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8. Transport in Mammal
And the Circulatory System
Why do we need a mammalian
transport System
 Animals – far more active than
plants
 Need energy for – contraction
of muscles, brain power,
mobility (have to find their own
food), nervous system
 Evolved transport system
 Diffusion – too slow, the
surface area is not enough
Pulmonary Circulation
 Deoxygenated blood moving out from the right
ventricles through the pulmonary arteries to the lung.
 The now oxygenated blood then travels back into the
left atrium from the pulmonary vein.
Systemic Circulation
 Oxygenated blood moving out of the left ventricle
through the aorta to the rest of the body.
 Deoxygenated blood travelling back through the vena
cava into the right atrium
The Blood vessels
 Artery
 Capillaries
 Vein
Arteries
 Vessels that transport blood at
high pressure to the tissue away
from the heart
 Inner endothelium: Tunica intima
– layer of flat squamous
epithelium cells – REDUCE
FRICTION
 Middle layer: Tunica media –
smooth muscle, collagen, elastic
fiber
 Outer layer: Tunica externa –
Elastic fiber/ collagen fibers
Arteries
 Strong and elastic
 To withstand high pressure of blood leaving the heart
(120mmhg)
 Elastic fibers: Wall can stretch
 Allows the heart to moderate the pressure of the blood
by recoiling or stretching
Arterioles
 Arteries branch into smaller vessels –
Arterioles
 Arterioles’ wall have more smooth muscle
 The muscle can contract – controlling the
volume of blood moving in and out of a
certain body part
 Vasoconstriction and vasodilation occurs
with arterioles
 Blood pressure drops here from 120 to 85
as arteries branch out
Capillaries
 Arterioles further branch out into capillaries where cell
will receive oxygen and give out waste
 One-cell thick wall (endothelium) – 7 micrometer – just
enough for Red blood Cell
 Blood brought to 1 micrometer from the cell
 Blood pressure drops enough for slower flow with
exchange of thing
 Allow diffusion to occur
Venules
 Capillaries gradually join up to form Venules
 Venules join to form veins – function: return blood to
the heart
Veins
 Blood pressure is low – no need for elastic muscles or
thick wall
 Larger lumen
 Blood flow because the contraction of muscle around
the veins
 Backflow prevented by semilunar valves
THE LYMPHATIC
SYSTEM
BLOOD PLASMA, TISSUE FLUID, LYMPH
Blood Plasma
 Pale yellow liquid composing of 55% of the blood
 Content: 90% water – 10% : Ions, Glucose, Urea, Plasma
proteins (amino acids, hormones, enzymes, antibodies
etc.)
Blood plasma - Importance
 Contains hormones and other useful substances
 Maintains pH and osmotic balance
Tissue Fluid
 When passing through capillaries – plasma leaks into
the spaces between cells forming tissue fluid
 Proteins cannot pass through
 White blood cells can squeeze through
Tissue Fluid
 The process is as such:
 The high blood pressure at arterial end of capillary bed –
causes blood plasma to flow out of capillaries
 High protein concentration in plasma = lower water potential,
osmotic pressure causes plasma to flow back into capillaries
at venule ends of the capillary bed
 Hence tissue fluid maintains the osmotic balance of the cell
 If blood pressure too high – at arterial ends too much of the
plasma flow into tissue fluid and accumulates – swelling in
the form of oedema
Lymph
 90% of fluid that leaks out of capillary – seeps back
 Another 10% is returned by the lymphatic system
 Lymphatic systems: made up of lymph vessels
 The lymphatic will allow tissue fluid to leak in
 Lymph vessels have valves large enough for proteins
 Lymph nodes: contain antibodies
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7orwMgTQ5I
The Lymphatic system
 The lymphatic system’s main job is to return blood
plasma to the blood and also to maintain the osmotic
balance by allowing protein to leak in from the tissue
fluid
 The system is also where a lot of of the white blood
cells reside
Content of Blood
 5 dm3 blood = 5 kg
 5 x 1013 Red Blood Cells/ Erythrocytes
 6 x 1012 Platelets
 2.5 x 1011 White Blood Cells/ Leukocytes
Red Blood Cells
 Small size = 7 micrometers
 Biconcave shape
 Small amount of organelles
 High flexibility in membrane
Hemoglobin
The Dissociation curve, Transport of Carbon dioxide and the Bohr Shift
Haemoglobin
 Proteins found inside the red blood cells
 They combine with oxygen to form Oxyhaemoglobin
 They are tools Red blood cell uses for transporting
oxygen
 Each haemoglobin has 4 haem groups with each one
containing an iron prosthetic group
 This iron allows the molecule to combine with oxygen
and hence give a red color to blood
The Dissociation Curve
 This is a curve used to show how haemoglobin combine
with oxygen at different partial pressure
 It is important to show how haemoglobin pick up
oxygen but also how it releases those oxygen
molecules
The Dissociation Curve
 At low partial pressure of oxygen – percentage
saturation is very low – haemoglobin combines with
very little, in this case 1 oxygen molecule
 As partial pressure increases, it gets easier
 Plus haemoglobin changes shape after first
combination to make it easier for the other 3
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYbvwMSzqdY
The S-Curve
 We must also take in account the changes of partial
pressure of Carbon Dioxide
 Where there are high CO2 concentration (high partial
pressure) eg. Muscle cells – usually respiring cells that
actually do need oxygen
 Oxygen will be released more readily
 How so?
