Chapter 42 Circulation
and Gas Exchange
Lecture Outline
Overview: Trading with the
Environment
·
Every
organism must exchange materials and energy with its environment, and this
exchange ultimately occurs at the cellular level.
°
Cells
live in aqueous environments.
°
The
resources that they need, such as nutrients and oxygen, move across the plasma
membrane to the cytoplasm.
°
Metabolic
wastes, such as carbon dioxide, move out of the cell.
·
Most
animals have organ systems specialized for exchanging materials with the
environment, and many have an internal transport system that conveys fluid
(blood or interstitial fluid) throughout the body.
°
For
aquatic organisms, structures such as gills present an expansive surface area
to the outside environment.
°
Oxygen
dissolved in the surrounding water diffuses across the thin epithelium covering
the gills and into a network of tiny blood vessels (capillaries).
°
At
the same time, carbon dioxide diffuses out into the water.
Concept 42.1 Circulatory systems reflect phylogeny
·
Diffusion
alone is not adequate for transporting substances over long distances in
animals—for example, for moving glucose from the digestive tract and oxygen
from the lungs to the brain of a mammal.
·
Diffusion
is insufficient over distances of more than a few millimeters, because the time
it takes for a substance to diffuse from one place to another is proportional
to the square of the distance.
°
For
example, if it takes 1 second for a given quantity of glucose to diffuse 100
microns, it will take 100 seconds for it to diffuse 1 mm and almost three hours
to diffuse 1 cm.
·
The
circulatory system solves this problem by ensuring that no substance must
diffuse very far to enter or leave a cell.
·
The
bulk transport of fluids throughout the body functionally connects the aqueous
environment of the body cells to the organs that exchange gases, absorb
nutrients, and dispose of wastes.
°
For
example, in the mammalian lung, oxygen from inhaled air diffuses across a thin
epithelium and into the blood, while carbon dioxide diffuses out.
°
Bulk
fluid movement in the circulatory system, powered by the heart, quickly carries
the oxygen-rich blood to all parts of the body.
°
As
the blood streams through the tissues within microscopic vessels called
capillaries, chemicals are exchanged between blood and the interstitial fluid
that bathes the cells.
Most invertebrates have a gastrovascular
cavity or a circulatory system for internal transport.
·
The
body plan of a hydra and other cnidarians makes a circulatory system
unnecessary.
°
A
body wall only two cells thick encloses a central gastrovascular cavity that
serves for both digestion and for diffusion of substances throughout the body.
§
The
fluid inside the cavity is continuous with the water outside through a single
opening, the mouth.
§
Thus,
both the inner and outer tissue layers are bathed in fluid.
·
In
cnidarians such as Aurelia, the mouth
leads to an elaborate gastrovascular cavity that has branches radiating to and
from the circular canal.
°
The
products of digestion in the gastrovascular cavity are directly available to
the cells of the inner layer, and it is only a short distance to diffuse to the
cells of the outer layer.
·
Planarians
and most other flatworms also have gastrovascular cavities that exchange
materials with the environment through a single opening.
°
The
flat shape of the body and the branching of the gastrovascular cavity
throughout the animal ensure that cells are bathed in a suitable medium and
that diffusion distances are short.
·
For
animals with many cell layers, gastrovascular cavities are insufficient for
internal distances because the diffusion transports are too great.
·
In
more complex animals, two types of circulatory systems that overcome the
limitations of diffusion have evolved: open circulatory systems and closed
circulatory systems.
°
Both
have a circulatory fluid (blood), a
set of tubes (blood vessels), and a
muscular pump (the heart).
§
The
heart powers circulation by using metabolic power to elevate the hydrostatic
pressure of the blood (blood pressure),
which then flows down a pressure gradient through its circuit back to the
heart.
·
In
insects, other arthropods, and most molluscs, blood bathes organs directly in
an open circulatory system.
·
There
is no distinction between blood and interstitial fluid, collectively called hemolymph.
·
One
or more hearts pump the hemolymph into interconnected sinuses surrounding the
organs, allowing exchange between hemolymph and body cells.
·
In
insects and other arthropods, the heart is an elongated dorsal tube.
°
When
the heart contracts, it pumps hemolymph through vessels out into sinuses.
