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Title: 1001NSC Human Biology Semester Summary Notes
Description: My notes are a collated summary of the multiple resources we were provided with for this subject. By combining the key points from the lecture slides, course guide, prescribed textbook (Human Anatomy & Physiology E9 by Marieb) and recommended readings, I was able to create a clear yet comprehensive set of notes to which I focused my study. Using these notes, I found my study to be well directed and time-efficient, ultimately preparing me for success in the mid-semester and final exams. I recommend printing the entire set of notes, binding them, then using them as a guide in conjunction with lecture capture as this worked well for me.
Description: My notes are a collated summary of the multiple resources we were provided with for this subject. By combining the key points from the lecture slides, course guide, prescribed textbook (Human Anatomy & Physiology E9 by Marieb) and recommended readings, I was able to create a clear yet comprehensive set of notes to which I focused my study. Using these notes, I found my study to be well directed and time-efficient, ultimately preparing me for success in the mid-semester and final exams. I recommend printing the entire set of notes, binding them, then using them as a guide in conjunction with lecture capture as this worked well for me.
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1001NSC Human Biology Semester Summary
Griffith University, Nathan Campus
Semester 1, 2014
Topics included:
- Blood
- The Cardiovascular System
- The Lymphatic System
- The Inflammatory Response
- The Immune System
- The Respiratory System
- The Digestive System
- Accessory Structures of the Digestive System
- The Renal System
- Sexual Reproduction
- The Male Reproductive System
- The Female Reproductive System
- Embryonic Development
Blood
Interstitial fluid (inside tissues)
o Bathes the cells of the body
Nutrients and oxygen diffuse from the blood into interstitial fluid and then into the cells
Wastes move in reverse direction
Blood
o Functions
Transports nutrients/wastes/hormones
Regulates of body temperature/pH
Prevents of blood loss/infection
o Physical characteristics
Thicker (more viscous) than water
Temp of 38oC
pH 7
...
45 (alkaline)
8% total body weight
5-6L males, 4-5L females
o Composition- 55% plasma, 45% cells
Cellular- all originate form pluripotent stem cell
Plasma- no cellular components
1
...
<1% White blood cells (leukocytes)
Properties:
o Amoeboid movement
Crawling-like motility powered by actin cytoskeleton
Allows cells to emigrate and seek-out bacteria
o Chemotaxis
Directed migration of cells in response to chemical gradient
Positive chemotaxis= chemoattractant
Eg
...
Platelets (thrombocytes)
Derived from giant bone marrow cell, megakaryocyte
Fragments of cell membrane and cytoplasm (no nucleus)
Production stimulated by thrombopoietin (TPO)
Hormone produced in liver
Contain assortment of proteins/other molecules
Enable them to stick together in clot formation and tissue repair
o
Plasma (non-cellular components)
90% Water
7% Plasma proteins
60% Albumin (major plasma protein)
Produced in liver
Transports molecules around circulatory system
Buffers blood pH
Aids in body heat distribution
Maintains osmotic pressure of blood
Decreased albumin leads to fluid leakage causing oedema
The blood clotting system
Hemostasis -stopping of bleeding
Vascular spasm
Platelet plug formation
Coagulation (blood clotting)
Serum= plasma without clotting system proteins
Globulins
Alpha, beta and gamma
Other solutes
Electrolytes, nutrients, hormones, gases, waste etc
...
Contraction of skeletal muscles in nearby tissues
2
...
Presence of valves in lymph ducts
4
...
Vasodilation
Increase in diameter/permeability of blood vessels
2
...
Inflammatory mediator production/release (elicit vasodilation/diapedesis)
Chemotactic factors released from sites of inflammation stimulate diapedesis of WBC's
(neutrophils)
Neutrophils phagocytose inflammatory materials (bacteria, damaged tissue etc
...
Chemical substances- toxins, venoms, proteases ect
...
