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Title: George Koutsothanasis Nicole Rebusi Kate Modica Ashley Davis


1
George KoutsothanasisNicole RebusiKate
ModicaAshley Davis
2
THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
3
INVERTEBRATE CIRCULATION
  • Two types of invertebrate circulation
  • Open circulation
  • Closed circulation
  • Both have three basic components
  • A circulatory fluid (blood), a set of tubes
    (blood vessels), and a muscular pump (heart).

4
CLOSED CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
  • Blood is confined to vessels and is distinct from
    the interstital fluid.
  • Materials are exchanged by diffusion between the
    blood and the interstital fluid bathing the
    cells.
  • Earthworms, squids, octopuses, and all
    vertebrates have closed circulatory systems.

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OPEN CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
  • There is no distinction between blood and
    hemolymph.
  • One or more hearts pump the hemolymph into an
    interconnected system of sinuses, which are
    spaces around organs.
  • Here chemical exchange occurs between lymph and
    body cells.

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VerteBRATE Circulation
  • Often called the cardiovascular system.
  • The vertebrate heart has one or two atria
  • The chambers that receive blood returning to the
    heart.
  • One or two ventricles
  • The chambers that pump blood out of the heart.

9
Blood vessels
  • Three main kinds
  • Arteries- carry blood away from the heart to
    organs throughout the body and branch into
    arterioles- small vessels that convey blood to
    capillaries.
  • Veins-a vessel that returns blood to the heart.
  • Capillaries- microscopic vessels with very thin,
    porous walls.
  • Networks of these vessels, called capillary beds,
    infiltrate each tissue.

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ARTERIES
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VEINS
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The Human HEART
  • The human heart is made up of 4 chambers.
  • The two atria have relatively thin walls and
    serve as collection chambers for blood returning
    to the heart.
  • The ventricles have thicker walls- the left
    ventricle pumps blood to all body organs.

13
The cardiac Cycle
  • One complete sequence of pumping and filling.
  • The contraction phase of the cycle is called
    systole, and the relaxation phase is diastole.
  • The volume of blood per minute that the left
    ventricle pumps out into the systemic circuit is
    called cardiac output.
  • Cardiac output depends on heart rate and stroke
    volume.

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Blood circulation
  • Blood delivers nutrients and removes wastes
    throughout an animals body.
  • Blood travels over a thousand times faster in the
    aorta than in capillaries.

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Respiration
  • There are many systems in the bodies of animals,
    each of which serve a very important purpose
    without which we wouldnt exist. The Respiratory
    System however serves a purpose that is not too
    difficult to understand. The Respiratory System
    and the Circulatory System are directly linked.
    Each of these relies on the other. If one fails,
    so does the other.
  • Respiration is the actual act of gas exchange.
    Although some may think this is a simple process,
    it is important to note that it is much more
    complicated.

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Gas Exchanging Mechanisms
  • There are different types of gas exchanging
    mechanisms in animals depending on their natural
    habitat.
  • Fish, because they live in aquatic biomes,
    adapted organs called gills where gas exchange
    takes place.
  • Insects, being simpler organisms than mammals,
    have a tracheal system. This is a system of
    tubes that branch throughout the body.
  • Mammals and birds have developed organs called
    lungs. Lungs are different than tracheal systems
    in insects in that they are located in one
    designated in location and do not branch out to
    the entire body. That is why animals with lungs
    also have a circulatory system.

20
Gills
  • Gills are outfoldings in the bodies of fish.
    Fish have such a different respiratory system
    than land animals because they rely on obtaining
    their oxygen from water as opposed to air.
    Oxygen is much more scarce in water, especially
    the deeper you go where there is less
    phytoplankton producing oxygen in the water.
  • Fishes gills do something called ventilation.
    Ventilation is the process by which water enters
    a fishs mouth, passes through the pharynx, flows
    over the gills and exits the body.
  • Fish spend a lot of energy during ventilation
    because the oxygen per unit of volume is very
    low, and they must obtain as much as possible.
  • Fishes bodies have developed a mechanism called
    countercurrent exchange. This mechanism is very
    effective and ensures that fish consume the least
    amount of energy as possible when they are
    undergoing respiration. Basically the blood in a
    fishs body flows opposite to the movement of
    water past the gills so that the maximum amount
    of oxygen can be picked up.

21
Tracheal Systems in Insects
  • This is a system of air tubes that branch
    throughout the body.
  • Larger tubes called tracheae open to the outside.
  • All of the bodys cells are within a short
    distance from the respiratory medium.
  • This system suffices for small insects because
    the trachea brings in enough oxygen and gets rid
    of enough carbon dioxide to support cellular
    respiration.
  • Larger insects must ventilate their tracheal
    systems with rhythmic body movements.