°
When
the heart relaxes, it draws hemolymph into the circulatory system through pores
called ostia.
°
Body
movements that squeeze the sinuses help circulate the hemolymph.
·
In
a closed circulatory system, found
in earthworms, squid, octopuses, and vertebrates, blood is confined to vessels
and is distinct from interstitial fluid.
°
One
or more hearts pump blood into large vessels that branch into smaller ones
coursing through organs.
°
Materials
are exchanged by diffusion between the blood and the interstitial fluid bathing
the cells.
·
The
fact that open and closed circulatory systems are both widespread in the animal
kingdom suggests that both systems offer advantages.
°
The
lower hydrostatic pressures associated with open circulatory systems make them
less costly than closed circulatory systems.
°
Because
they lack an extensive system of blood vessels, open systems require less
energy to build and maintain.
°
In
molluscs and freshly molted aquatic arthropods, the open circulatory system
functions as a hydrostatic skeleton.
·
What
advantages are associated with closed circulatory systems?
°
Closed
systems with their higher blood pressure are more effective at transporting
circulatory fluids to meet the high metabolic demands of the tissues and cells
of larger and more active animals.
°
Among
the molluscs, only the large and active squid and octopuses have closed
circulatory systems.
Vertebrate phylogeny is reflected in
adaptations of the cardiovascular system.
·
The
closed circulatory system of humans and other vertebrates is often called the cardiovascular system.
·
The
heart consists of one atrium or two atria, the chambers that receive blood
returning to the heart, and one or two ventricles,
the chambers that pump blood out of the heart.
·
Arteries, veins, and capillaries are the three main kinds of blood vessels.
°
Arteries
carry blood away from the heart to organs.
°
Within
organs, arteries branch into arterioles,
small vessels that convey blood to capillaries.
°
Capillaries
with very thin, porous walls form networks called capillary beds, which infiltrate each tissue.
°
Chemicals,
including dissolved gases, are exchanged across the thin walls of the
capillaries between the blood and interstitial fluid.
°
At
their “downstream” end, capillaries converge into venules, and venules converge into veins, which (usually) return
blood to the heart.
·
Arteries
and veins are distinguished by the direction
in which they carry blood, not by the characteristics of the blood they carry.
°
All
arteries carry blood from the heart toward
capillaries.
°
Veins
return blood to the heart from
capillaries.
§
A
significant exception is the hepatic portal vein that carries blood from
capillary beds in the digestive system to capillary beds in the liver.
·
Metabolic
rate is an important factor in the evolution of cardiovascular systems.
°
In
general, animals with high metabolic rates have more complex circulatory
systems and more powerful hearts than animals with low metabolic rates.
°
Similarly,
the complexity and number of blood vessels in a particular organ are correlated
with that organ’s metabolic requirements.
°
Perhaps
the most fundamental differences in cardiovascular adaptations are associated
with gill breathing in aquatic vertebrates compared with lung breathing in
terrestrial vertebrates.
·
A
fish heart has two main chambers, one atrium and one ventricle.
·
Blood
is pumped from the ventricle to the gills (the gill circulation) where it picks up oxygen and disposes of carbon
dioxide across the capillary walls.
·
The
gill capillaries converge into a vessel that carries oxygenated blood to
capillary beds in the other organs (the systemic
circulation) and back via veins to the atrium of the heart.
·
In
fish, blood must pass through two
capillary beds, the gill capillaries and systemic capillaries.
°
When
blood flows through a capillary bed, blood pressure—the motive force for
circulation—drops substantially.
°
Therefore,
oxygen-rich blood leaving the gills flows to the systemic circulation quite
slowly (although the process is aided by body movements during swimming).
°
This
constrains the delivery of oxygen to body tissues and, hence, the maximum
aerobic metabolic rate of fishes.
·
Frogs
and other amphibians have a three-chambered heart with two atria and one
ventricle.
°
The
ventricle pumps blood into a forked artery that splits the ventricle’s output
into the pulmocutaneous and systemic circulations.
·
The
pulmocutaneous circulation leads to capillaries in the gas-exchange organs (the
lungs and skin of a frog), where the blood picks up O2 and releases
CO2 before returning to the heart’s left atrium.
