BIOL1040 Lecture Notes
BIOL1040 Lecture Notes
BIOL1040 Lecture Notes
Fluid mosaics
Membrane fluidity
Cholesterol
o
Experiment
o Labelled proteins of mouse and human cells fusion of cells mixed
proteins
Transport
Enzymatic activity
Signal transduction
Cell-to-cell recognition
Intercellular joining
Selective permeability
Passive transport
Diffusion/osmosis
Does not require ATP
Osmosis
Hypotonic solution solute concentration greater inside cell cell gains water
Transport proteins
Facilitated diffusion
Active transport
Uses ATP
Against concentration gradient
Cotransport
Bulk transport
Exocytosis
o Neurotransmitter release
Endocytosis
o
Hormonal signalling hormone secreted into blood stream, can reach cells anywhere
in body (long distance)
Water soluble
Surface receptors
Lipid soluble
Transduction
o
Receptor types
G protein-coupled receptors
G protein-coupled receptors
7 transmembrane domains
Sequence of events
Responses
Adrenaline
Amplification of signalling
Enzymes active long enough to process number molecules of substrate before they
become inactive again
Few enzymes many enzyme products
Steroid receptors
Intracellular
Nucleus genes regulation protein production control
Cone snails produce toxins that attack nervous system of prey (immobilise)
Neuropathic pain treatment drug based on cone snail toxins
Giant axon of squid physiology model, action potentials (Hodgkin and Huxley)
Information processing
integration (CNS)
Reflex arc
Neuron structure
Types of neurons
Motor neurons many dendrites attached to cell body, with long axon
Radial nerve
Glia
Astrocytes
CNS
Structural support
Selectively determines which substances can move from blood to brain extracellular
fluid
o Lipid soluble compounds, H2O, O2, CO2, glucose, alcohol, nicotine,
anaesthetics YES
o
Membrane potential
Graded potentials
Action potentials
Nerve impulses that carry information from one point of the body to another
Threshold stimulus threshold potential reached (-55 mV) action potential
Sequence of events
1. Resting state voltage gated ion channels closed, membrane potential -70 mV
2. Stimulus few Na+ channels open and Na+ rushes in
3. Depolarisation if threshold (-55 mV) is reached lots of Na+ channels open
and lots of Na+ rushes in
4. Repolarisation K+ channels open and K+ rushes out, Na+ channels
inactivated
5. Undershoot small hyperpolarisation + Na+/K+ ATPase restores resting
potential
Refractory period
Conduction speed
Temperature
Degree of myelination
Factor that influences conduction speed the most (> axon diameter)
Synapses
Junctions through which impulses pass from one neuron (presynaptic) to another
(postsynaptic)
Electrical synapses
Chemical synapses
Neurotransmitter release
Exocytosis
o Action potential Ca2+ ion influx fusion of vesicles with membrane
neurotransmitter release
Direct transmission
Indirect transmission
Graded
Action potential
o
Depolarisation
All or nothing
Amine neurotransmitters
Acetylcholine
Dopamine
Norepinephrine
Serotonin
Diffusion (dopamine)
Sympathetic + parasympathetic
Involuntary functions homeostasis
Sympathetic division
Fight or flight
o Bronchi dilation
o
Glycogen breakdown
Adrenaline secretion
Digestion inhibition
Nerves that arise from thoracic and lumbar regions of spinal cord
Parasympathetic division
Nerves that arise from sacral and cervical regions of spinal cord (two ends)
Spinal cord
Cerebrospinal fluid
Clear fluid
Subarachnoid space, ventricles and central canal
Waste removal
Hydrocephalus
o
Brainstem
Homeostasis
o
Information transfer
o
All info relayed between cerebrum/cerebellum and rest of body passes through
brainstem
Complex movements
o
Running, climbing
Reticular formation
o
Cerebellum
Motor learning
Diencephalon
Hypothalamus
o
Homeostasis hormones
Biological clock
Temperature regulation
Hunger, thirst
Epithalamus
o
Cerebrum
Emotions
Limbic system
Amygdala fear
Hippocampus memory
Memory
Hippocampus
o Short term memory
o
STMLTM
Cerebral cortex
o
Long-term potentiation
Involves glutamate
Nutrient storage (glycogen used in muscle function, can use muscle tissue for
energy in times of starvation)
Extensibility muscle tissue can be stretched without damage, skeletal muscles work
in pairs (one contracts, other relaxes)
Elasticity tendons (not muscles) good at temporarily storing energy as strain energy