The Bohr Shift
 When Carbon Dioxide enters the Red Blood cell, carbonic
anhydrase allows it to combine with water to form Carbonic
acid
 The Carbonic acid dissociates into Hydrogen bicarbonate
and hydrogen ions
 The hydrogen ion is actually taken up by the haemoglobin
 And hence the oxygen has to be released
 THIS IS PERFECT, BECAUSE NOW OXYGEN IS RELEASED
WHERE IT IS NEEDED MOST
Transport of Carbon
dioxide
 Because of the Bohr shift – 85% of the CO2 is now
transported in the form of hydrogen bicarbonate ions
 Another 10% of CO2 directly combines with
haemoglobin to form Carbaminohaemoglobin
 The other 5% is transported in solution
Problems with Oxygen
Transport
High Altitude, Carbon Mooxide
Effects of Carbon
Monoxide
 Haemoglobin combines very readily with
Carbon monoxide – even more so than oxygen
(250 times more)
 To form Carboxyhaemoglobin – a very stable
molecule
 Now the body cannot transport oxygen
 Carbon monoxide quickly diffuse through
alveoli
 Even 0.1% in the air may cause death by
asphyxiation
 They are found in cigarette smokes – hence
most smokers actually have 5% of their blood
permanently combined with carbon monoxide
Effects of High Altitude
 Partial pressure of oxygen in normal air is higher than
in air at high altitude
 Haemoglobin becomes less saturated
 Less oxygen carried around the body
 Causing breathlessness and illness
Altitude Sickness
 When the body doesn’t have enough time to adjust to
the change in altitude
 Increase in rate/ depth of breath
 Dizziness and weakness
 Arterials dilate for more oxygen transport – blood flow
into the capillary bed more – oedema
 Oedema in brains can lead to disorientation
 The way to cure is simple – come down
Adaptations
 If the body is allowed to
acclimatized – number of Red
Blood Cells increases –
usually takes 2 -3 weeks
 Permanent adaptations for
those living at high altitudes
 Broader chest – for more lung
capacity
 Larger right side of heart – to
pump blood to the lung
 More haemoglobin
The Heart
Heart beats and how they work
The Heart Structure
 Mass: 300 g
 Size: fist
 A bag of muscle filled with blood
 Muscles – cardiac muscles – interconnecting cells with
membranes tightly joined for electrical excitation to
pass through
Aorta
 The largest artery
 Arch shape
 Branches leading to the
head
 Main flow double back
down toward the body
 High pressure blood flow
here
 Connected to the left
ventricle
Venae Cavae
 2 large veins running vertically on the right side of the
heart, Connected to the right atrium
 1 vessel (superior vena cava) brings blood from rest of
the body
 Another brings blood from the head
Pulmonary Arteries/ Veins
 P Artery: takes blood out of the heart to
the lung – connected to the right ventricle
 P Veins: Takes blood from the lung into the
hear – connected to the left atrium
 The revers of the rest of the body – if veins
at the rest of the body carry deoxygenated
blood, pulmonary veins carries oxygenated
blood. Same goes for pulmonary arteries
 Pulmonary artery branches off immediately
to the right and left lung
 Pulmonary vein returns first into then
combine into one
Coronary arteries
 Branch off from aorta
 Deliver oxygen to the heart itself
The Cardiac Cycle
 The sequence of events which make up one heartbeat
 3 stages
 Atrial systole
 Ventricular systole
 Ventricular diastole
Atrial Systole
 Heart is filled with blood – muscle ready to contract
 Muscular wall of atrial are thin – contraction do not
produce much pressure
 Pressure still forces Atrioventricular valves (tricuspid/
bicuspid) open
 Blood flows from the atria into the ventricles
 Valves in the veins prevent backflow
Ventricular Systole
 0.1 seconds after the atria contract
 Ventricles contract