°
Most
of the returning oxygen-rich blood is pumped into the systemic circulation,
which supplies all body organs and then returns oxygen-poor blood to the right
atrium via the veins.
°
This
scheme, called double circulation,
provides a vigorous flow of blood to the brain, muscles, and other organs
because the blood is pumped a second time after it loses pressure in the
capillary beds of the lung or skin.
·
In
the ventricle of the frog, some oxygen-rich blood from the lungs mixes with
oxygen-poor blood that has returned from the rest of the body.
°
However,
a ridge within the ventricle diverts most of the oxygen-rich blood from the
left atrium into the systemic circuit and most of the oxygen-poor blood from
the right atrium into the pulmocutaneous circuit.
·
Nonbird
reptiles also have double circulation with a pulmonary circuit (lungs) and a systemic circuit.
°
Turtles,
snakes, and lizards have a three-chambered heart, although the ventricle is
partially blocked by a septum, which results in even less mixing of oxygen-rich
and oxygen-poor blood than in amphibians.
°
All
reptiles except birds have two arteries leading from the heart to the systemic
circuit, and arterial valves allow them to divert most of their blood from the
pulmonary circuit to the systemic circuit.
·
In
crocodilians, birds, and mammals, the ventricle is completely divided into
separate right and left chambers.
°
In
this arrangement, the left side of the heart receives and pumps only
oxygen-rich blood, while the right side handles only oxygen-poor blood.
·
Double
circulation restores pressure to the systemic circuit after blood has passed
through the lung capillaries and prevents mixing of oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor
blood.
·
The
evolution of a powerful four-chambered heart was an essential adaptation to
support the endothermic way of life characteristic of birds and mammals.
°
Endotherms
use about ten times as much energy as ectotherms of the same size.
°
Therefore,
the endotherm circulatory system needs to deliver about ten times as much fuel
and O2 to their tissues and remove ten times as much wastes and CO2.
°
Birds
and mammals evolved from different reptilian ancestors, and their powerful
four-chambered hearts evolved independently—an example of convergent evolution.
Concept 42.2 Double circulation in mammals depends
on the anatomy and pumping cycle of the heart
·
In
the mammalian cardiovascular system, the pulmonary and system circuits operate
simultaneously.
°
The
two ventricles pump almost in unison.
°
While
some blood is traveling in the pulmonary circuit, the rest of the blood is
flowing in the systemic circuit.
·
To
trace the double circulation pattern of the mammalian cardiovascular system,
we’ll start with the pulmonary (lung) circuit.
·
The
pulmonary circuit carries blood from the heart to the lungs and back again.
°
The
right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs via the pulmonary arteries.
°
As
blood flows through capillary beds in the right and left lungs, it loads O2
and unloads CO2.
°
Oxygen-rich
blood returns from the lungs via the pulmonary veins to the left atrium of the
heart.
°
Next,
the oxygen-rich blood flows to the left ventricle, as the ventricle opens and
the atrium contracts.
·
The
left ventricle pumps oxygen-rich blood out to the body tissues through the
systemic circuit.
°
Blood
leaves the left ventricle via the aorta, which conveys blood to arteries
leading throughout the body.
§
The
first branches from the aorta are the coronary arteries, which supply blood to
the heart muscle.
°
The
next branches lead to capillary beds in the head and arms.
°
The
aorta continues in a posterior direction, supplying oxygen-rich blood to
arteries leading to arterioles and capillary beds in the abdominal organs and
legs.
§
Within
the capillaries, blood gives up much of its O2 and picks up CO2
produced by cellular respiration.
·
Venous
return to the right side of the heart begins as capillaries rejoin to form
venules and then veins.
°
Oxygen-poor
blood from the head, neck, and forelimbs is channeled into a large vein called
the anterior (or superior) vena cava.
°
Another
large vein called the posterior (or inferior) vena cava drains blood from the
trunk and hind limbs.
°
The
two venae cavae empty their blood into the right atrium, from which the
oxygen-poor blood flows into the right ventricle.
·
The
mammalian heart is located beneath the breastbone (sternum) and consists mostly
of cardiac muscle.
°
The
two atria have relatively thin walls and function as collection chambers for
blood returning to the heart.
°
The
ventricles have thicker walls and contract much more strongly than the atria.