that can be used for locomotion
Articulations (joints)
Pivot joints rotate forearm at elbow and move head side to side
Anatomical planes
Myofilaments
Each head has actin binding site + myosin ATPase binding site
Sarcomere structure
Myofibril structure
Terminal cisternae chambers that sarcoplasmic reticulum tubes empty into, store
Ca2+ ions
Motor units
Neuromuscular junction
Sequence of events
Sequence of events
5. After power stoke ATP binds to head and causes detachment of cross bridge, ATPase
within head cleaves ATP to ADP + energy and uses energy to recock head, recocked
head can bind to another exposed binding site and produce another power stroke
6. Repeated power strokes pull in thin filaments and cause muscle contraction
Energy released by hydrolysis of ATP required to convert myosin head from low to
high energy configuration (uncocked cocked)
Actin and myosin filaments arranged within sarcomeres oriented in one direction,
sliding draws sarcomere ends towards centre which shortens muscle fibre to generate
movement
Muscle relaxation
Caused by active transport of Ca2+ ions from cytosol back into transverse cisternae,
reverting thin myofilaments to regular shape (covering myosin binding sites) and
causing them to slide back into original position
Ca2+ ions leaks into cytosol and causes contraction, remaining ATP used to sustain
contraction,
After ATP spent myosin heads cannot unbind, leading to stiffening of the body
Electromyography (EMG)
Rhabdomyolysis
All or none law when a motor unit is stimulated, all of its muscle fibres will contract
(more muscle fibres = more force = stronger contraction)
Types of skeletons
Hydroskeletons
Exoskeletons
Endoskeletons
Ossification/ontogenesis
Damage to growth plates can cause premature closure (bone stops lengthening
or curves) and growth disorders
Skeleton organisation
Molecules/chemicals Ca2+
Types of bones
Long bones length > width, shaft with ends, leverage/movement (femur)
Short bones square, movement (kneecap)
Can be remodelled
Bone matrix
Bone brittleness
Collagen
o
Cortical microstructure
Primary bone
o First bone that is formed (embryo)
Secondary bone
o
Cortical remodelling
Osteoporosis
Synovial joints
Free movement
Between most long bones
Structural differences
o
Locomotion in water
Rowing (beetle)
Buoyancy
o
Pectoral fins create lift which allows fish to swim up and down
Constantly swimming
Friction
o
Locomotion in air
Upstroke + downstroke
Bounding flight
Soaring
Most economical
Hovering
Highly energetic
Light bones
No teeth/urinary bladder
Locomotion on land
Two-anchor (inchworm)
Peristalsis (earthworm)
Walking
Body form, posture and size strongly influence energetic costs more
muscle activity needed to walk with bent limb
Running
Jumping
Locomotion in primates
Bipedalism (humans)
Benefits of bipedalism
o Visual scanning of environment
o
Walking speed
6. Lateral body displacement maintains balance during single limb stance, too little =
unstable, too much = movement too costly
Module 4 Lecture 1: Circulation 1
Multicellular organisms require specialised systems for both exchange and transport
o
In closed system circulatory fluid is not the same as interstitial fluid and is
confined to vessels (blood)
Circulation in vertebrates
Double loop
RVLCLALVSCRA
Sequence of events
Left side of heart (LA/LV) has thicker walls than right side
o
Cardiac muscle
o
Cardiac cycle
CO = HR (bpm) x SV (litres)
Sequence of events
Heart conduction
Cardiac myocytes
o Auto rhythmic contract without signal from NS
Sequence of events
Hormones (adrenaline)
Temperature
Innermost layer
Smooth muscle
o
Middle layer
Connective tissue
o
Outer layer
Capillaries
o
Smallest vessels
Arteries
o
Greater elastic recoil keeps blood pressure constant when heart relaxes
between contractions
Blood pressure
Highest in aorta/arteries
Ventricular BP = 120/80
Vasodilatation
o
Cuff further deflated until sounds stop (laminar flow) diastolic pressure
Capillaries
When BP > OP net loss of fluid from capillaries, but when BP < OP net gain
of fluid
Lymphatic system
85% of fluid leaving capillaries re-enters due to OP, remaining fluid returned to blood
via lymphatic system
Defence
Blood composition
Erythrocytes
o
Inflammatory responses
Mast cells
o Store histamine in granules for secretion histamine secretion