Leucocytosis
Bone marrow stimulated to release more WBC's into bloodstream to replace those lost
Fever
o
Systemic response to infection
Caused by pyrogens (chemical substance released by WBC's/macrophages exposed to antigens)
Alter thermostat regulation of hypothalamus
Bacteria/viruses like to reproduce at body temp→body heats up as defence
The Immune System
Acquired- lymphocytes are taught what is self and non-self
o Naturally acquired
Active- infection; contact with pathogen
Passive- antibodies pass from mother to foetus
Via placenta or breast milk
o Artificially acquired
Active- vaccine; dead or attenuated pathogens
Passive- injection of immune serum (antibodies)
Antigens
o Any chemical which provokes immune response (chemicals on surface of bacteria, virus etc
...
)
Strongest antigens usually proteins
o Antigenic determinant- region of antigen which is immunogenic (recognised by antibody)
Antibodies (immunoglobulins Ig)
o Protective proteins secreted by activated B cells
o Bind to antigens
o 5 different types
IgG- most abundant
IgA- found in bodily secretions (saliva, mucus etc
...
o Alveolar pores
Connect adjacent alveoli
Allow air pressure to equalise, provides alternate route for air flow
The mechanics of breathing
o Breathing= movement of air into and out of lungs
o Under voluntary and involuntary control
o Occurs in response to pressure changes
Controlled by volume changes in thoracic and pleural cavities
Coordinated contractions of intercostal (between rib) and diaphragm muscles
Inspiration- diaphragm contracts/chest outwards→volume increases→negative
pressure
Expiration- diaphragm relaxes/chest inwards→volume decreases→positive pressure
Intrapleural pressure stops lungs collapsing
Intrapulmonary pressure= 760mmHg, Intrapleural pressure= 756mmHg
Negative pressure of pleural cavity prevents lungs collapsing
Atelectasis (lung collapse)
When air enters pleural cavity via chest wound/rupture of visceral pleura
Pneumothorax
Presence of air within intrapleural space resulting in atelectasis
Treated by closing the "hole" and removing air
If one lung does collapse, it will not usually affect the other
Gas Exchange in Respiration
o Occurs by simple diffusion
Dependent upon partial pressure (concentration) of each gas
Partial pressures of O2 and CO2 at particular sites determine their uptake/unloading
Respiratory membrane (PO2 high in alveoli)
O2 taken up by haemoglobin
CO2 released into lungs
Body tissues and blood (PO2 low in tissue)
O2 released to the tissues
CO2 taken up by the plasma and RBCs
o
o
CO2 transport
CO2 is much more soluble in water than O2
Majority of CO2 is carried in plasma (~70%)
Mainly transported as soluble bicarbonate (HCO3-) ions in plasma
Carbonic acid-bicarbonate buffer system maintains blood pH
The more CO2→ more acidic blood pH is
Enhanced by carbonic anhydrase (enzyme in RBCs)
Some (20-30%) bound to haemoglobin
Binds to amino acids of globulin protein subunits (not heme)
Forms carbamino-heamoglobin
O2 transport
Relatively poor solubility in water, only small amount transported in plasma
Majority bound to heme in haemoglobin of RBCs
Allosteric binding- each O2 bound enhances the binding of the next O2
Oxyhaemoglobin (HbO2)= fully/partially saturated with O2
Deoxyhaemoglobin (HHb)= no O2 bound
Rate of O2 binding is regulated by:
PO2 (uptake increases with O2 partial pressure)
PCO3 (uptake decreases with CO2 partial pressure)
Temperature (increased temp
...
Duodenum (first 25cm)
Contains bile duct from liver and pancreatic duct from pancreas
Duodenal glands secrete alkaline, bicarbonate rich mucus→neutalise stomach acid
2
...
5m)
3
...
6m)
Mesentery- serous membrane that binds intestines together/suspends them in abdominal wall
Greater omentum- connective tissue and layer of fat for insulation, protection, support
Main site for nutrient absorption
Very efficient, >90% absorption of fluid due to large surface area
Surface area increase by:
Plicae circulares (circular folds of mucosa)
Villi (finger-like projections of folded mucosa)
Blood capillary system- absorbs amino acids/simple
sugars into blood
Lymphatic vessel (lacteal)- absorbs lipids
Microvilli (of individual cells)
Brush-border cells
Responsible for nutrient absorption
Contain disaccharidases, lipases, proteinases
Mucosa contains crypts (pits) which secrete intestinal fluid
Bile secreted by liver enters via the gallbladder at the common bile duct in the duodenum
Emulsifies fats aiding in lipid absorption into lacteals
o
o
o
o
o
o
Large intestine
Four main sections:
1
...