·
A
cardiac cycle is one complete
sequence of pumping, as the heart contracts, and filling, as it relaxes and its
chambers fill with blood.
°
The
contraction phase is called systole,
and the relaxation phase is called diastole.
·
For
a human at rest with a pulse of about 75 beats per minute, one complete cardiac
cycle takes about 0.8 sec.
°
During
the relaxation phase (atria and ventricles in diastole) lasting about 0.4 sec,
blood returning from the large veins flows into atria and ventricles.
°
A
brief period (about 0.1 sec) of atrial systole forces all the remaining blood
out of the atria and into the ventricles.
°
During
the remaining 0.3 sec of the cycle, ventricular systole pumps blood into the
large arteries.
·
Cardiac output is the volume of blood
pumped per minute, and it depends on two factors: the rate of contraction or heart rate (number of beats per second)
and stroke volume, the amount of
blood pumped by the left ventricle in each contraction.
°
The
average stroke volume for a human is about 75 mL.
°
The
typical resting cardiac output, about 5.25 L/min, is equivalent to the total
volume of blood in the human body.
°
Cardiac
output can increase about fivefold during heavy exercise.
°
Heart
rate can be measured indirectly by measuring your pulse—the rhythmic stretching of arteries caused by the pressure of
blood pumped by the ventricles.
·
Four
valves in the heart, each consisting of flaps of connective tissue, prevent
backflow and keep blood moving in the correct direction.
°
Between
each atrium and ventricle is an atrioventricular
(AV) valve, which keeps blood from flowing back into the atria when the
ventricles contract.
°
The
AV valves are anchored by strong fibers that prevent them from turning inside
out.
°
Two
sets of semilunar valves, one
between the left ventricle and the aorta and the other between the right
ventricle and the pulmonary artery, prevent backflow from these vessels into
the ventricles while they are relaxing.
·
The
heart sounds we can hear with a stethoscope are caused by the closing of the valves.
°
The
sound pattern is “lub-dup, lub-dup, lub-dup.”
°
The
first heart sound (“lub”) is created by the recoil of blood against the closed
AV valves.
°
The
second sound (“dup”) is the recoil of blood against the semilunar valves.
·
A
defect in one or more of the valves causes a heart murmur, which may be detectable as a hissing sound when a
stream of blood squirts backward through a valve.
°
Some
people are born with heart murmurs.
°
Other
murmurs are due to damage to the valves by infection.
°
Most
heart murmurs do not reduce the efficiency of blood flow enough to warrant
surgery.
·
Because
the timely delivery of oxygen to the body’s organs is critical for survival,
several mechanisms have evolved to assure continuity and control of the
heartbeat.
°
Certain
cells of vertebrate cardiac muscle are self-excitable, meaning they contract
without any signal from the nervous system.
°
Each
cell has its own intrinsic contraction rhythm.
°
However,
these cells are synchronized by the sinoatrial
(SA) node, or pacemaker, which
sets the rate and timing at which all cardiac muscle cells contract.
°
The
SA node is located in the wall of the right atrium.
·
Because
the vertebrate heart has a pacemaker made up of specialized muscle tissues
located within the heart itself, it is referred to as a myogenic heart.
°
In
contrast, the pacemakers of most arthropod hearts originate in motor nerves
arising from the outside, an arrangement called a neurogenic heart.
·
The
cardiac cycle is regulated by electrical impulses that radiate throughout the
heart.
°
Cardiac
muscle cells are electrically coupled by intercalated disks between adjacent
cells.
°
The
SA node generates electrical impulses, much like those produced by nerves that
spread rapidly through the wall of the atria, making them contract in unison.
§
The
impulse from the SA node is delayed by about 0.1 sec at the atrioventricular (AV) node, the relay
point to the ventricle, allowing the atria to empty completely before the
ventricles contract.
°
Specialized
muscle fibers called bundle branches and Purkinje fibers conduct the signals to
the apex of the heart and throughout the ventricular walls.
°
This
stimulates the ventricles to contract from the apex toward the atria, driving
blood into the large arteries.
·
The
impulses generated during the heart cycle produce electrical currents that are
conducted through body fluids to the skin.
°
Here,
the currents can be detected by electrodes and recorded as an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG).
·
While
the SA node sets the tempo for the entire heart, it is influenced by a variety
of physiological cues.
