Title: Physiology, Homeostasis, and Temperature Regulation
1Physiology, Homeostasis, andTemperature
Regulation
2Physiology, Homeostasis,and Temperature
Regulation
- Homeostasis Maintaining the Internal Environment
- Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Physiological Regulation and Homeostasis
- Temperature and Life
- Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- The Vertebrate Thermostat
3HomeostasisMaintaining the Internal Environment
- Homeostasis is the maintenance of constant
conditions in the internal environment of an
organism. - Single-celled organisms and simple multicellular
animals meet all of their needs by direct
exchange of substances with the external
environment. - Simple, multicellular animal lifestyles are quite
limited, however, because no part of their bodies
can be more than a few cell layers thick.
4HomeostasisMaintaining the Internal Environment
- Complex, multicellular organisms developed
specialized cells that help maintain an internal
environment. - The internal environment consists of
extracellular fluid that bathes every cell. Cells
exchange materials with this environment. - As multicellular organisms evolved, specialized
cells formed specialized tissues and organs to
control various aspects of the internal
environment. - Homeostasis is an essential feature of complex
animals.
5Figure 41.1 Maintaining Internal Stability while
on the Go
6Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Cells grouped together with the same
characteristics or specializations are called
tissues. - The four basic types of tissue are epithelial,
connective, muscle, and nervous. - An organ is composed of tissues, usually of
several different types.
7Figure 41.2 Four Types of Tissue
8Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Epithelial tissues are sheets of densely packed
and tightly connected cells that cover inner and
outer body surfaces. - Some epithelial tissues have specialized
functions - Secretion of hormones, milk, mucus, digestive
enzymes, sweat - Some have cilia to move substances.
- Some epithelial cells are modified to be
chemoreceptors for taste, smell, etc. - Epithelial cells may have protective, absorptive,
or transport functions.
9Figure 41.3 Epithelial Tissue
10Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Epithelial tissues have distinct inner and outer
surfaces. - The outer surfaces are the apical ends of the
epithelial cells. They face the air (skin, lungs)
or a fluid-filled organ cavity (the lumen of the
gut). - Apical ends may have cilia or be highly folded to
increase surface area. - The inner surfaces are the basil ends they rest
on an extracellular matrix called a basal lamina. - Some epithelial tissue, such as skin, gets much
wear and tear, and thus has a high rate of cell
division and replacement.
11Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Connective tissue consists of cells embedded in
an extracellular matrix that they secrete. - An important component of the extracellular
matrix is protein fibers. - The most common is collagen, a very strong fiber.
- Collagen is very dense in tough tendons and
ligaments. - It also forms a netlike framework for organs, to
give shape and strength. - It has low density as loose strands when it fills
in between organs.
12Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Other protein fibers include elastin which can be
stretched to several times its resting length and
then recoil. - Tissues that are regularly stretched, such as
lung walls and artery walls, have abundant
elastin.
13Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Cartilage and bone connective tissue provide
rigid structural support. - Cartilage is a network of collagen fibers
embedded in a flexible matrix of proteins and
carbohydrates. It is found in the external ears,
nose, and trachea, and lines joints of
vertebrates. - The extracellular matrix of bone is hardened by
the deposition of calcium phosphate.
14Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Adipose tissue is a connective tissue that forms
and stores droplets of lipids. - Adipose tissue serves as a fuel reserve and as a
cushion to protect internal organs. Layers of
adipose tissue under the skin help insulate
against heat loss. - Blood is also a connective tissue made up of
cells in a fluid extracellular matrix called
blood plasma. - Plasma also contains an abundance of proteins.
15Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Muscle tissues are made of elongated cells
capable of contracting and causing movement by a
sliding of protein filaments past each other. - They are the most abundant tissues in the body
and use most of the energy the body produces.
16Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- Nervous tissue is composed of neurons and glial
cells. - Neurons are extremely diverse in size and form.
They function by generating electrochemical
signals in the form of nerve impulses. - These impulses are conducted via long extensions
to other parts of the body where they communicate
with other neurons, muscle cells, or secretory
cells to control activities of organ systems. - Glial cells provide a number of support functions
for neurons.