Colon
Ascending, transverse, descending, sigmoid
3
...
Anal canal
Internal anal sphincter- involuntary smooth muscle
External anal sphincter- external skeletal muscle
Teniae coli- the longitudinal muscle is condensed into 3 ribbons
Pulls large intestine into sacs called haustra
Main site of water absorption
Large number of blood vessels
No villi are present
Large number of goblet cells (lots of mucus)
Contains the bacteria flora
Synthesise B complex vitamins and vitamin K
Haemorrhoids:
Enlarged, inflamed veins (usually varicose) within the anus
Due to increased pressure on the anal veins
Common in pregnancy, prolonged sitting, constipation, forms of obesity
...
5L per day of saliva per day
Moistens food to aid in swallowing
Cleanses the mouth/prevents overgrowth and infection of harmful bacteria
IgA antibodies
Lysozymes (bacteriostatic enzyme)
Defensins (antibiotic proteins)
Cyanide compound
Dissolves food particles so they can be tasted
Contains salivary amylase (commences starch breakdown)
Pancreas
o Exocrine: (Acini)
Acinar cells- secrete pancreatic juice into GI tract via duct
Alkaline (pH 8) bicarbonate-rich mixture
Neutralises acidic chyme from stomach
Contains enzyme precursors for protein digestion
Duct joins the common bile duct to enter the small intestine
o Endocrine: (Islets of Langerhans)
Alpha cells- secrete glucagon→ increase blood glucose levels
Stimulates glucose release from liver where it is stored as glycogen
Beta cells- secrete insulin→ decrease blood glucose levels
Enhances membrane transport of glucose into tissue cells
After glucose enters the cell, insulin triggers enzymatic activities:
Catalyse oxidation of glucose for ATP production
Joins glucose together to form glycogen
Converts glucose to fat
Delta cells- secrete somatostatin→ inhibits release of glucagon and insulin
Gamma cells- secrete pancreatic polypeptide→ reduces appetite
Liver
o
Three main functions in digestive system:
1
...
5 to 1L per day)
Produced/secreted by hepatocytes
Bile then drains into ducts →eventually into gallbladder
Derived from cholesterol and cholic salts
High cholesterol levels lead to gallstones (crystals of pure cholesterol)
pH 7
...
6 (alkaline)
Emulsifies fats→aids in fat digestion/absorbtion into lacteals
Deodorises faeces
Bilirubin- main bile pigment (greenish/brown colour)
Waste product of heme from worn out RBC's
Metabolised by bacteria in small intestine→urobilinogen (brown colour of faeces)
2
...
Primary site of glucose storage for the body
In the form of glycogen (a complex polysaccharide)
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Composed of hexagonal liver lobules
Contain a central vein with sheets of hepatocytes radiation outwards
Portal triad at each point of the hexagon
Consists of an arteriole, a venule and a bile duct
Blood from arteriole/venule pass down sinusoids (leaky capillaries)
Removes debris and worn-out blood cells
Surrounded by sheets of hepatocytes
Process blood-borne nutrients
Store fat-soluble vitamins
Detoxify the blood of toxins/metabolic wastes
Produce bile→secreted into bile canaliculi that rins into bile duct of portal triad
Hepatitis:
Inflammation of the liver caused by dug toxicity, poisoning, viral infection
Common hepatitis viruses A,B,B,D,E,F
HVA, HVE- transmitted by contaminated food/water (vaccines available)
HVB, HVC- carried in infected blood products/body fluids
Vaccine for HVB, no vaccine or cure for HVC
HVD- mutated virus that needs HVB to be infectious
HVF- little in known
Heptomegaly- enlargement of the liver
Jaundice- bilirubin build-up in blood→yellow discolouration in skin
Cirrhosis:
Progressive, chronic liver inflammation typically a result of alcoholism
Alcohol poisons/wears out hepatocytes
Fat accumulates in hepatocytes→fibrous scar tissue forms→liver becomes filled with fat/scar tissue
Scar tissue starts to tighten→blocks blood supply→liver dies
Gallbladder
o Small green sac lined with smooth muscle
o Right, lower surface of liver
o Stores and concentrates bile before release into small intestine
o Contraction stimulated by intestinal hormone cholecystokinin
Intestinal hormone released when acidic, fatty chyme enters small intestine
The Renal System
Functions:
o Maintains water, salt and pH balance of blood (filters ~200L of blood per day)
o Removes toxic metabolic waste products (urea, creatinine, uric acid etc
...
