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CHAPTER 5: MEMBRANES.

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 5: MEMBRANES."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 5: MEMBRANES

2 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Human body is an open system Exchanges heat and materials with external environment Principle of MASS BALANCE is used to maintain Homeostasis Law of Mass Balance: If the amount of a substance in the body is to remain constant, any gain must be offset by an equal loss Example: Water loss (output) must be balanced by water intake (from external environment and from metabolic water production)

3 Figure 5-1

4 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Law of Mass Balance: If the amount of a substance in the body is to remain constant, any gain must be offset by an equal loss Total amount (load) of substance X in body = Intake + production – excretion - metabolism

5 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Applies to: Water Oxygen Carbon Dioxide Salts (electrolytes) Hydrogen ions (pH)

6 Figure 5-2

7 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Input: Most substances enter the body from the outside Water, nutrients, enter via digestive tract Oxygen and other gases enter via lungs: Some lipid-soluble molecules can enter through the skin

8 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Output: 1. Excretion Through urine, feces, lungs, or skin 2. Metabolize the substance to a different one Metabolite: a product created in a metabolic pathway Clearance: The rate at which a molecule disappears from the body (via excretion or metabolism)

9 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Clearance example: Volume of blood plasma cleared of the substance per unit of time Mass Flow: a more direct way to measure this Mass Flow = concentration x volume flow Amount of substance/min = amount of substance/vol x vol/min

10 Mass Balance and Homeostasis
Mass Flow: example: A person is given an intravenous infusion of glucose solution (50 g glucose per liter), given at a rate of 2 ml per min Mass flow is: 50 g glucose/1000 ml x 2 ml solution /min = 0.1 g glucose/min Mass flow applies to entry, production, and removal of substances And also to movement of substances from one functional compartment to another

11 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
Homeostasis: usually refers to stability of the internal environment Usually refers to stability of the ECF (plasma, interstitial fluid) Cells maintain a state of cellular homeostasis But, lots harder to measure stability of ICF (inside environment of cells)

12 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
In a state of homeostasis, the composition of both body compartments is relatively stable BUT The composition of the compartments are different

13 Figure 5-3a

14 Electrolytes These dissociate (come apart) in liquids
and form ions (charged particles) Acids: HCl (hydrochloric acid) Dissociates to form H+ and Cl- Bases: NaOH (sodium hydroxide) KOH (potassium hydroxide) Salts: NaCl (sodium chloride or table salt) KCl (potassium chloride)

15 Electrolytes are Chemically reactive in metabolism Major cations Na+, K+, Ca2+, H+ Major anions Cl-, HCO3-, PO43- Cation: positive ion Anion: negative ion

16 Electrolytes Main functions in body: 1. Many are essential minerals
2. As the most numerous solutes, they control osmosis of water between body compartments

17 Electrolytes Main functions in body:
3. They help maintain the acid-base balance required for normal cellular activities 4. They can carry an electric current: This allows Action Potentials, graded potentials to happen; controls secretion of some hormones and neurotransmitters

18 Distribution of Electrolytes in Extracellular Fluid
1. Interstitial fluid contains: Na+ (most abundant positive ion) Cl- (most abundant negative ion) H2CO3 (Bicarbonate ion; abundant) K+ Ca++ Mg++ 2. Plasma contains: Same ions as interstitial fluid and Lots of protein anions

19 Distribution of Electrolytes 3. Intracellular fluid (ICF) contains:
K+ (most abundant positive ion) Protein ions; phosphate ions (HPO42-) (most abundant negative ions) H2CO3 (Bicarbonate ion; not as abundant as in ECF's) Cl- Na+ Mg++

20 Figure 5-3b

21 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
(p ) 4 phrases to learn: Dynamic disequilibrium Osmotic equilibrium Chemical disequilibrium Electrical disequilibrium

22 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
(p ) Dynamic disequilibrium ECF and ICF contain different concentrations of various solutes, resulting in a state of dynamic disequilibrium Osmotic equilibrium Water moves freely between ECF and ICF, so these can reach a state of osmotic equilibrium

23 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
(p ) Chemical disequilibrium Certain solutes are more concentrated in one compartment than in the other Electrical disequilibrium Body as a whole is electrically neutral But due to ion concentrations, ICF is slightly negative relative to ECF Changes to the ionic imbalance create electrical signals (nerve cells, muscle cells)

24 Figure 5-3b

25 Homeostasis and Equilibrium
(p ) “The goal of homeostasis is to maintain the dynamic steady states of the body's compartments Dynamic: Materials are constantly moving back and forth between compartments Steady state: No net movement of materials between the compartments

26 Membrane Transport (p ) “Humans are large complex organisms and the movement of materials within and between compartments is necessary for communication” Movement of materials across selectively permeable membranes requires a variety of transport mechanisms (Cell membranes are selectively permeable)

27 Membrane Transport (p ) Transport Mechanisms: Some require energy in the form of ATP (Active transport) Some do not require ATP (Passive transport) This kind uses energy of molecular motion

28 Figure 5-4

29 Figure 5-5


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