17Tissues, Organs, and Organ Systems
- A discrete structure that carries out a specific
function in the body is an organ. Examples
include the stomach and the heart. - Most organs include all four tissue types.
- Most organs are part of an organ system, a group
of organs that function together.
18Physiological Regulation and Homeostasis
- Homeostasis depends on the ability to regulate
the functions of organs and organ systems. - Generally, the regulatory systems are the nervous
system and the endocrine system. - Maintenance of homeostasis is dependent on
information received, specifically feedback
information that signals any discrepancy between
the set point (the particular desired condition
or level) and the conditions present. - The difference between the set point and the
feedback information is the error signal.
19Figure 41.4 Control, Regulation, and Feedback
20Physiological Regulation and Homeostasis
- Cells, tissues, and organs are effectors that
respond to commands from regulatory systems.
Effectors are controlled systems. - Regulatory systems obtain, process, and integrate
information, then issue commands to controlled
systems, which effect change. - Regulatory systems receive information as
negative feedback, which causes effectors to
reduce or reverse a process or positive feedback
which tells a regulatory system to amplify a
response. - Feedforward information signals the system to
change the setpoint.
21Temperature and Life
- Living cells tolerate only a narrow range of
temperature. Most cell function is limited to the
range between 0C and 45C. - Even within this range, temperature change may
create problems for animals. - Heat always moves from a warmer to a cooler
object, so any environmental temperature change
will cause change in the temperature of an
organismunless the organism can regulate its
temperature.
22Temperature and Life
- Most physiological processes are
temperature-sensitive, going faster at higher
temperatures. - The sensitivity of a physiological process to
temperature can be described as a quotient, Q10. - Q10 is defined as the rate of a reaction at a
particular temperature (RT) divided by the rate
of that reaction at a temperature 10C lower
(RT-10). - Q10 RT / RT-10
23Temperature and Life
- Most biological Q10 values are between 2 and 3,
meaning that reaction rates double or triple as
temperature increases by 10C. - Since not all of the component reactions in an
animal have the same Q10, temperature change can
disrupt physiological functioning, throwing off
the balance and integration that cell processes
require. - To maintain homeostasis, organisms must either
compensate for or prevent temperature change.
24Figure 41.5 Q10 and Reaction Rate
25Temperature and Life
- The body temperature of some animals is closely
coupled to environmental temperature. - The animal may adjust its metabolic rate (total
cell energy turnover, often measured by O2
consumption) for different seasonal temperatures. - This process is called acclimatization, or
metabolic compensation, which is a biochemical
adjustment of enzyme systems to counter the
effects of temperature. - The result is metabolic function that is much
less sensitive to long-term temperature change
than to short-term thermal fluctuations.
26Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Animals may be classified by how they respond to
environmental temperatures - Homeotherms maintain a constant body temperature.
- In poikilotherms, body temperature changes when
environmental temperature changes. - A third category, heterotherm, fits animals that
regulate body temperature at a constant level
some of the time, such as hibernating mammals.
27Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Animals may also be classified according to the
sources of heat that determine their body
temperature - Ectotherms (most animals aside from mammals and
birds) depend on external heat sources to
maintain body temperature. - Endotherms (all mammals and birds) regulate body
temperature by generating metabolic heat and/or
preventing heat loss.
28Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- If a lizard (an ectotherm) and a mouse (an
endotherm) are placed in a closed chamber in
which the temperature is gradually raised, the
body temperature of the lizard will equilibriate
with that of the chamber, whereas the body
temperature of the mouse will remain constant. - The metabolic rates also respond differently. In
the ectotherm, metabolism decreases as air
temperature decreases. - In the endotherm, metabolic rate increases as
temperature decreases, which increases production
of body heat.
29Figure 41.7 Ectotherms nd Endotherms (Part 1)
30Figure 41.7 Ectotherms nd Endotherms (Part 2)
31Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Ectotherms such as the lizard can use behavior to
regulate body temperature in the natural
environment. - Behaviors include basking in the sun, seeking
shade, burrowing, or orienting the body with
respect to the sun. - Endotherms also use behavioral thermoregulation.