°
Two
sets of nerves affect heart rate, with one set speeding up the pacemaker and
the other set slowing it down.
§
Heart
rate is a compromise regulated by the opposing actions of these two sets of
nerves.
°
The
pacemaker is also influenced by hormones.
§
For
example, epinephrine from the adrenal glands increases heart rate.
°
The
rate of impulse generation by the pacemaker increases in response to increases
in body temperature and with exercise.
Concept 42.3 Physical principles govern blood circulation
·
All
blood vessels are built of similar tissues.
·
The
walls of both arteries and veins have three similar layers.
°
On
the outside, a layer of connective tissue with elastic fibers allows the vessel
to stretch and recoil.
°
A
middle layer has smooth muscle and more elastic fibers.
°
Lining
the lumen of all blood vessels, including capillaries, is an endothelium, a single layer of
flattened cells that minimizes resistance to blood flow.
·
Structural
differences correlate with the different functions of arteries, veins, and
capillaries.
°
Capillaries
lack the two outer layers, and their very thin walls consist only of
endothelium and its basement membrane, thus enhancing exchange.
·
Arteries
have thicker middle and outer layers than veins.
°
The
thicker walls of arteries provide strength to accommodate blood pumped rapidly
and at high pressure by the heart.
°
Their
elasticity (elastic recoil) helps maintain blood pressure even when the heart
relaxes.
·
The
thinner-walled veins convey blood back to the heart at low velocity and
pressure.
°
Blood
flows through the veins mainly because skeletal muscle contractions squeeze
blood in veins.
°
Within
larger veins, flaps of tissues act as one-way valves that allow blood to flow
only toward the heart.
Physical laws governing the movement of fluids
through pipes affect blood flow and blood pressure.
·
The
observation that blood travels more than a thousand times faster in the aorta
than in capillaries follows from the law
of continuity, describing fluid movement through pipes.
°
If
a pipe’s diameter changes over its length, a fluid will flow through narrower
segments faster than it flows through wider segments because the volume of flow per second must be
constant throughout the entire pipe.
·
Each
artery conveys blood to such an enormous number of capillaries that the total
cross-sectional area is much greater in capillary beds than in any other part
of the circulatory system.
·
The
resulting slow flow rate and thin capillary walls enhance the exchange of
substances between the blood and interstitial fluid.
·
As
blood leaves the capillary beds and passes to venules and veins, it speeds up
again as a result of the reduction in total cross-sectional area.
·
Fluids
exert a force called hydrostatic pressure against surfaces they contact, and it
is that pressure that drives fluids through pipes.
°
Fluids
always flow from areas of high pressure to areas of lower pressure.
°
Blood
pressure, the hydrostatic force that blood exerts against vessel walls, is much
greater in arteries than in veins and is highest in arteries when the heart
contracts during ventricular systole, creating the systolic pressure.
·
When
you take your pulse by placing your fingers on your wrist, you can feel an
artery bulge with each heartbeat.
°
The
surge of pressure is partly due to the narrow openings of arterioles impeding
the exit of blood from the arteries, the peripheral
resistance.
°
Thus,
when the heart contracts, blood enters the arteries faster than it can leave,
and the vessels stretch from the pressure.
°
The
elastic walls of the arteries snap back during diastole, but the heart
contracts again before enough blood has flowed into the arterioles to
completely relieve pressure in the arteries.
°
As
a consequence of the elastic arteries working against peripheral resistance,
there is substantial diastolic pressure
even during diastole.
§
Blood
flows into arterioles and capillaries continuously.
§
The
arterial blood pressure of a healthy human oscillates between about 120 mm Hg
at systole and less than 80 mm Hg at diastole.
·
Blood
pressure is determined partly by cardiac output and partly by peripheral
resistance.
°
Contraction
of smooth muscles in walls of arterioles constricts these vessels, increasing
peripheral resistance and increasing blood pressure upstream in the arteries.
°
When
the smooth muscles relax, the arterioles dilate, blood flow through arterioles
increases, and pressure in the arteries falls.
°
Nerve
impulses, hormones, and other signals control the arteriole wall muscles.
°
Stress,
both physical and emotional, can raise blood pressure by triggering nervous and
hormonal responses that will constrict blood vessels.