 Atrioventricular valves pulled shut due to the pressure
in the ventricles exceeding the atria
 Semi lunar valves forced open
 Blood rushes into the arteries
 This lasts for 0.3 seconds
Ventricular Diastole
 The whole heart muscle relaxes
 Semilunar valve shuts
 Blood from veins flow into the atria – at low pressure –
but thin wall of atria gives not much resistance
 Blood just begins flowing into the ventricles when the
atria contracts again
Control of heart beat
 The muscles in the heart are myogenic
 They naturally contract/ relaxes
 The heart still has its own natural pacemaker
 Sinoatrial node (SAN) - in the right atrium wall – it
can still respond to the brain
 SAN works a little faster than the heart
 It sends excitation waves across the atrial walls –
causing atrial systole
Control of heart beat
 Muscles of the ventricle contracts 0.1 second after – this is
because of the AVN
 The AVN (Atrioventricular node) receives excitation wave
which it withholds until the atria contracts, then it sends
down to the ventricles so that they can follow in contraction
 Between atria and ventricle – a band of fiber that does not
conduct electrical impulse is there
 The AVN send the impulse down through the purkyne
tissues in the septum which travels to the rest of the
ventricles

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AS Level Biology - 8) Transport in Mammals

  • 1. 8. Transport in Mammal And the Circulatory System
  • 2.
  • 3. Why do we need a mammalian transport System  Animals – far more active than plants  Need energy for – contraction of muscles, brain power, mobility (have to find their own food), nervous system  Evolved transport system  Diffusion – too slow, the surface area is not enough
  • 4. Pulmonary Circulation  Deoxygenated blood moving out from the right ventricles through the pulmonary arteries to the lung.  The now oxygenated blood then travels back into the left atrium from the pulmonary vein.
  • 5. Systemic Circulation  Oxygenated blood moving out of the left ventricle through the aorta to the rest of the body.  Deoxygenated blood travelling back through the vena cava into the right atrium
  • 6.
  • 7. The Blood vessels  Artery  Capillaries  Vein
  • 8. Arteries  Vessels that transport blood at high pressure to the tissue away from the heart  Inner endothelium: Tunica intima – layer of flat squamous epithelium cells – REDUCE FRICTION  Middle layer: Tunica media – smooth muscle, collagen, elastic fiber  Outer layer: Tunica externa – Elastic fiber/ collagen fibers
  • 9. Arteries  Strong and elastic  To withstand high pressure of blood leaving the heart (120mmhg)  Elastic fibers: Wall can stretch  Allows the heart to moderate the pressure of the blood by recoiling or stretching
  • 10. Arterioles  Arteries branch into smaller vessels – Arterioles  Arterioles’ wall have more smooth muscle  The muscle can contract – controlling the volume of blood moving in and out of a certain body part  Vasoconstriction and vasodilation occurs with arterioles  Blood pressure drops here from 120 to 85 as arteries branch out
  • 11. Capillaries  Arterioles further branch out into capillaries where cell will receive oxygen and give out waste  One-cell thick wall (endothelium) – 7 micrometer – just enough for Red blood Cell  Blood brought to 1 micrometer from the cell  Blood pressure drops enough for slower flow with exchange of thing  Allow diffusion to occur
  • 12. Venules  Capillaries gradually join up to form Venules  Venules join to form veins – function: return blood to the heart
  • 13. Veins  Blood pressure is low – no need for elastic muscles or thick wall  Larger lumen  Blood flow because the contraction of muscle around the veins  Backflow prevented by semilunar valves
  • 14.
