzyme ethanal dehydrogenase
- this produces ethanoate which combines with coenzyme A to form acetyl CoA, used in aerobic respiration
- H atoms released from alcohol are combined with NAD to formed reduced NAD
- if the liver detoxifies too much alcohol and uses up NAD, fatty acids are converted to lipids, causes fatty liver disease

Describe the formation of urea in the liver
- excess amino acids cannot be stored because amino groups are toxic
- but amino acid molecules contain a lot of energy
- so deamination occurs then the ornithine cycle

Describe deamination in how to form urea in the liver
- amino group is removed and ammonia is produced
- ammonia is very soluble and highly toxic
- deamination also produces a keto acid, which can enter respiration directly to release energy

Describe the ornithine cycle to form urea in the liver
- ammonia is combined with carbon dioxide to produce urea
- this then combines with the amino acid ornithine to produce citrulline
- then converted to arginine by addition of further ammonia
- the arginine is then re-converted to ornithine by the removal of urea
- urea is passed back into the blood and transported to the kidneys, where it is then filtered out of blood into urine

What is the structure of the kidney?
- outer region: the cortex
- inner region: medulla
- centre: pelvis, leads to ureter

How does the blood supply work in the kidney?
- renal artery splits to form many afferent arterioles, which each lead to a knot of capillaries called the glomerulus
- blood from the glomerulus continues into an efferent arteriole which carries the blood to more capillaries surrounding the rest of the tubule
- these capillaries eventually flow together into the renal vein
- each glomerulus is surrounded by the Bowman’s capsule
- fluid from the blood is pushed into the Bowman’s capsule by ultrafiltration

Describe the barrier between the blood in the capillary and the lumen of the Bowman’s capsule
Endothelium of the capillary:
- narrow gaps between the cells of the endothelium of the capillary wall
- cells of the endothelium also contain pores, called fenestrations
- these gaps allow blood plasma and the substances dissolved in it to pass out of the capillary
Basement membrane:
- consists of a fine mesh of collagen fibres and glycoproteins
- acts as a filter to prevent the passage of molecule with a relative molecular mass of greater than 69000
- most proteins and red blood cells are held in the capillaries
Epithelial cells of the Bowman’s capsule:
- the cells, called podocytes, have a specialised shape
- they have finger-like projections called major processes
- on each major process are minor processes or foot processes that hold the cells away from the endothelium of the capillary
- ensure that there are gaps between the cells
Label a diagram of a nephron

What is ultrafiltration?
- the filtering of blood at a molecular level
- blood flows into the glomerulus through the afferent arteriole, which is wider than the efferent arteriole that carries blood away from the glomerulus
- the difference in diameters ensures that the blood in the capillaries of the glomerulus maintains a pressure higher than the pressure in the Bowman’s capsule
What is filtered out the blood during ultrafiltration?
blood plasma containing dissolved substances is pushed under pressure from the capillary into the lumen of the Bowman’s capsule
- water
- amino acids
- glucose
- urea
- inorganic mineral ions (sodium, chloride, potassium)
What is left in the capillary during ultrafiltration?
- red blood cells and proteins
- presence of proteins means that there is very low water potential
What happens as the fluid from the Bowman’s capsule passes along the nephron tubule?
Proximal convoluted tubule:
- fluid is altered by reabsorption of all sugar, most mineral ions and some water
- cells of the tubules have a highly folded surface, increasing its surface area
Descending limb of the loop of Henle:
- water potential of the fluid is decreased by the addition of mineral ions and the removal of water
Ascending limb of the loop of Henle:
- water potential is increased as mineral ions are removed by active transport
Collecting duct:
- the water potential is decreased again by the removal of water
- final product is urine
- this process ensures that urine has a low water potential