Most animals select the best thermal environment
whenever possible, for example by seeking shade,
breezes, etc.
32Figure 41.8 An Ectotherm Uses Behavior to
Regulate Its Body Temperature
33Figure 41.9 Endotherms Use Behavior to
Thermoregulate
34Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- If the body temperature of an animal is to remain
constant, the heat entering the animal must equal
the heat leaving the animal. This can be
expressed as an energy budget. - Heatin Heatout
- Heatin metabolism solar radiation (Rabs)
- Heatout radiation (Rout) convection
conduction - evaporation
- If heat is entering the body through convection
and/or conduction, the sign of those factors
changes to negative.
35Figure 41.10 Animals Exchange Heat with the
Environment
36Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Any adaptation that influences the ability of an
animal to deal with its thermal environment must
affect one or more components of the budget. - All of the components on the right (heat-loss)
side of the equation depend on the surface
temperature of the animal, which can be
controlled by altering the blood flow to the skin.
37Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Heat exchange between the internal environment
and the skin occurs largely through blood flow. - When blood is close to the surface of the skin,
heat energy carried by the blood is lost to the
environment by the four mechanisms listed above. - When a person is exposed to cold, blood vessels
of the skin constrict, decreasing blood flow and
heat transport to the skin and reducing heat
loss. - Some ectotherms, such as the marine iguana,
control blood flow to the skin as an adaptation
for survival in cold water and hot sun.
38Figure 41.11 Some Ectotherms Regulate Blood Flow
to the Skin (Part 1)
39Figure 41.11 Some Ectotherms Regulate Blood Flow
to the Skin (Part 2)
40Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- Some ectotherms raise their body temperature by
producing heat. - The flight muscles of insects must be warmed to
3540C before flight can occur. This is achieved
by flight muscle contractions, which generate
heat in a manner similar to shivering in mammals.
- Honeybees regulate temperature in a hive by group
clustering to produce metabolic heat so the brood
temperature stays at about 34C even as
temperatures outside of the hive drop well below
freezing.
41Maintaining Optimal Body Temperature
- In most fish, blood passing through the gills
comes in close contact with water, so the
temperature of the blood tends to be about the
same temperature as the water. - Some large fish, such as bluefin tuna and great
white shark, can raise body temperature 1015C
above the water temperature. - In the large swimming muscles, heat is exchanged
through a countercurrent heat exchanger, a
structural plan that allows cool blood returning
from the gills to be warmed by warm blood from
the muscles.
42Figure 41.12 Cold and Hot Fish
43Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- Endotherms respond to environmental temperature
change by changing rates of heat production. - Within a narrow range of temperatures, the
thermoneutral zone, the metabolic rate of
endotherms is low and independent of temperature. - The metabolic rate of a resting animal within the
thermoneutral zone is called the basal metabolic
rate (BMR). - The BMR of an endotherm is about six times that
of an ectotherm of the same size and at the same
body temperature.
44Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- Across all the endotherms, BMR per gram of tissue
increases as animals get smaller. - The reason for this is unknown.
- It was once thought that larger animals evolved
lower metabolic rates to prevent overheating
because they have low surface areavolume ratios. - However, the relationship between metabolic rate
and body mass holds even for very small organisms
and for ectotherms, in which overheating is not
usually a problem.
45Figure 41.13 The Mouse-to-Elephant Curve (Part 1)
46Figure 41.13 The Mouse-to-Elephant Curve (Part 2)
47Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- The thermoneutral zone is bounded by a lower
critical and upper critical temperature. - When environmental temperature falls below the
lower critical temperature, mammals
thermoregulate by generating heat (thermogenesis)
through shivering and nonshivering heat
production. - Birds use only the shivering mechanism.
- In shivering, skeletal muscles use ATP to release
only heat. Active body movement also generates
heat.
