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Circulation and Gas Exchange

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Title: Circulation and Gas Exchange


1
Circulation and Gas Exchange
  • Chapter 42
  • A.P. Biology
  • Mr. Knowles
  • Liberty Senior High

2
Its all because of cellular respiration!
  • C6H12O6 6O2 --gt 6CO2 6H2O
    (ATP)

And Eliminate This!
We Need This!
To Make This!
3
  • Concept 42.5 Gas exchange occurs across
    specialized respiratory surfaces
  • Gas exchange supplies oxygen for cellular
    respiration and disposes of carbon dioxide.

4
  • Animals require large, moist respiratory surfaces
    for the adequate diffusion of respiratory gases
  • Between their cells and the respiratory medium,
    either air or water.

5
  • Overview Trading with the Environment
  • Every organism must exchange materials with its
    environment
  • And this exchange ultimately occurs at the
    cellular level

6
  • In unicellular organisms
  • These exchanges occur directly with the
    environment.
  • For most of the cells making up multicellular
    organisms
  • Direct exchange with the environment is not
    possible.

7
  • Concept 42.1 Circulatory systems reflect
    phylogeny
  • Transport systems
  • Functionally connect the organs of exchange with
    the body cells.

8
  • Most complex animals have internal transport
    systems
  • That circulate fluid, providing a lifeline
    between the aqueous environment of living cells
    and the exchange organs, such as lungs, that
    exchange chemicals with the outside environment

9
External Respiration
  • Uptake of O2 and the release of CO2 into the
    environment- external respiration.
  • Dry Air 78 N2, 21 O2 , 0.93 argon and
    other inert gases, and 0.03 CO2 .
  • Amount of air changes at altitude, but not
    composition.
  • Each gas exerts a fraction of total atmospheric
    pressure- partial pressure (PN2, PO2, PCO2)

10
Remember the Plasma Membrane?
  • Like H2O, O2 and CO2 diffuse through the
    phospholipid bilayer.
  • Membrane must have H2O on both sides for its
    integrity (hydrophobic).
  • All terrestrial organisms obtain gas diffusion
    across a moist membrane, never dry. Dissolved
    gases (O2 and CO2 ) diffuse through.

11
Intracellular Diffusion of Gases is Passive
CO2 is lower
Aerobically Respiring Cell
CO2 is higher
O2 is lower
O2 is higher
12
Dissolved Oxygen in Water
  • Factors that affect O2 solubility in H2O
  • 1. PO2 in air, decreases with altitude. Less PO2
    , less dissolved O2 in the H2O.
  • 2. Temperature of the H2O. Inversely related.
  • 3. Concentration of other solutes in H2O.
    Inversely related.

13
What happens to the oxygen level when tides go
out?
  • The Story of the Tarpon
  • Discovery Blue Planet- Tidal Seas

14
Problems in External Respiration
  • Simple diffusion- limited to a distance of 0.5
    mm.
  • As organisms become larger, their surface area to
    volume ratio decreases.
  • Keep Intracellular O2 lt Extracellular O2. If
    not, there is no net movement of O2 by diffusion.

15
Invertebrate Circulation
  • The wide range of invertebrate body size and
    form
  • Is paralleled by a great diversity in circulatory
    systems

16
Evolution of External Respiration
  • Unicellular bacteria and protists simple
    diffusion.
  • Problem Limits size of organism.
  • Jellyfish (Phylum Cnidaria) have no respiratory
    system. Very thin and slow down metabolism to
    allow diffusion of gases. (an unusual case)

17
Gastrovascular Cavities
  • Simple animals, such as cnidarians
  • Have a body wall only two cells thick that
    encloses a gastrovascular cavity.
  • The gastrovascular cavity
  • Functions in both digestion and distribution of
    substances throughout the body.

18
  • Some cnidarians, such as jellies
  • Have elaborate gastrovascular cavities

19
The Jellyfish Life!
  • Discover Blue Planet- Seasonal Seas

20
Cyanea capillata 7 ft. bell, 120 ft tentacles
21
Creating a Water Current
  • Sponges (Phylum Porifera) diffusion directly
    from surrounding water set up a current using
    cilia. Beating cilia replace water over the
    diffusion surface.

22
Sponges (Porifera)
23
Sponges (Porifera)
24
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25
Sponges and Corals
  • Discovery Blue Planet- Coral Seas

26
Creating a Water Current
  • Problem Limited to aquatic environments not
    efficient for really large organisms.

27
But sponges are aquatic! What about terrestrial
organisms?
  • Enter Cutaneous Respiration!

28
Cutaneous Respiration
  • Cutaneous Respiration gas exchange occurs
    directly across an animals body surface.
  • Problem Must stay moist for gas diffusion must
    increase body surface area limits size.

