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Blood By: Dr. Holly Nash-Rule Functions of blood • Distribution/transport - nutrients, wastes, gases, etc. • Communication, i.e., hormones • Prevention of fluid loss – hemostasis, osmosis • Maintenance of pH • Disease/ infection fighting • Heating/Cooling Blood Circulation • Powered by the pumping action of the heart • Functions of blood • Carries respiratory gases, nutrients, and hormones • Helps body regulate temperature • Blood volume • Males: 5–6 liters • Females: 4–5 liters Composition of Blood • Contains cellular and liquid components • A specialized connective tissue • Blood cells—formed elements • Plasma—fluid portion and fibrinogen • Hematocrit—measure of % RBC • Males: 47% ± 5% • Females: 42% ± 5% Major Components of Whole Blood Plasma 55% of whole blood Least dense component Buffy coat Leukocytes and platelets <1% of whole blood 1 Withdraw blood and place in tube. 2 Centrifuge the blood sample. Erythrocytes 45% of whole blood Most dense component Formed elements Blood Plasma • Straw-colored, sticky fluid portion of blood • Approximately 90% water • Contains over 100 kinds of molecules • Ions—Na+ and Cl– • Nutrients—Sugars, amino acids, lipids, wastes, and proteins • Three main proteins • Albumin, globulins, and fibrinogen Formed Elements • Blood cells • Erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets • Staining of blood cells • Acidic dye—eosin; stains pink • Basic dye—methylene blue; stains blue and purple Platelets Neutrophils Erythrocytes Monocyte Lymphocyte Photomicrograph of a human blood smear Erythrocytes • Oxygen-transporting cells—7.5 µm in diameter (diameter of capillary 8—10mm) • Most numerous of the formed elements • Females: 4.3–5.2 million cells/cubic millimeter • Males: 5.2–5.8 million cells/cubic millimeter • Have no organelles or nuclei Erythrocytes • Are packed with oxygen-carrying hemoglobin • Hemoglobin molecule bears four oxygen molecules • Each O2 molecule bears an iron molecule • Results in the oxidation of iron atoms of hemoglobin molecules • Gives blood its red color Erythrocytes • Pick up O2 at lung capillaries • Release O2 across other tissue capillaries • Structural characteristics contribute to respiratory function • Biconcave shape 30% more surface area • 97% hemoglobin • Lack mitochondria • Do not consume O2 they pick up Erythrocyte Leukocytes—White Blood Cells (WBCs) • 4,800–11,000/cubic millimeter • Protect the body from infectious microorganisms • Function outside the bloodstream in loose connective tissue • Circulating leukocytes leave the capillaries • Originate in bone marrow Leukocytes—White Blood Cells (WBCs) • Two types of leukocytes • Granulocytes • Agranulocytes • Girls Never Eat Bananas • Around Long-armed Monkeys Relative Percentages of the Different Types of Leukocytes Differential WBC count (All total 4,800– 10,800/l) Formed elements Platelets Granulocytes Leukocytes Neutrophils (50–70%) Eosinophils (2–4%) Basophils (0.5–1%) Erythrocytes Agranulocytes Lymphocytes (25–45%) Monocytes (3–8%) Granulocytes • Neutrophils—most numerous WBC • Phagocytize and destroy bacteria • Nucleus—has two to six lobes • Granules pick up acidic and basic stains Granulocytes • Eosinophils—compose 1–4% of all WBCs • Play roles in • Ending allergic reactions, parasitic infections • Granules pick up mostly acidic stain Granulocytes • Basophils—about 0.5% of all leukocytes • Nucleus—usually two lobes • Function in inflammation mediation • Granules secrete histamines • Granules pick up mostly basic stain Agranulocytes • Lymphocytes—compose 20–45% of WBCs • The most important cells of the immune system • Nucleus—stains dark purple • Effective in fighting infectious organisms • Act against a specific foreign molecule (antigen) Agranulocytes • Two main classes of lymphocyte • T cells—attack foreign cells directly • B cells—multiply to become plasma cells • Secrete antibodies Agranulocytes • Monocytes—compose 4–8% of WBCs • The largest leukocytes • Nucleus—kidney shaped • Transform into macrophages • Phagocytic cells Platelets • Cell fragments • Break off from megakaryocytes • Function in clotting of blood Blood Cell Formation • Hematopoiesis—process by which blood cells are formed in red marrow • 100 billion new blood cells formed each day Bone Marrow as the Site of Hematopoiesis • Bone marrow—located within all bones • Red marrow—actively generates new blood cells • Contains immature erythrocytes • In adults, red marrow is located • Between trabeculae of spongy bone of axial skeleton • Appendicular girdles • Proximal epiphyses of humerus and femur Bone Marrow as the Site of Hematopoiesis • Yellow marrow—dormant • Contains many fat cells • Located in the long bones of adults Cell Lines in Blood Cell Formation • All blood cells originate in bone marrow • All originate from one cell type • Blood stem cell (pluripotential hematopoeitic stem cell) • Lymphoid stem cells • Give rise to lymphocytes • Myeloid stem cells • Give rise to all other blood cells Proerythroblasts Megakaryoblasts Monoblasts Myeloblasts 27 The End