5L/day)
o Recycles water/salts
eliminates the need for constant drinking
o Hormone production
Erythropoietin to stimulate erythropoiesis (production of RBCs)
o Enzyme production
Renin for blood pressure regulation
o Activate Vitamin D to its active D3 form (calcitriol) to assist in bone formation
o Supplies glucose during prolonged fasting (via gluconeogenesis)
Kidneys
o Filtration of wastes from blood stream (highly vascularised organ)
o Both are in the upper abdominal cavity, protected by the 12th rib
Right kidney is usually lower than the left
o Protected and insulated by:
Renal fascia- outer, dense, fibrous tissue
Adipose layer- middle layer of fat
The renal capsule- inner, thin, shiny membrane on kidney surface
o Three regions:
Outer cortex
Site of filtration
Light-coloured, granular appearance
Inner medulla
Site of reabsorption/excretion
Dark, reddish-brown colour
Arranged into series of pyramids
Papilla- point of each pyramid (points inwards towards calyces)
Renal pelvis
Central junction that papilla points to
Close by, a renal artery enters and a renal vein leaves
Large, funnel-shaped collecting tube
Calyces- branching extensions of renal pelvis
Collect urine draining from the pyramids
Walls of calyces, renal pelvis and ureter contain smooth muscle
Propel urine along by peristalsis
Nephron- filtration unit
o Consists of:
Glomerulus
Pinhead sized tuft or arterioles with fenestrations (tiny holes)
Allows fluids, solutes, wastes to leak out of bloodstream
Basement membrane does not allow blood cells/large solutes to leak out
Podocytes further filter fluid which has passed though basement membrane
Pedicles- numerous foot-like projections restrict surface area for filtration
Regulate amount of fluid being filtered
Glomerular (Bowman's) capsule
Cup-like structure holding the glomerulus
Allows fluid to pass from blood to collecting tubules
Renal capsule= glomerulus + Bowman's capsule
Renal tubule- collecting tube divided into 3 regions:
Proximal convoluted tubule
Loop of Henle
Distal convoluted tubule
Collecting duct
o
Urine formation involves 3 major processes
1
...
Tubular reabsorption
Within the proximal convoluted tubule the following are reabsorbed back into the blood:
Glucose, lactate, amino acids, 65% sodium ions, 65% of water
Within the loop of Henle:
Descending limb
Freely permeable to water, impermeable to solutes/salts
Extracellular space becomes hypertonic due to active pumping in ascending
limb
Water moves by osmosis out of the descending limb and into the
extracellular space
Ascending limb
Impermeable to water
Actively reabsorbs salt (sodium/chloride ions) back into blood from the urine
Within the distal convoluted tubule/collecting duct:
Hormone-dependent permeability to water
Antidiuretic hormone (ADH)
Released by posterior pituitary gland
Regulates water permeability of the collecting ducts
Under ADH water is reabsorbed into blood→urine becomes more concentrated
Alcohol inhibits ADH release
Decreased water reabsorption, increased urine output, dehydration
Aldosterone
A mineralocorticoid secreted by adrenal glands
Enhances sodium reabsorption
Water follows sodium back into blood (increases blood pressure)
Urine becomes more concentrated
Sodium reabsorption coupled with potassium secretion into urine
3
...
)
Elimination of undesirable/toxic substances (urea, uric acid etc
...
Primary spermatocyte stage- daughter cell (from spermatogonia mitosis) separates and enters
meiosis
2
...
Spermatids are produced from second meiotic division
Round, haploid cells without characteristic sperm shape
4
...
Growth
Change in size due to mitosis
2
...
