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Respiratory System

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Gas exchange Why do we breathe? Think of all the reasons why we need a respiratory system. W O R K T O G E T H E R Warning: terminology! Respiration is used ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Respiratory System


1
Respiratory System
  • Gas exchange

2
W O R K T O G E T H E R
  • Why do we breathe? Think of all the reasons why
    we need a respiratory system.

3
Warning terminology!
  • Respiration is used several different ways
  • Cellular respiration is the aerobic breakdown of
    glucose in the mitochondria to make ATP.
  • Respiratory systems are the organs in animals
    that exchange gases with the environment.
  • Respiration is an everyday term that is often
    used to mean breathing.

4
Respiratory system function
  • Respiratory systems allow animals to move oxygen
    (needed for cellular respiration) into body
    tissues and remove carbon dioxide (waste product
    of cellular respiration) from cells.

5
Gas exchange by Diffusion
  • Some animals simply allow gases to diffuse
    through their skins.
  • These animals have a low metabolic rate. Why?
  • All of these are aquatic animals. Why?

6
Specialized structures
  • Structures specialized for gas exchange include
  • gills (aquatic animals)
  • spiracles (terrestrial insects)
  • lungs (most terrestrial vertebrates)

7
Countercurrent Exchange
  • In a concurrent system, exchange is inefficient.
    Equilibrium is reached at one end.
  • In a countercurrent system, equilibrium is not
    reached, so gas exchange continues, increasing
    efficiency.

8
Fish Gills
  • Fish increase gas exchange efficiency using
    countercurrent exchange.
  • Running blood through the system in the opposite
    direction to water keeps a diffusion gradient
    throughout the entire exchange.

9
Gills exchange gases in fish. What is the site of
gas exchange in mammals?
  1. Alveoli
  2. Tracheids
  3. Bronchi
  4. Esophagus


10
W O R K T O G E T H E R
  • Why are gills so widely seen in aquatic animals
    but not in land animals?
  • One group of land animals that have gills is the
    Isopods (pill bugs and sow bugs). How can
    these organisms survive on land with gills?

11
Human respiratory system
  • Parts of the respiratory system include
  • Trachea
  • Bronchi
  • Bronchioles
  • Alveoli

12
Moving air in and out
  • During inspiration (inhalation), the diaphragm
    and intercostal muscles contract.
  • During exhalation, these muscles relax. The
    diaphragm domes upwards.

13
Alveoli
  • The alveoli are moist, thin-walled pockets which
    are the site of gas exchange.
  • A slightly oily surfactant prevents the alveolar
    walls from collapsing and sticking together.

14
Circulation and Gas Exchange
  • Recall the interconnection between circulation
    and the respiratory system.
  • Gas exchange at the lungs and in the body cells
    moves oxygen into cells and carbon dioxide out.

15
What happens when you breathe in?
  1. The rib muscles relax.
  2. The diaphragm contracts.
  3. Air leaves the alveoli.
  4. Air moves between the chest wall and the lung.

16
W O R K T O G E T H E R
  • Premature infants sometimes die of lung collapse
    and other lung problems. What might preemies be
    missing? How could this be remedied?

17
In the alveolus
  • The respiratory surface is made up of the alveoli
    and capillary walls.
  • The walls of the capillaries and the alveoli may
    share the same membrane.

18
Gas exchange
  • Air entering the lungs contains more oxygen and
    less carbon dioxide than the blood that flows in
    the pulmonary capillaries.
  • How do these differences in concentrations assist
    gas exchange?

19
Oxygen transport
  • Hemoglobin binds to oxygen that diffuses into the
    blood stream.
  • What are some advantages to using hemoglobin to
    transport oxygen?

20
Carbon dioxide transport
  • Carbon dioxide can dissolve in plasma, and about
    70 forms bicarbonate ions.
  • Some carbon dioxide can bind to hemoglobin for
    transport.

21
At the cells
  • Cells use up oxygen quickly for cellular
    respiration. What does this do to the diffusion
    gradient? How does this help cells take up
    oxygen?
  • Cells create carbon dioxide during cellular
    respiration, so CO2 levels in the cell are higher
    than in the blood coming to them. How does this
    help cells get rid of oxygen?

22
Diffusion of O2 from lungs to blood is rapid
because
  1. Active transport moves oxygen.
  2. Hemoglobin takes up oxygen, keeping plasma
    concentration low.
  3. Blood plasma is oxygen-rich.

23
Most of the oxygen in blood is
  1. In the white cells.
  2. Bound to hemoglobin.
  3. Combined with carbon to make carbon dioxide.
  4. Dissolved in the plasma.

24
Effects of smoking
  • Inhaled smoke contains
  • CO2, which affects the CO2 diffusion gradient.
  • carcinogenic chemicals that can trigger tumors.
  • toxic nicotine, which paralyzes cilia that
    normally clean the lungs.

Gross, isnt it?
25
Emphysema
  • Besides cancer, smoking can also lead to
    emphysema. Alveoli become dry and brittle, and
    eventually rupture.
  • Both active and passive smoking (second-hand
    smoke) can lead to can lead to lung problems.

All types of smoke, not just tobacco, can cause
cancers and emphysema.
26
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Cystic fibrosis is one of the most common
    inherited disorders in the Caucasian population
    in the U.S.
  • CF is caused by mutation of a single gene, the
    CFTR gene, which controls salt balance in the
    lungs.

27
Cystic Fibrosis
  • A normal CFTR protein regulates the amount of
    chloride ions across the cell membrane of lung
    cells.
  • If the interior of the cell is too salty, water
    is drawn from lung mucus by osmosis, causing the
    mucus to become thick and sticky.

28
Cystic Fibrosis
  • At this point there is no cure for CF, though
    there are therapies that have extended the lives
    of CF patients, including lung transplants.
  • Gene therapy may one day insert good CFTR genes
    into lung cells to make them operate normally.

29
Two lies and a truth which one is true?
  1. Cigarette smoke cures colds because it kills
    bacteria in the lungs.
  2. Nicotine is one of the most potent neurotoxins on
    earth.
  3. Passive smoking is less harmful than regular
    smoking.

30
W O R K T O G E T H E R
  • When people quit smoking, if the lungs are not
    damaged they can often clean themselves because
    the cilia are no longer paralyzed. People with
    cystic fibrosis have trouble with lung infections
    because their lung mucus is thick and sticky.
    What roles do cilia and mucus play in lung
    health?
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