  • 15. THE LYMPHATIC SYSTEM BLOOD PLASMA, TISSUE FLUID, LYMPH
  • 16.
  • 17. Blood Plasma  Pale yellow liquid composing of 55% of the blood  Content: 90% water – 10% : Ions, Glucose, Urea, Plasma proteins (amino acids, hormones, enzymes, antibodies etc.)
  • 18. Blood plasma - Importance  Contains hormones and other useful substances  Maintains pH and osmotic balance
  • 19. Tissue Fluid  When passing through capillaries – plasma leaks into the spaces between cells forming tissue fluid  Proteins cannot pass through  White blood cells can squeeze through
  • 20. Tissue Fluid  The process is as such:  The high blood pressure at arterial end of capillary bed – causes blood plasma to flow out of capillaries  High protein concentration in plasma = lower water potential, osmotic pressure causes plasma to flow back into capillaries at venule ends of the capillary bed  Hence tissue fluid maintains the osmotic balance of the cell  If blood pressure too high – at arterial ends too much of the plasma flow into tissue fluid and accumulates – swelling in the form of oedema
  • 21.
  • 22. Lymph  90% of fluid that leaks out of capillary – seeps back  Another 10% is returned by the lymphatic system  Lymphatic systems: made up of lymph vessels  The lymphatic will allow tissue fluid to leak in  Lymph vessels have valves large enough for proteins  Lymph nodes: contain antibodies  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7orwMgTQ5I
  • 23. The Lymphatic system  The lymphatic system’s main job is to return blood plasma to the blood and also to maintain the osmotic balance by allowing protein to leak in from the tissue fluid  The system is also where a lot of of the white blood cells reside
  • 24. Content of Blood  5 dm3 blood = 5 kg  5 x 1013 Red Blood Cells/ Erythrocytes  6 x 1012 Platelets  2.5 x 1011 White Blood Cells/ Leukocytes
  • 25. Red Blood Cells  Small size = 7 micrometers  Biconcave shape  Small amount of organelles  High flexibility in membrane
  • 26. Hemoglobin The Dissociation curve, Transport of Carbon dioxide and the Bohr Shift
  • 27. Haemoglobin  Proteins found inside the red blood cells  They combine with oxygen to form Oxyhaemoglobin  They are tools Red blood cell uses for transporting oxygen  Each haemoglobin has 4 haem groups with each one containing an iron prosthetic group  This iron allows the molecule to combine with oxygen and hence give a red color to blood
  • 28. The Dissociation Curve  This is a curve used to show how haemoglobin combine with oxygen at different partial pressure  It is important to show how haemoglobin pick up oxygen but also how it releases those oxygen molecules
  • 29.
  • 30. The Dissociation Curve  At low partial pressure of oxygen – percentage saturation is very low – haemoglobin combines with very little, in this case 1 oxygen molecule  As partial pressure increases, it gets easier  Plus haemoglobin changes shape after first combination to make it easier for the other 3  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYbvwMSzqdY
  • 31. The S-Curve  We must also take in account the changes of partial pressure of Carbon Dioxide  Where there are high CO2 concentration (high partial pressure) eg. Muscle cells – usually respiring cells that actually do need oxygen  Oxygen will be released more readily  How so?
  • 32. The Bohr Shift  When Carbon Dioxide enters the Red Blood cell, carbonic anhydrase allows it to combine with water to form Carbonic acid  The Carbonic acid dissociates into Hydrogen bicarbonate and hydrogen ions  The hydrogen ion is actually taken up by the haemoglobin  And hence the oxygen has to be released  THIS IS PERFECT, BECAUSE NOW OXYGEN IS RELEASED WHERE IT IS NEEDED MOST
  • 33. Transport of Carbon dioxide  Because of the Bohr shift – 85% of the CO2 is now transported in the form of hydrogen bicarbonate ions  Another 10% of CO2 directly combines with haemoglobin to form Carbaminohaemoglobin  The other 5% is transported in solution
  • 34.