Morphogenesis
Change in overall shape/organisation of embryo
Fertilisation
o Combining of gametes to form zygote usually occurs in fallopian tubes
Ovum must be fertilized within 12-24 hours after ovulation
Takes 72 hours for ovum to reach uterus
o Why so many sperm?
Ejaculation contains 300 million
Only 2000 reach ovum
Loss by leakage
Killed by acidic vaginal environment/destroyed by WBC's in uterus
Failure to penetrate mucus of cervical canal
Half will enter wrong fallopian tube
o Sperm can reach ovum in 10 minutes but cannot fertilize until capacitation (`10 hours)
Removal of adherent seminal plasma proteins
Reorganisation of cell membrane lipids and proteins
Prior to ejaculation sperm head contained much cholesterol
Toughens membrane preventing pre-mature release of acrosomal digestive
enzymes
Acidic vaginal fluid washes away cholesterol/inhibitory factors
Influx of extracellular calcium (due to increased sperm head permeability)
Increase in cyclic AMP
Decrease in sperm intracellular pH
Sperm motility increases
o After capacitation sperm makes contact with zona pellucida of ovum
Carbohydrate groups on zona pellucida glycoproteins function as sperm receptors
Receptor-ligand interact (allows species specificity)
Sperm surface proteins bind to receptors triggering acrosomal reaction
Release of digestive enzymes from acrosome of sperm
Cellular extension (actin filaments) from head guides sperm nucleus into cytoplasm of ovum
Monozygotic twins: (identical)
o Single ovum fertilised by one sperm
o Inner cell mass separates into two identical cell masses
o Single, shared placenta (one twin may receive more placental blood flow)
Dizygotic twins:
o Two separate ova fertilized by two different sperm
o Fused placenta
Blocks to polyspermy
o Humans only allow entry of one sperm into ovum (monospermy)
o Fast block
Sperm enters ovum membrane
Sodium ions rush into ovum
Ovum membrane depolarises→no other sperm can penetrate
o Slow block (cortical reaction)
Sperm enters ovum
Calcium ions released from ovum's ER
Cortical granules release enzymes (zonal inhibitory proteins) between ovum membrane and
zona pellucida
Enzymes attract water filling the space→washes away/detaches other sperm
Cleavage
o First four cell divisions after fertilisation
o No increase in overall size of embryo
Morula (3 days)
o 16-cell structure
o Undergoes surface smoothing (compaction)
Expression of first cell adhesion molecules
Boundaries between adjacent cells become less obvious as cells become more adhesive
Bastula (4-6days)
o 100 embryonic cells organised into blastula (blastocyst)
Trophoectoderm- outer, single layer of trophoblast cells
Forms placenta
Inner cell mass
Forms embryonic disk→embryo
Blastocyst cavity
Implantation (6 days)
o Syncytiotrophoblast cells release digestive enzymes onto endometrium
o Blastocyst attaches to uterine wall 6 days after ovulation
o Syncytiotrophoblast grows roots and digests way into endometrium
Secretes HCG→stimulates corpus leteum hormone secretion to maintain endometrium and
prevent menstruation
Becomes the chorion (blood supply) of the placenta
o Endometrium completely encloses implanting embryo
Ectopic Pregnancy
o Blastocyst implants somewhere other than uterus
Mostly in uterine tube (tubal pregnancy)
Tube unable to expand enough and ruptures by Week 12
Embryo may re-implant in abdominopelvic cavity (adequate blood supply)
Gastrulation (2 weeks)
o Inner cell mass becomes three distinct tissue layers- primary germ layers
1
...
Mesoderm
Musculo-skeletal system
Circulatory system
Dermis of skin
Sub-epithelial layers of digestive tract/respiratory system
Urinary system
3
...
Amniotic membrane (amnion)
From ectoderm which completely surrounds embryo
Fills with amniotic fluid
Protects and supports embryo
2
...