22
Mammalian Respiratory Systems
  • Mammalian lungs are located in the thoraic cavity
    and have a spongy texture. They have a moist
    epithelium which is the respiratory surface.
  • In mammals the trachea and the esophagus are
    right next to each other, so there must be a
    system to separate air from food. Whenever food
    is swallowed the larynx moves up so that the
    epiglottis seals with the glottis. Imagine if
    your windpipe and esophagus were constantly open
    simultaneously?
  • The vocal cords are located in the larynx. Sound
    is produce when muscles in the voice box are
    tensed. These muscles are stretched so that they
    vibrate.

23
Mammalian Respiratory Systems
  • The trachea eventually branches into two bronchi
    which lead to each lung.
  • As soon as we get into the lung, each bronchus
    separates into thinner and finer tubes called
    bronchioles.
  • At the end of all the bronchioles are clusters of
    air sacs called alveoli. It is on the moist
    epithelial surface of the millions of alveoli
    found in lungs that gas exchange occurs.

24
Breathing Ventilates the Lungs
  • The process that ventilates the lungs is called
    breathing. Breathing consists of the inhalation
    and exhalation of air.
  • Mammals ventilate their lungs through a process
    called negative pressure breathing. This
    basically works like a suction pump that sucks
    air into the lungs instead of pushing into the
    lungs.
  • Mammalian breathing relies on muscles that change
    the volume of the rib cage and chest cavity.
  • The muscle responsible for changing the chest
    cavitys volume is called the diaphragm. It is a
    sheet of skeletal muscle which forms the bottom
    layer of the chest cavity.

25
How a Bird Breathes
  • Ventilation is much more complex in birds than in
    mammals. Birds have about nine air sacs separate
    from the lungs that are used to trap air.
  • The air sacs are just pathways to the lungs. The
    lungs are where the official gas exchange occurs.
  • Instead of alveoli, birds have tiny channels
    called parabronchi. Air flows through
    parabronchi in one direction.

26
Control of Breathing in Humans
  • Breathing in humans is a voluntary and
    involuntary action. Although we can control the
    rate at which we breath there are automatic
    mechanisms that regulate our breathing.
  • The breathing control centers are located in two
    distinct regions of the brain, the medulla
    oblongata and the pons.
  • Secondary control over breathing is exerted by
    sensors in the aorta and carotid arteries that
    monitor oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations
    in the blood as well as blood pH.

27
The Role of Partial Pressure Gradients
  • Diffusion of a gas depends on differences in a
    quantity called partial pressure.
  • A gas always diffuses from an area of higher to
    lower pressure.
  • Blood that arrives at the lungs via the pulmonary
    arteries has a lower pressure of oxygen and
    higher pressure of carbon dioxide.

28
Respiratory Pigments
  • Since oxygen has a low solubility in water a
    problem is posed to animals that rely on the
    circulatory system to deliver oxygen.
  • Most animals transport most of their oxygen bound
    to certain proteins called respiratory proteins
    instead of in dissolved form.

29
Respiration Activity
  1. The part of an animals body where gases are
    exchanged with the surrounding environment is
    called the ________________.
  2. _______________ is the mechanism through which
    blood flows in the opposite direction of blood
    flow.
  3. The _______________ is made up if air tubes that
    branch through the entire body.
  4. These sites of gas exchange called ________ are
    restricted to one location.
  5. The ________ moves upward in order to tip the
    epiglottis over the glottis.
  6. Exhaled air rushes by a pair of ____________ in
    the larynx.
  7. From the larynx, air passes into the _________.
  8. The tinies bronchioles dead-end as a cluster of
    air sacs called ________.
  9. Lung volume increases as a result of contraction
    of the rib muscles and the _________.
  10. The volume of air a mammal inhales and exhales
    with each breath is called _____________.

30
Activity Answers
  1. Respiratory Surface
  2. Countercurrent Exchange
  3. Tracheal System
  4. Lungs
  5. Larynx
  6. Vocal Cords
  7. Trachea
  8. Alveoli
  9. Diaphragm
  10. Tidal Volume

31
The Immune System
The body has two mechanisms in defending itself
Nonspecific defense mechanism and specific
defense mechanism. It is then subdivided into
three lines of defenses.
32
Nonspecific Defense Mechanism
  • First line of defense.
  • Is external and consists of epithelial tissues
    that cover and line our bodies and the secretions
    they produce.
  • Examples are skin and mucous membrane.
  • Key terms
  • Antimicrobial proteins function in nonspecific
    defense either by attacking microbes directly or
    by impeding their production.
  • Complement System a group of at least 20 blood
    proteins that cooperate with other defense
    mechanism. It amplifies the inflammatory
    response, enhances phagocytosis, and directly
    lyses pathogens.