48Figure 41.14 Environmental Temperature and
Mammalian Metabolic Rates
49Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- Most nonshivering heat production occurs in
specialized adipose tissue called brown fat. - The tissue looks brown because of its abundant
mitochondria and rich blood supply. - Brown fat cells have the protein thermogenin
which uncouples proton movement from ATP
production, so that no ATP is produced, but heat
is released. - Brown fat is commonly found in newborn infants
and animals that hibernate.
50Figure 41.15 Brown Fat
51Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- The coldest environments are almost devoid of
ectotherm reptiles or amphibians. - Endotherms have many adaptation for reducing heat
loss in cold environments - Reduction of surface-to-volume ratios of the body
by short appendages and round body shapes - Thermal insulation by thick layers of fur,
feathers, and fat. - Decreasing blood flow to the skin by constricting
blood vessels, especially in appendages
52Figure 41.16 Adaptations to Hot and Cold
Climates (Part 1)
53Figure 41.16 Adaptations to Hot and Cold
Climates (Part 2)
54Thermoregulation in Endotherms
- In any climate, getting rid of excess heat may
also be a problem, especially during exercise. - Reduction or loss of fur or hair allows for
easier loss of heat from the body to the
environment. - Seeking contact with water cools the skin because
water absorbs heat to a greater capacity than
does air. - Sweating or panting to increase evaporation
provides concomitant cooling (although this
benefit may be offset by water loss).
55The Vertebrate Thermostat
- The regulatory system for body temperature in
vertebrates can be thought of as a thermostat. - This regulator is at the bottom of the brain in a
structure called the hypothalamus. - The temperature of the hypothalamus itself is the
major source of feedback information in many
species. Cooling it causes fish and reptiles to
seek a warmer environment, and warming it
triggers the reverse behavior.
56The Vertebrate Thermostat
- In endotherms, cooling the hypothalamus causes
the body temperature to rise. - Warming the hypothalamus causes dilation of blood
vessels in the skin and/or sweating or panting in
attempts to lower body temperature.
57Figure 41.17 The Hypothalamus Regulates Body
Temperature
58The Vertebrate Thermostat
- The hypothalamus generates a set point like a
setting on a thermostat. Hypothalamic temperature
is a negative feedback system. - Vertebrates also integrate other sources of data,
such as information from temperature sensors in
the skin. - Mammals also have the ability to shift the
hypothalamic set points. - The temperature of the skin can be considered
feedforward information that adjusts the
hypothalamic set point. - Set points are also higher during wakefulness and
the active part of the daily cycle.
59Figure 41.18 Adjustable Set Points
60The Vertebrate Thermostat
- A fever is a rise in body temperature in response
to pyrogens. - Exogenous pyrogens come from foreign substances
such as invading bacteria or viruses. - Endogenous pyrogens are produced by cells of the
immune system when they are challenged. - Pyrogens cause a rise in the hypothalamic set
point, and body temperature rises until it
matches the new set point.
61The Vertebrate Thermostat
- Immune system cells called macrophages attack
pyrogens and release interleukins, chemicals that
signal other cells and trigger other responses,
including release of prostaglandins. - Interleukins also raise the hypothalamic set
point. - Aspirin is an inhibitor of prostaglandin
synthesis, so it lowers the set point and makes
the body more comfortable. - Evidence suggests that moderate fevers help the
body fight infections, but extreme fevers can be
dangerous.
62The Vertebrate Thermostat
- Animals can save energy by turning down the
thermostat to below normal (hypothermia). - Many animals use regulated hypothermia as a means
of surviving periods of cold and food scarcity. - An adaptive hypothermia called daily torpor can
drop body temperature 1020C and save
considerable metabolic energy. - Regulated hypothermia lasting days or weeks with
drops to very low temperatures is called
hibernation. The reduction in metabolic rate
results in enormous energy savings.
63Figure 41.19 A Ground Squirrel Enters Repeated
Bouts of Hibernation during Winter
64The Vertebrate Thermostat
- Arousal from hibernation occurs when the
hypothalamic set point returns to normal. - Many species of mammals hibernate, but only one
bird, the poorwill, has been found to do so. - This drastic decrease of the set point probably
came about as an evolutionary extension of the
set point decrease that accompanies sleep in
nonhibernators.