Homeostasis
Homeostasis
Homeostasis
Homeostasis, read pg
817, SOLOMON
TEXTBOOK
Temperature
Blood pressure
Homeostasis
Osmotic pressure
“steady state”
A process of maintaining
constant physical and
pH value
[sugar]
chemical factor within an
[salt] internal body environment
WHY? Why is homeostasis important?
• Biochemical reactions are controlled
by enzymes.
– Changes in pH and temperatures
– affect the rate of enzymes-controlled
reactions, denature the enzymes and
proteins
• Water moves in and out of cells by
osmosis
– Maintaining constant water potential in
the interstitial fluid, avoid cellular
Mechanism of Homeostasis
• All homeostatic mechanisms
– use negative feedback to maintain a constant
value (set point)
• Feedback system (feedback loop)
– A cycle of events, status of a body condition is
monitored, evaluated, changed, remonitored,
reevaluated
• Negative feedback
– Whenever a change occurs in a system, the
change“Regulatory
trigger a corrective
mechanismmechanism
maintainto
start, brings the system
homeostasis back negative
through to normal
feedback loops”
Negative feedback
• Applies to biological system, electronic circuits
(e.g. central heating system, oven, air-conditioner
system)
– When your oven gets too hot, heating switches off; allows
the oven to cool down.
– Eventually it will get cold, the heating will switch back in,
so raising the temperature once again.
• In a system controlled by negative feedback, the
set level is never perfectly maintained, but
constantly fluctuate/ oscillates within the set point.
Constant value
Homeostasis
• Internal conditions vary, but always within
relatively narrow limits.
• Hormone-controlled homeostatic
mechanism, significant time-lag before
corrective mechanism can be activated.
– It takes times for protein synthesis to
commence, the hormone to diffuse into the
blood stream and for it to circulate around the
body and take effect.
3 components in homeostatic control
mechanism
Detect
1. Receptors changes
Define
2. Control changes
centre
Triggers appropriate
corrective actions
is achieved by:
Negative feedback
Types of feedback
(1) Negative feedback
Thermoregulation
> Is the regulation of body
temperature
References: pg
822
Thermoregulation
• Classification based on the source of
heat in determining body temperature
– use metabolic heat to regulate body
temperature: Endotherms
– use environmental energy and behavioral
adaptations to regulate its body
temperature: Ectotherms
• Behavioral adaptation: hibernation
• E.g. lying in the sun when cold, moving
into shade when hot
Ectotherms and Endotherms
• Ectotherms (Ecto-: outside)
– Absorb heat from their surrounding
Stratum
corneum Melanocyte
Epidermis (pigment cell)
Stratum
basale Hair erector
muscle
Dermis Hair shaft
Sensory receptor
(Pacinian
Subcutaneous corpuscle)
tissue
Artery
Hair follicle
Vein Sweat gland Sebaceous
gland
• In mammals, the integumentary system
– Acts as insulating material
Fig. 39-1, p. 829
(a) Erector muscle (b) Erector muscle
contract relax
Vasodilation and vasoconstriction
• Vasodilation of cutaneous blood vessels
– Blood flow in the skin increases, facilitating heat
loss.
• In humans, the
Thermostat in
hypothalamus
activates cooling
hypothalamus mechanisms. Blood vessels
in skin dilate:
(underside part of the capillaries fill
• Heat-promoting mechanisms
– Skin hair raised, trapping air
– Vasoconstriction of cutaneous blood vessels
(skin arterioles constrict)
– Shivering
– Glands secreting adrenaline and thyroxine
EFFECT:
Increase in Increase sweating,
blood Detected by Vasodilation,
temperature hypothalamus Hairs lay flat
EFFECT:
Decrease sweating,
Decrease in
Detected by Vasoconstriction,
blood
hypothalamus Hairs raised,
temperature
Shivering
Blood glucose homeostasis
Read pg 1043
Blood glucose homeostasis
Homeostasis:
Blood glucose level
4 Glucagon promotes 90 mg/100 mL
the breakdown of Hypoglycemic
glycogen in the
liver and the STIMULUS:
release of glucose Blood glucose
into the blood, level drops 3
increasing blood below set point. When blood glucose
glucose level. level drops, the pancreas
secretes the hormone
α-cells glucagon into the blood.
Figure 41.3
Increase in Detected by β EFFECT:
blood glucose Increase in
cells (islets of √ Enhances the
Langerhans in insulin
uptake of glucose
secretion
the pancreas) in body cells.
√ Stimulates the
liver and muscle
cells to store
glucose as
glycogen.
NORM
NORM
(Blood
glucose) Control of blood glucose concentration
EFFECT:
Glucagon promotes
the breakdown of
Decrease in Increase in glycogen in the
blood glucose Detected by liver and the
glucagon
α cells of release of glucose
secretion
pancreas into the blood
Control of blood glucose
INSULIN
concentration
GLUCAGON
• A hormone produced • A hormone produced
by the β cells of the by the α cells of the
islets of Langerhans in islets of Langerhans in
the pancreas. the pancreas.
Drinking reduces
blood osmolarity When body
to set point
ADH
Increased
becomes
permeability dehydrated,
Pituitary
gland
the osmotic [ c ]
Distal
of the blood ↑
tubule
Posterior lobe of
the pituitary
H2O reabsorption
STIMULUS: helps prevent further glandADH
The release of ADH is osmolarity
triggered when osmo- increase
receptor cells in the
Collecting duct
Figure 44.16a:
hypothalamus detect an Antidiuretic hormone
increase in the osmolarity
of the blood
(ADH) enhances fluid
retention by making the
kidneys reclaim more
Homeostasis: water
Blood osmolarity
Low blood water potential
(too little water)
• Hypothalamus controls the sensation of thirst and
it also secretes the hormone ADH (antidiuretic
hormone; a.k.a vasopressin).
• ADH is stored in pituitary gland,
– and its target cells are the distal tubules and collecting
ducts of the kidney nephrons.
Angiotensin II
Distal
tubule
Angiotensinogen
JGA
In response to
Renin
production low blood
pressure OR
Renin
blood vol.,
(b) The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) leads to
Figure 44.16b an increase in blood volume and pressure. READ pg 936
Increase retention
Aldosteroneof Na+ by the
kidneys, greater
fluid retention,
increases blood
vol.
Renin
Angiotensinoge Angiotensin II
n (plasma Vasoconstriction,
protein) increase blood
pressure
High blood water potential
(low osmotic concentration) > low blood
pressure
• A second regulatory mechanism involves
juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA), located
near the afferent arteriole that supplies
blood to the glomerulus.
Collecting
SEM
duct
20 µm
Efferent Distal
Renal
medulla
arteriole from tubule
glomerulus
To
renal
pelvis Collecting
Branch of
renal vein duct
Descending
Loop limb
of
Ascending
Henle limb
Vasa
recta
(d) Filtrate and
(c) Nephron blood flow
THE END