29
The Worms!
  • Flatworms (Phylum Platyhelminthes) very thin to
    permit direct diffusion from surrounding fluid
    (tapeworms-host fluid).
  • Roundworms (Phylum Nematoda) and Earthworms
    (Phylum Annelida) - direct diffusion requires a
    moist cuticle often secret mucous to keep skin
    wet.

30
  • Many segmented worms have flaplike gills
  • That extend from each segment of their body.

31
So why do earthworms die on your driveway after a
rain?
  • They dry out and, therefore, suffocate!
  • Mouth-to-skin, anyone?

32
What are the down sides to cutaneous respiration?
  • The Worlds Largest Earthworm
  • Video Nigel Marvins Giant Creepy Crawlies

33
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34
Scolex
Proglottids
35
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36
Cutaneous Respiration in a Tapeworm
  • Video The Body Snatchers

37
Increasing the Diffusion Surface Area
  • Advanced Invertebrates (Phylum Echinodermata,
    Mollusca, Arthropoda) increase surface area and
    bring external fluid close to internal fluid.
  • Use a primitive gill - increases diffusion
    surface area.

38
  • In some invertebrates
  • The gills have a simple shape and are distributed
    over much of the body

39
Primitive Gill
  • Phylum Echinodermata use a primitive gill
    called papulae.

papula
O2
CO2
Epidermis
Body Cavity
40
  • The gills of clams, crayfish, and many other
    animals
  • Are restricted to a local body region.

41
Axolotl- permanent salamander larvae
External Gills
42
O2
CO2
43
The External Gills
  • Some, like the axolotl (aquatic salamander)
    physically moves its external gills through the
    water for improved gas exchange.
  • A problem with external gills Difficult to
    circulate water past surfaces constantly.
  • Problem external gills are fragile and offer
    resistance in water.

44
Brachial Chambers
  • Brachial chambers a muscular, internal pouch
    used to pump water over the gills.
  • Phylum Mollusca use an internal mantle cavity
    that pumps water over gills. Ex. Squid and
    octopi.

45
Internal Gills
  • Cartilaginous Fishes (Sharks and Rays) force
    water through mouth over internal gills by
    constant swimming. Water flows out gill slits.
  • Swim with mouth open to force water over gills
    ram ventilation.
  • Problem Must stay in motion or suffocate.

46
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47
Filament
48
  • The feathery gills projecting from a salmon
  • Are an example of a specialized exchange system
    found in animals.

49
The Best Brachial Chamber
  • Bony Fishes have opercular cavities. Gills are
    between mouth and opercular cavities.
  • Opercula (Gill Covers) are flexible and they
    pull water through cavity, like a bellows.
  • Each gill two rows of gill filaments and each
    filament has rows of lamellae parallel to
    direction of water movement (see Fig. 46.6).

50
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51
  • The effectiveness of gas exchange in some gills,
    including those of fishes
  • Is increased by ventilation and countercurrent
    flow of blood and water.

52
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53
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54
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55
The Gill Filament
  • In each lamella, blood flows in a direction
    opposite the direction of water movement
    countercurrent flow.
  • Maximizes the differences in O2 between the water
    and blood (see Fig. 46.7).
  • Most efficient respiratory organ known 85
    available oxygen is removed.

56
Countercurrent Flow in Gills
57
What if youre not aquatic?
  • Why do fish die out of water?
  • They suffocate.

58
The Problem of Terrestrial Respiration
  • Water 5-10 ml of O2 per liter
  • Air 210 ml O2 per liter (rich in O2)
  • Gills dont work in air
  • Air is less buoyant than water, fragile lamellae
    collapse and reduce surface area and not enough
    gas diffusion.
  • Water diffuses into air by evaporation. Gills
    provide too much surface area for water loss.

59
Terrestrial Organisms
  • Use two types of internal passage ways for gas
    diffusion sacrifice efficiency for reduced
    evaporation.
  • Terrestrial Insects use tracheae air-filled
    passages connecting the surface of the insect to
    all potions of its body. Diffusion directly with
    internal cells and no circulatory system.
  • Use openings called spiracles along the abdomen
    that can be controlled. Effective for small
    animals.

60
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61
Tracheal Systems in Insects
  • The tracheal system of insects
  • Consists of tiny branching tubes that penetrate
    the body

62
  • The tracheal tubes
  • Supply O2 directly to body cells.