Chorionic membrane (chorion)
From mesoderm
Outer layer- combines with the cytotrophoblast cells to form chorionic villi (blood
capillaries) within placenta
Inner layer- protective layer around amniotic membrane
Extra-embryonic coelom- space between inner/outer layers
Placenta
o Organ connecting foetus to uterine wall
o Allows nutrient uptake, waste elimination, gas exchange via mother's blood supply
Foetal and maternal blood do NOT mix
o Placental conductivity increase as chorionic villi grow since membranes become thinner
Foetal circulation
o Umbilical-placental circuit via umbilical cord
o Spaces in mesoderm become lined with endothelium→merge into blood and lymph vessels
o Two side-by-side tubes fuse to form heart
Prenatal Nutrition
o Trophoblastic nutrition
Embryo is nourished by digestion of endometrial cells and yolk sac
o Placental
Foetus is nourished from mother's bloodstream through placenta
Parturition (40 weeks)
o During last two weeks of pregnancy, oestrogen reaches highest level
Stimulates myometrium to form abundance of oxytocin receptors
o Cells within foetus begin to produce oxytocin
Acts on placenta causing release of prostaglandins
o Oxytocin/prostaglandins are powerful uterine muscle stimulants
Oxytocin also hormonal trigger for milk ejection from female mammary glands
o Increasing physical/emotional stress activates hypothalamus
Triggers posterior pituitary gland to secrete oxytocin
Positive feedback mechanism commences
Untimely spurts of oxytocin can provoke premature births
Events of labour
o Process by which foetal is expelled from the uterus via the vagina
o Onset decreases effects of progesterone and increases effects of placental hormones:
Relaxin- causes pelvic ligaments and pubic symphysis to relax, widen and become more flexible
Human placental lactogen (hPL)- stimulates maturation of breasts for lactation
Human chorionic thyrotropin- ensures foetus has adequate calcium
False labour- week, irregular contraction (Bracton Hicks contractions)
True labour- uterine contractions occur at regular intervals
o Contractions produce strong pain
o As interval between contractions shortens, contractions intensify (positive feedback)
o Discharge of blood containing mucus
o Three stages of true labour
Dilation
Dilation of cervix
Rupture of amniotic membrane (water break)
Expulsion
From complete cervical dilation to delivery of baby
The placental stage
Placenta and foetal membranes are expelled
Powerful uterine contractions constrict blood vessels torn during delivery
o During labour adrenal glands of foetus secrete epinephrine and norepinephrine
Protect newborn against stress
Puerperium (until 6 weeks after pregnancy)
o Maternal reproductive organs return to pre-pregnancy state
Uterus undergoes involution- reduction in size due to tissue catabolism
Cervix loses elasticity and regains pre-pregnancy firmness
Lochia- uterine discharge 2-4 weeks after deliver
Initially containing blood and then serous fluid derived from former placental site
Post-natal development
o Respiratory adaption
Baby's oxygen supply from mother ceases
Blood carbon dioxide level increases stimulating respiratory centre in brain stem
Inspiratory muscles stimulated to contract→vigorous exhalation and baby naturally begins to
cry
o Cardiovascular adaption
Foramen ovale between atria closes at moment of birth to divert deoxygenated blood to lungs
After umbilical cord is severed, distal portions of umbilical arteries become medial umbilical
ligaments and the umbilical vein becomes the round ligament of the liver
o Immunological adaption
Maternal antibody (IgG) diffuses across placenta/IgA in breast milk
Title: 1001NSC Human Biology Semester Summary Notes
Description: My notes are a collated summary of the multiple resources we were provided with for this subject. By combining the key points from the lecture slides, course guide, prescribed textbook (Human Anatomy & Physiology E9 by Marieb) and recommended readings, I was able to create a clear yet comprehensive set of notes to which I focused my study. Using these notes, I found my study to be well directed and time-efficient, ultimately preparing me for success in the mid-semester and final exams. I recommend printing the entire set of notes, binding them, then using them as a guide in conjunction with lecture capture as this worked well for me.
Description: My notes are a collated summary of the multiple resources we were provided with for this subject. By combining the key points from the lecture slides, course guide, prescribed textbook (Human Anatomy & Physiology E9 by Marieb) and recommended readings, I was able to create a clear yet comprehensive set of notes to which I focused my study. Using these notes, I found my study to be well directed and time-efficient, ultimately preparing me for success in the mid-semester and final exams. I recommend printing the entire set of notes, binding them, then using them as a guide in conjunction with lecture capture as this worked well for me.