vasodilatation phagocytes traverse capillary wall to get to where they are
needed
o
Blood cells all develop from multipotent stem cells in bone marrow
o Multipotent able to form multiple cell types
Erythrocyte production
Blood doping
Blood clotting
Cardiovascular disease
respiratory surface
respiratory medium
Partial pressure
Respiratory media
Respiratory surfaces
Some aquatic animals (sea star, zebrafish) have large, thin surface area no
specialised organ required
Alveoli
Lung surfactants
o
Ventilation
Lung volumes
Tidal volume volume of air inhaled and exhaled during normal breathing
Inspiratory reserve volume additional air that can be forcibly inhaled after TV
inspiration (deep breath)
Expiratory reserve volume additional air that can be forcibly exhaled after TV
expiration
Residual volume volume of air remaining in lungs after ERV volume exhalation
Total lung capacity maximum amount of air that can fill lungs (TV+IRV+ERV+RV)
Vital capacity total amount of air that can be expired after fully inhaling
(TV+IRV+ERV)
Regulation of breathing
Driving force = differences in partial pressure of gases, gas flows from high to low
Oxygen flows from alveolus to blood and then from blood to body tissue
Carbon dioxide flows from body tissue to blood and then from blood to alveolus
Respiratory pigments
Haemoglobin
Haemoglobin dissociation
Fetal haemoglobin greater oxygen affinity than maternal haemoglobin because it can
function at lower partial pressure (50% saturation when pO2 = 19 instead of when
pO2 = 26.8), therefore shift of curve to left
Carbon monoxide 200x greater affinity for haemoglobin than oxygen inhibition of
oxygen delivery
Diving mammals
Conservation
Endocrine cells/glands secrete hormones into bloodstream that can reach all cells
Long distance
Autocrine signalling secreted regulators trigger response in cell which secreted them
Hormones = long distance communication, messengers that tell target cells how to
behave
Endocrine cells in various organs and tissues secrete hormones into bloodstream
Specificity
Types of hormones
Polypeptide hormones
o Water soluble, bind to surface receptors
o
Steroid hormones
o
Amine hormones
o
Hormone functions
Skeletal muscle beta receptors blood vessel dilation and increased blood
flow
Neurohormones
Feedback
Positive feedback reinforces stimulus, increases deviation from normal values thus
not homeostatic
Negative feedback
Hormone + anterior pituitary + target endocrine gland = hormone cascade pathway
Thyroid hormones
Neurohormone pathway
Antagonistic hormones
Hormones with opposing effects that counterbalance each other to maintain internal
balance
o Insulin + glucose blood glucose homeostasis
Insulin + glucagon
Increased blood glucose (meal) insulin released into bloodstream by pancreas beta
cells increased glucose uptake by body cells and liver (stored as glycogen)
decreased blood glucose
Decreased blood glucose (skipped meal) glucagon released into blood stream by
pancreas alpha cells glycogen broken down by liver and glucose released into
blood increased blood glucose
Vasopressin (ADH)
Negative feedback
Diabetes insipidus
Tropic hormones
Nontropic hormones
Supra-renal organs
Adrenal cortex (endocrine) + adrenal medulla (neuroendocrine)
Adrenal cortex
Adrenal medulla
Neural tissue
Releases catecholamines (short term stress response)
o
Activates adrenal medulla (and short term responses) via autonomic nerve impulses
Activates adrenal cortex (and long term responses) via hormonal signals
Virus-based
Viral genes in human genome placenta
Reverse transcriptase
o
Retrovirus uses to convert their RNA into DNA that can be incorporated into
our genome
Gene therapy
o
SCID
Scale
X linked recessive
Caused by mutations in dystrophin gene
o
Dystrophin gene binds to cell surface proteins but not actin nonfunctional
dystrophin
Mutation DMD
RNAi in eye
o
C1V1=C2V2
Effects of tonicity on red blood cells
o
Isotonic no change
Hypotonic swelling/hemolysis
Action potentials
Skeletal muscle
Experimental design
Hypothesis
o Falsifiable and testable
Methods
o
Interpret/draw graph
Axis labels (with units)
o
Example: The effect of stimulus interval (ms) of two 1V pulses on the second
peak CAP (mV) generated by the ulnar nerve of Rattus norvegicus. Data
represents the mean of three replicates.