homeostasis

Cards (57)

  • What is homeostasis?
    Control of internal environment within restricted limits
  • How does negative feedback contribute to homeostasis?
    It counteracts change to maintain a stable state
  • What effect does positive feedback have on a system?
    It exaggerates change from the original condition
  • What three components are essential for homeostatic control?
    • Receptors
    • Coordinators
    • Effectors
  • What is the role of a coordinator in homeostasis?
    Transfers information between components
  • What is the role of a receptor in homeostasis?
    Detects deviation from optimum conditions
  • What is the role of an effector in homeostasis?
    Carries out a response to stimuli
  • What factors influence blood glucose concentrations?
    Diet and exercise
  • Where are the Islets of Langerhans located?
    Pancreas
  • Which cells detect decreases in blood glucose and release glucagon?
    Alpha cells
  • Which cells detect increases in blood glucose and release insulin?
    Beta cells
  • How does insulin affect cells when it binds to its receptors?
    Increases cell permeability to glucose
  • How do cells increase the number of channel proteins on their cell membrane in response to insulin?
    Via vesicles moving channel proteins to membrane
  • How does insulin lower blood glucose concentration in the liver?
    Activates enzymes converting glucose to glycogen
  • What is the process of converting glucose to glycogen called?
    Gluconeogenesis
  • How does glucagon raise blood glucose concentration?
    Activates enzymes converting glycogen to glucose
  • What is the name of the process that converts glycogen into glucose?
    Glycogenolysis
  • What is the name of the process that converts glycerol and amino acids into glucose?
    Gluconeogenesis
  • What effect does adrenaline have on blood glucose levels?
    Increases blood glucose levels
  • What second messenger is involved in glycogenolysis when adrenaline or glucagon binds to liver cells?
    cAMP
  • What enzyme does cAMP activate in the second messenger model?
    Protein kinase
  • What is the role of adenylate cyclase in the second messenger model?
    Converts ATP into cAMP
  • Which type of diabetes involves the immune system attacking beta cells?
    Type one
  • What is a common treatment for type one diabetes?
    Insulin shots
  • What are possible causes of type two diabetes?
    Pancreas not producing enough insulin
  • What are the common treatments for type two diabetes?
    Limiting carbohydrate intake and exercising
  • What are the two main functions of the kidneys?
    Filter blood and produce urine
  • What is the role of the kidneys in osmoregulation?
    Controls water potential of blood
  • What is the functional unit of the kidney?
    Nephron
  • What is the glomerulus?
    Mass of capillaries in nephron
  • Why does the efferent arteriole branch into capillaries surrounding the nephron structure?
    To ensure short diffusion distance
  • What condition results from the body's inability to maintain blood glucose concentration?
    Diabetes
  • What two processes are the nephrons responsible for?
    Blood filtration and urine production
  • What is the driving force behind substances being forced out of the capillaries in the glomerulus?
    High hydrostatic pressure
  • Why is there high hydrostatic pressure in the glomerulus?
    Efferent arteriole has smaller diameter
  • What is the name for substances being forced out of capillaries due to high hydrostatic pressure?
    Ultrafiltration
  • What three layers must substances pass through during ultrafiltration?
    Endothelium, basement membrane, podocytes
  • What is the name given to the mixture of substances that enter Bowman's capsule?
    Glomerular filtrate
  • What process occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule where useful substances are reabsorbed?
    Selective reabsorption
  • In the proximal convoluted tubule, how are sodium ions transported into the blood?
    Actively transported from epithelial cell