·
Cardiac
output is adjusted in concert with changes in peripheral resistance.
°
This
coordination maintains adequate blood flow as the demands on the circulatory
system change.
°
For
example, during heavy exercise, arterioles in the working muscles dilate,
admitting a greater flow of oxygen-rich blood to the muscles and decreasing
peripheral resistance.
°
At
the same time, cardiac output increases, maintaining blood pressure and
supporting the necessary increase in blood flow.
·
In
large land animals, blood pressure is also affected by gravity.
°
In
addition to the peripheral resistance, additional pressure is necessary to push
blood to the level of the heart.
°
In
a standing human, it takes an extra 27 mm of Hg pressure to move blood from the
heart to the brain.
°
In
an organism like a giraffe, this extra force is about 190 mm Hg (for a total of
250 mm Hg).
°
Special
check valves and sinuses, as well as feedback mechanisms that reduce cardiac
output, prevent this high pressure from damaging the giraffe’s brain when it
puts its head down.
·
By
the time blood reaches the veins, its pressure is not affected much by the
action of the heart.
°
The
resistance of tiny arterioles and capillaries has dissipated the pressure
generated by the pumping heart.
°
Rhythmic
contractions of smooth muscles in the walls of veins and venules account for
some movement of blood.
°
More
important, the activity of skeletal muscles during exercise squeezes blood
through the veins.
°
Also,
inhalation changes pressure in the thoracic (chest) cavity, causing the venae
cavae and other large veins near the heart to expand and fill with blood.
Transfer of substances between the blood and
the interstitial fluid occurs across the thin walls of capillaries.
·
At
any given time, only about 5–10% of the body’s capillaries have blood flowing
through them.
°
Capillaries
in the brain, heart, kidneys, and liver are usually filled to capacity, but in
many other sites, the blood supply varies over times as blood is diverted.
§
For
example, after a meal, blood supply to the digestive tract increases.
§
During
strenuous exercise, blood is diverted from the digestive tract and supplied to
skeletal muscles.
·
Two
mechanisms, both dependent on smooth muscles controlled by nerve signals and
hormones, regulate the distribution of blood in capillary beds.
°
In
one mechanism, contraction of the smooth muscle layer in the wall of an
arteriole constricts the vessel, decreasing blood flow through it to a
capillary bed.
§
When
the muscle layer relaxes, the arteriole dilates, allowing blood to enter the
capillaries.
°
In
the other mechanism, rings of smooth muscles, called precapillary sphincters
because they are located at the entrance to capillary beds, control the flow of
blood between arterioles and venules.
°
Some
blood flows directly from arterioles to venules through thoroughfare channels
that are always open.
·
The
exchange of substances between the blood and interstitial fluid that bathes the
cells takes place across the thin endothelial walls of the capillaries.
°
Some
substances are carried across endothelial cells in vesicles that form by
endocytosis on one side and then release their contents by exocytosis on the
other side.
°
Others
simply diffuse between the blood and the interstitial fluid across cells or
through the clefts between adjoining cells.
·
Transport
through these clefts occurs mainly by bulk flow due to fluid pressure.
°
Blood
pressure within the capillary pushes fluid, containing water and small solutes,
through the capillary clefts.
§
This
causes a net loss of fluid at the upstream end of the capillary.
°
Blood
cells and most proteins in the blood are too large and remain in the
capillaries.
·
As
blood proceeds along the capillary, blood pressure continues to drop and the
capillary becomes hyperosmotic compared to the interstitial fluids.
°
The
resulting osmotic gradient pulls water into the capillary by osmosis near the
downstream end.
°
About
85% of the fluid that leaves the blood at the arterial end of the capillary bed
reenters from the interstitial fluid at the venous end.
°
The
remaining 15% is eventually returned to the blood by the vessels of the
lymphatic system.
The lymphatic system returns fluid to the
blood and aids in body defense.
·
Fluids
and some blood proteins that leak from the capillaries into the interstitial
fluid are returned to the blood via the lymphatic
system.
°
Fluid
enters this system by diffusing into tiny lymph capillaries intermingled among
capillaries of the cardiovascular system.
°
Once
inside the lymphatic system, the fluid is called lymph, with a composition similar to the interstitial fluid.
