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Homeostasis & Feedback Unit 3 Life Sciences-HHMI Outreach. Copyright 2009 President and Fellows of Harvard College. Homeostasis Video • https://www.teachertube.com/video/homeostasis-398911 • Process that occurs in all living things • All organ systems work together to achieve homeostasis Life Sciences-HHMI Outreach. Copyright 2009 President and Fellows of Harvard College. What is homeostasis? • Ability of an organism to maintain its internal environment, despite changes to its internal or external environment http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tightrope_artist_Cologne_1.jpg How does homeostasis work? • Feedback pathways • A cellular relay race! • Specific organs and structures must communicate with each other in response to changes in the body http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Southern_12_stage-02_1988.jpg • Keeps levels of certain processes within a normal range What things in your body need to be kept within a range? • Body Temperature • Blood pressure • Blood pH • O2 and CO2 concentration • Osmoregulation-Water balance • Blood glucose • Ion levels • Hormone levels Cellular Relay Race • Stimulus • Receptor • Integrating center • Effector • Response • Reverses the stimulus Feedback Loops: Types • Negative feedback loop • original stimulus reversed • most feedback systems in the body are negative • used for conditions that need frequent adjustment • Positive feedback loop • original stimulus intensified/amplified • seen during normal childbirth Negative Feedback Loop Homeostasis – Negative Feedback Loop • Blood glucose concentrations rise after a sugary meal (the stimulus), the hormone insulin is released and it speeds up the transport of glucose out of the blood and into selected tissues (the response), so blood glucose concentrations decrease (thus decreasing the original stimulus). Homeostasis of Blood Pressure • Baroreceptors in walls of blood vessels detect an increase in BP • Brain receives input and signals blood vessels and heart • Blood vessels dilate, HR decreases • BP decreases Thermoregulation (Regulation of Body Temperature) • Ectothermy (cold-blooded animals) • body temperatures vary with that of the environment • e.g. reptiles, fish, amphibians Endothermy(warm-blooded animals) keep body temperature constant even in winter by increasing metabolic rate e.g. birds, mammals Ectotherm vs Endotherm Endothermy Advantages • Disadvantages Maintains stable body temp – Cooling & heating the body Greater food consumption to meet metabolic needs cooling and heating the body • high levels of aerobic metabolism • Human metabolic mate at • sustains vigorous activity for 200C & at rest much longer than ectotherms 1,300 to 1,800 kcal per day. – Long distance running • American alligator – Flight metabolic rate at 200C & at rest 60 kcal per day at 200C. Mechanisms for thermoregulation • Insulation - Fur Hair Feathers Fat Blubber • Evaporative cooling - sweating, panting, bathing • Shivering • Nonshivering thermogenesis & brown fat • Circulation adaptations - Countercurrent exchange Vasodilatation (cooling) Vasoconstriction (heat conservation) • Behavioral responses Regulating Body Temp in Humans • Some ectotherms that experience subzero body temperatures protect themselves by producing “antifreeze” compounds (cryoprotectants) that prevent ice formation in the cells. – In cold climates, cryoprotectants in the body fluids let overwintering ectotherms, such as some frogs and many arthropods and their eggs, withstand body temperatures considerably below zero. – Cyroprotectants are also found in some Arctic and Antarctic fishes, where temperatures can drop below the freezing point of unprotected body fluids (about -0.7oC). • Cells can often make rapid adjustments to temperature changes. – For example, marked increases in temperature or other sources of stress induce cells grown in culture to produce stress-induced proteins, including heatshock proteins, within minutes. – These molecules help maintain the integrity of other proteins that would be denatured by severe heat. – These proteins are also produced in bacteria, yeast, and plants cells, as well as other animals. – These help prevent cell death when an organism is challenged by severe changes in the cellular environment. Plant responses to water limitations Life Sciences-HHMI Outreach. Copyright 2009 President and Fellows of Harvard College. • When plants under water stress, they close their stomata and decrease their transpiration rates (water loss that occurs when stomata open to get carbon dioxide for photosynthesis) Operons in gene regulation • An operon is a cluster of coordinately regulated genes. It includes structural genes(generally encoding enzymes), regulatory genes(encoding, e.g. activators or repressors) and regulatory sites(such as promoters and operators). Positive Feedback during Childbirth • • • • • Stretch receptors in walls of uterus send signals to the brain Brain induces release of hormone (oxytocin) into bloodstream Uterine smooth muscle contracts more forcefully More stretch, more hormone, more contraction etc. Cycle ends with birth of the baby & decrease in stretch Ripening of Fruit • First fruit that starts to ripen releases ethylene gas that stimulates other fruits to ripen and create more ethylene gas Lactation in Mammals • Suckling by an infant stimulates sensory neurons in the nipples, generating signals in the nervous system that trigger the release of the neurohormone oxytocin • In response to the oxytocin, the mammary gland secrete milk. • Milk release leads to more suckling and more stimulation. Role of Body Systems in Homeostasis Control of Homeostasis • Homeostasis is continually being disrupted by • External stimuli • heat, cold, lack of oxygen, pathogens, toxins • Internal stimuli • Body temperature • Blood pressure • Concentration of water, glucose, salts, oxygen, etc. • Physical and psychological distresses • Disruptions can be mild to severe • If homeostasis is not maintained, death may result Alteration in the mechanisms of feedback often results in deleterious consequences • Diabetes mellitus • Response to decreased insulin • Cannot absorb glucose out of the blood • Dehydration • Response to decreased antidiuretic hormone (ADH) • Grave’s disease (hyperthyroidism) • imbalance of metabolism caused by overproduction of thyroid hormone which control the way that every cell in the body uses energy (metabolism). • Blood clotting