63
How large can an insect become?
  • Video Nigel Marvins Giant Creepy Crawlies

64
First Terrestrial Organism
  • Problem Tracheal breathing limits the size of
    the organism. Ventilation is by movement of
    organism.

65
Lungs
  • Spiders, land snails, and most terrestrial
    vertebrates
  • Have internal lungs (simple sacs).

66
Other Terrestrial Organ
  • Lung moves air through a moist, internal,
    tubular passage and back out same passage.
  • Benefit minimizes evaporation.
  • Problem lower efficiency than gill, but O2 more
    abundant in air.
  • Four variations of the terrestrial, vertebrate
    lung.

67
The First Terrestrial Animals?
68
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69
Class Amphibia
  • Amphibian Lung simple sac with a folded
    membrane has trachea with a valve glottis.
  • Can breathe through nose and mouth.
  • Perform positive pressure breathing create a
    positive pressure outside and forces air into
    lungs (throat breathing in frogs).

70
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71
I supplement by lung breathing with cutaneous
respiration, too!
72
Problems with the Amphibian System
  • Lung is not very efficient poor surface area.
  • Cutaneous Respiration requires moist skin.
    Limited to moist environments and/or secrete
    mucous covering. Dependent on water.
  • Cannot be very active slower metabolism.

73
Class Reptilia
  • Living completely on land, no connection to
    water. Made water-tight skin (scales) to prevent
    evaporation.
  • Little or no cutaneous respiration.
  • Reptile Lung contains many small air chambers
    increase surface area.

74
Class Reptilia
  • Reptiles use negative pressure breathing
    intercostal muscles and diaphragm to expand
    thoracic cavity and create a negative pressure in
    lungs.
  • Air is pulled into lungs rather than pushed.
  • Also called body cavity breathing or chest
    breathing.

75
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76
Class Mammalia
  • Must maintain constant body temperature need
    more efficient lung.
  • Use millions of sacs, clustered like grapes
    alveoli (alveolus sing.)
  • Each cluster connected to a short, branching
    passageway bronchiole.
  • Bronchioles connect into left and right bronchi
    (bronchus sing.)
  • Bronchi are connected to superior trachea.

77
How a Mammal Breathes
  • Mammals ventilate their lungs
  • By negative pressure breathing, which pulls air
    into the lungs.

78
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79
Bronchioles
Bronchi
80
(No Cartilage)
81
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82
Oxygenated Blood
Deoxygenated Blood
83
About 1 µm
84
80 m2 of Surface Area!
85
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • Trachea and Bronchi have hyaline cartilage, but
    not bronchioles.
  • Bronchioles are surrounded by smooth muscle.
  • Bronchoconstriction nervous system or hormones
    (histamine) signal smooth muscle to contract and
    narrow bronchioles (asthma).
  • Bronchodilation - nervous system or hormones
    (epinephrine) signal smooth muscle to relax and
    open bronchioles.

86
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • Visceral Pleural Membrane surrounds outside of
    lung.
  • Parietal Pleural Membrane lines thoracic
    cavity.
  • Pleural Cavity is fluid-filled space between
    connects lung to wall of cavity.

87
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • One-cycle pump.
  • Inspiration intercostal muscles and diaphragm
    contract increase volume of thoracic cavity.
  • Pleural membranes are coupled, lungs expand.
  • Air pressure in lungs is decreased and air is
    pulled in negative pressure breathing.

88
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • One-cycle pump.
  • Expiration Intercostal muscles and diaphragm
    relax, elastic recoil of thoracic cavity
    decrease volume of cavity and lungs.
  • Air pressure in lungs is increased, forces air
    out.

89
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90
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • Tidal Volume amount of air moved into and out
    of lungs at rest (500 ml).
  • Functional Residual Capacity amount of air left
    in lungs after normal expiration at rest.
  • Residual Volume amount of air left after
    forceful, maximum expiration.

91
Mechanics of Human Breathing
  • Anatomical Dead Space constant amount of air
    trapped in trachea, bronchi, bronchioles (150
    ml).
  • Vital Capacity max. amount of air exhaled after
    a forceful, maximum inhalation (VC TV IRV
    ERV).
  • Total Lung Capacity TV IRV ERV RV

92
Class Aves
  • Flight requires more ATP.
  • Avian lung is a two-cycle pump (Fig. 46-9).
  • Uses a system of anterior and posterior air sacs
    and a lung.
  • Gas exchange occurs in lung only.

93
How a Bird Breathes
  • Besides lungs, bird have eight or nine air sacs
  • That function as bellows that keep air flowing
    through the lungs.