33
  • Second line of defense
  • Is internal.
  • It is triggered by chemical signals and involves
    phagocytic cells and antimicrobial protein that
    indiscriminately attacks invaders that penetrates
    the bodys outer barriers.
  • Inflammation is a sign of this defense.
  • Includes phagocytic white blood cells,
    antimicrobial proteins, and the inflammatory
    response.
  • Key Terms
  • Phagocytosis the injection of invading organisms
    by certain types of white cells.
  • Neutrophills white blood cells cells damaged by
    invading microbes release chemical signals that
    attract neutrophils from the blood. They enter
    infected tissue,engulfing and destroying microbes
    there.
  • Macrophages are the largest phagocytic cells.
    They engulf a microbe in vacuole that fuses with
    a lysosome.
  • Natural Killer (NK) cells destroy virus infected
    body cells

Inflammatory response a line of defense
triggered by penetration of skin or mucous
membranes in which small blood vessels in the
vicinity of an injury dilate and become leakier,
enhancing filtration of leukocytes. How is the
inflammatory response initiated? Chemical
signals such as histamine are released by cells
of the body in response to tissue injury.
NK cells
34
Specific Defense Mechanism
  • Third line of defense
  • Known as The Immune System it works
    simultaneously with the second line of defense,
    but it responds in a specific way to particular
    microorganisms, aberrant body cells, toxins, and
    other substances marked by foreign molecules.
  • Includes the production of proteins called
    antibodies and involves a diverse group of blood
    cells called lymphocytes.

35
  • Lymphocytes
  • B lymphocyte (B Cell)a type of lymphocyte that
    develops in the bone marrow and later produces
    antibodies.
  • T lymphocyte (T Cell) a type of lymphocyte
    responsible for cell-mediated immunity that
    differentiates under the influences of the
    thymus.
  • Both B Cell and T Cell circulate throughout the
    blood and lymphocytes and are concentrated in the
    spleen, lymph nodes, and other lymphatic tissues.
  • Specific. Why?
  • Because lymphocytes recognize and respond to
    particular microbes and foreign molecules.
  • How?

T cell
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  • Antigen a foreign macromolecule that does not
    belong to the host organism and that elicits an
    immune response.
  • Antibody an antigen-binding immunoglobulin,
    produced by B Cells, that functions as the
    effector in an immune response

Antigen receptors transmembrane versions of
antibody molecules that B Cells and T Cells use
to recognize specific agents.
  • Effector Cell a muscle cell or gland cell that
    performs the bodys responses to stimuli.
  • Memory Cells long-lived cells bearing receptors
    for the same antigen.

37
Immunity
  • Acquired Immunity highly specific develops only
    after the body is exposed to inducing agents
  • Innate Immunity nonspecific present before any
    exposure to pathogens and is effective from the
    time of birth.

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Activity 1 Immune System
  • Word Bank
  • Complete Sentences
  • ___________ are the largest phagocytic cells that
  • extend long pseudopodia that can attach to
  • polysaccharides on a microbes surface.
  • 2. Damage to tissue by a physical injury or by
    the entry
  • of microorganisms triggers a localized
    ___________,
  • increasing the local blood supply.
  • 3. Attract phagocytes to an area and is secreted
    by
  • endothelial cells blood vessels and monocytes,
    are
  • called__________ molecules.
  • 4. ____________ are short lived cells that combat
    the
  • same antigen.
  • 5. Long lived cells bearing receptors specific
    for the same
  • antigen._____________.
  • 6. How many lines of defense are there ___.
  • 7. Cells damaged by invading microbes release
    chemical
  • signals that attract _________from the blood.
  • 8.________ is produced by circulating leukocytes
    .
  • 9._______T lymphocytes kill cancer cells and
    cells infected by

Effector Cells Macrophages Histamine Chemokines Ne
utrophils Cytotoxic Inflammatory response Memory
cells 3
39
Activity 2 Immune System
  • True or False
  • 1.Lymphocytes are a part of the second line of
    defense.
  • 2.Anti-microbal proteins are the first line of
    defense.
  • 3.B cells are a type of lymphocyte.
  • 4. Natural killers do not attack o the viruses
    membrane and cause the cell to lyse.
  • 5.Inflammatory response is initiated by chemical
    signals.
  • 6.Interestrial fluid is found in blood vessels.
  • 7.Only B cells circulate throughout the blood.
  • 8. Antigens do not interact with specific
    lymphocytes, its at random.
  • 9. Lysozymes digest the cell walls of many
    bacteria.
  • 10.The complement system carries out steps that
    lead to the lyses of microbes.

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Answer
  • Activity 2
  • False
  • False
  • True
  • False
  • True
  • False
  • False
  • False
  • True
  • True
  • Activity1
  • Macrophages
  • Inflammatory response
  • Chemokines
  • Effector cells
  • Memory cells
  • 3
  • Neutrophils
  • Histamine
  • Cytotoxic
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