  • 35. Problems with Oxygen Transport High Altitude, Carbon Mooxide
  • 36. Effects of Carbon Monoxide  Haemoglobin combines very readily with Carbon monoxide – even more so than oxygen (250 times more)  To form Carboxyhaemoglobin – a very stable molecule  Now the body cannot transport oxygen  Carbon monoxide quickly diffuse through alveoli  Even 0.1% in the air may cause death by asphyxiation  They are found in cigarette smokes – hence most smokers actually have 5% of their blood permanently combined with carbon monoxide
  • 37. Effects of High Altitude  Partial pressure of oxygen in normal air is higher than in air at high altitude  Haemoglobin becomes less saturated  Less oxygen carried around the body  Causing breathlessness and illness
  • 38. Altitude Sickness  When the body doesn’t have enough time to adjust to the change in altitude  Increase in rate/ depth of breath  Dizziness and weakness  Arterials dilate for more oxygen transport – blood flow into the capillary bed more – oedema  Oedema in brains can lead to disorientation  The way to cure is simple – come down
  • 39.
  • 40. Adaptations  If the body is allowed to acclimatized – number of Red Blood Cells increases – usually takes 2 -3 weeks  Permanent adaptations for those living at high altitudes  Broader chest – for more lung capacity  Larger right side of heart – to pump blood to the lung  More haemoglobin
  • 41. The Heart Heart beats and how they work
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44. The Heart Structure  Mass: 300 g  Size: fist  A bag of muscle filled with blood  Muscles – cardiac muscles – interconnecting cells with membranes tightly joined for electrical excitation to pass through
  • 45. Aorta  The largest artery  Arch shape  Branches leading to the head  Main flow double back down toward the body  High pressure blood flow here  Connected to the left ventricle
  • 46. Venae Cavae  2 large veins running vertically on the right side of the heart, Connected to the right atrium  1 vessel (superior vena cava) brings blood from rest of the body  Another brings blood from the head
  • 47. Pulmonary Arteries/ Veins  P Artery: takes blood out of the heart to the lung – connected to the right ventricle  P Veins: Takes blood from the lung into the hear – connected to the left atrium  The revers of the rest of the body – if veins at the rest of the body carry deoxygenated blood, pulmonary veins carries oxygenated blood. Same goes for pulmonary arteries  Pulmonary artery branches off immediately to the right and left lung  Pulmonary vein returns first into then combine into one
  • 48. Coronary arteries  Branch off from aorta  Deliver oxygen to the heart itself
  • 49. The Cardiac Cycle  The sequence of events which make up one heartbeat  3 stages  Atrial systole  Ventricular systole  Ventricular diastole
  • 50. Atrial Systole  Heart is filled with blood – muscle ready to contract  Muscular wall of atrial are thin – contraction do not produce much pressure  Pressure still forces Atrioventricular valves (tricuspid/ bicuspid) open  Blood flows from the atria into the ventricles  Valves in the veins prevent backflow
  • 51. Ventricular Systole  0.1 seconds after the atria contract  Ventricles contract  Atrioventricular valves pulled shut due to the pressure in the ventricles exceeding the atria  Semi lunar valves forced open  Blood rushes into the arteries  This lasts for 0.3 seconds
  • 52. Ventricular Diastole  The whole heart muscle relaxes  Semilunar valve shuts  Blood from veins flow into the atria – at low pressure – but thin wall of atria gives not much resistance  Blood just begins flowing into the ventricles when the atria contracts again
  • 53. Control of heart beat  The muscles in the heart are myogenic  They naturally contract/ relaxes  The heart still has its own natural pacemaker  Sinoatrial node (SAN) - in the right atrium wall – it can still respond to the brain  SAN works a little faster than the heart  It sends excitation waves across the atrial walls – causing atrial systole
  • 54. Control of heart beat  Muscles of the ventricle contracts 0.1 second after – this is because of the AVN  The AVN (Atrioventricular node) receives excitation wave which it withholds until the atria contracts, then it sends down to the ventricles so that they can follow in contraction  Between atria and ventricle – a band of fiber that does not conduct electrical impulse is there  The AVN send the impulse down through the purkyne tissues in the septum which travels to the rest of the ventricles