94
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95
5
1
3
4
2
96
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97
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98
Two-Cycle Breathing
  • 1st Inspiration air travels down trachea to
    posterior air sacs.
  • 1st Expiration air flows from sacs to lung.
  • Lung gas exchange.
  • 2nd Inspiration air flows from lung to anterior
    air sacs.
  • 2nd Exhalation air flows from sacs out through
    trachea.

99
Benefits to Avian Breathing
  • Unidirectional flow of air through lung no
    dead volume of air left in lung. Always fully
    oxygenated air.
  • Flow of blood is perpendicular to air flow
    cross-current flow.
  • Very efficient at extracting oxygen from air.
  • Most efficient terrestrial respiration.

100
Gas Transport and Exchange
  • If transport were by simple diffusion, then O2
    would require three years to travel from lung to
    toe.
  • Use a circulatory system but plasma could only
    carry 3 ml O2 per l.
  • Use RBC with hemoglobin to carry 200 ml O2 per l.

101
Erythrocyte
102
Hemoglobin (Hb)
  • Accounts for 95 of proteins inside the RBC.
  • 280 million Hbs in each RBC.
  • Hb binds to and transports O2 and CO2.

103
Hb Molecule
  • Each Hb molecule four protein chains 2 alpha
    chains 2 beta chains of polypeptides.
  • Each chain is a globular subunit and has a heme
    group.
  • Heme a porphyrin which is a ring compound with
    an iron in the center.
  • Iron has a charge and can bind to O2 (negative).

104
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105
  • Like all respiratory pigments
  • Hemoglobin must reversibly bind O2, loading O2 in
    the lungs and unloading it in other parts of the
    body

Figure 42.28
106
Quaternary Structure of Hemoglobin
107
Hb Molecule
  • When hemoglobin binds to O2 it becomes
    oxyhemoglobin (bright red).
  • Very weak interaction easy to separate.
  • At the tissues, some oxyhemoglobin releases its
    O2 becomes- deoxyhemoglobin (dark red).

108
Oxygenated Blood
PO2 105 mm Hg
PO2 100 mm Hg
Deoxygenated Blood
109
Oxygen Transport
  • Lungs are efficient 97 of hemoglobin in RBCs
    is fully saturated.
  • At capillaries, extracellular fluid has lower PO2
    and O2 diffuses into tissues.
  • Venous blood leaving tissues has PO2 40 mm Hg.
  • Only about 22 of oxyhemoglobin has releases O2
    into tissues.

110
O2 is higher
Body Tissues
O2 is lower
111
Figure 42.27
112
Why so little O2 released into tissues?
  • Blood can supply oxygen needs during exercise.
  • Blood has enough oxygen to maintain life 4 or 5
    minutes without breathing.

113
How does Hb know when to let go?
  • In RBC, CO2 H2O H2CO3 , lowers pH.
  • Hbs affinity for O2 decreases with lower pH.
    Releases oxygen into tissue.
  • Hbs affinity for O2 inversely related to
    temperature. Metabolically active tissues are
    warmer. Cause release of O2 into tissues.

114
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115
What about the CO2?
  • As Hb releases O2, a binding site on protein
    absorbs CO2. CO2 does not bind to heme group
    (20).
  • 8 dissolved in the blood plasma.
  • 72 diffuses from plasma ? RBC cytoplasm and
    converted by enzyme into H2CO3 ?HCO3- H ions.

116
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117
Control of Breathing in Humans
  • The main breathing control centers
  • Are located in two regions of the brain, the
    medulla oblongata and the pons

4
118
Controlling Breathing
  • Respiratory Control Center Medulla Oblongata in
    brain.
  • Impulses sent to diaphragm and intercostal
    muscles? contraction and expand thoracic cavity
    (inhalation).
  • No impulse, muscles relax and cavity becomes
    smaller (exhalation).
  • Part of ANS but can be voluntary.

119
Controlling Breathing
  • If breathing stops, the PCO2 of plasma rises.
  • Causes pH to drop (increase in H).
  • Peripheral chemoreceptors in walls of aorta and
    coratid arteries detect increase in H.
  • Send signals to respiratory control center.
  • Initiates breathing.

120
What does exercise do?
  • Working tissue causes ? PCO2 in plasma and ?in
    pH.
  • As H ?, chemoreceptors cause an ? in
    respiratory rate.
  • Can you indefinitely hyperventilate?
  • Why can people hold their breath longer if they
    hyperventilate first?

121
The Ultimate Endurance Runner
  • The extreme O2 consumption of the antelope-like
    pronghorn
  • Underlies its ability to run at high speed over
    long distances

Figure 42.31
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