°
The
lymphatic system drains into the circulatory system near the junction of the
venae cavae with the right atrium.
·
Lymph
vessels, like veins, have valves that prevent the backflow of fluid toward the
capillaries.
°
Rhythmic
contraction of the vessel walls helps draw fluid into lymphatic capillaries.
°
Like
veins, lymph vessels depend mainly on the movement of skeletal muscle to
squeeze fluid toward the heart.
·
Along
lymph vessels are organs called lymph
nodes.
°
The
lymph nodes filter the lymph and attack viruses and bacteria.
°
Inside
a lymph node is a honeycomb of connective tissue with spaces filled with white
blood cells specialized for defense.
§
When
the body is fighting an infection, these cells multiply, and the lymph nodes
become swollen.
·
In
addition to defending against infection and maintaining the volume and protein
concentration of the blood, the lymphatic system transports fats from the
digestive tract to the circulatory system.
Concept 42.4 Blood is a connective tissue with
cells suspended in plasma
·
In
invertebrates with open circulation, blood (hemolymph) is not different from
interstitial fluid.
·
However,
blood in the closed circulatory systems of vertebrates is a specialized
connective tissue consisting of several kinds of cells suspended in a liquid
matrix called plasma.
·
The
plasma includes the cellular elements (cells and cell fragments), which occupy
about 45% of the blood volume, and transparent, straw-colored plasma.
·
Plasma,
about 55% of the blood volume, consists of water, ions, various plasma
proteins, nutrients, waste products, respiratory gases, and hormones, while the
cellular elements include red and white blood cells and platelets.
°
Blood
plasma is about 90% water.
·
Dissolved
in the plasma are a variety of ions, sometimes referred to as blood
electrolytes.
°
These
are important in maintaining osmotic balance of the blood and help buffer the
blood at a pH of about 7.4.
°
Also,
proper functioning of muscles and nerves depends on the concentrations of key
ions in the interstitial fluid, which reflects concentrations in the plasma.
·
Blood’s
plasma proteins have many functions.
°
Collectively,
they act as buffers against pH changes, help maintain osmotic balance, and
contribute to the blood’s viscosity.
°
Some
specific proteins transport otherwise insoluble lipids in the blood.
°
Other
proteins—the immunoglobulins, or antibodies—help combat viruses and other
foreign agents that invade the body.
°
Fibrinogen
proteins help plug leaks when blood vessels are injured.
§
Blood
plasma with clotting factors removed is called serum.
·
Plasma
carries a wide variety of substances in transit from one part of the body to
another, including nutrients, metabolic wastes, respiratory gases, and hormones.
·
Suspended
in blood plasma are two classes of cells: red
blood cells, which transport oxygen, and white blood cells, which function in defense.
°
A
third cellular element, platelets,
are pieces of cells that are involved in clotting.
·
Red
blood cells, or erythrocytes, are by
far the most numerous blood cells.
°
Each
cubic millimeter of blood contains 5 to 6 million red cells, 5,000 to 10,000
white blood cells, and 250,000 to 400,000 platelets.
°
There
are about 25 trillion red blood cells in the body’s 5 L of blood.
·
The
main function of red blood cells, oxygen transport, depends on rapid diffusion
of oxygen across the red blood cell’s plasma membranes.
°
Human
erythrocytes are small biconcave disks, presenting a large surface area.
°
Mammalian
erythrocytes lack nuclei, an unusual characteristic that leaves more space in
the tiny cells for hemoglobin, the
iron-containing protein that transports oxygen.
°
Red
blood cells also lack mitochondria and generate ATP exclusively by anaerobic
metabolism.
·
An
erythrocyte contains about 250 million molecules of hemoglobin.
°
Each
hemoglobin molecule binds up to four molecules of O2, so one
erythrocyte can transport a billion O2 molecules.
·
As
red blood cells pass through the capillary beds of lungs, gills, or other
respiratory organs, oxygen diffuses into the erythrocytes and hemoglobin binds
O2 and NO.
°
In
the systemic capillaries, hemoglobin unloads oxygen, which then diffuses into
body cells.
°
NO
relaxes the capillary walls, allowing them to expand and helping deliver O2
to the cells.
·
There
are five major types of white blood cells, or leukocytes: monocytes, neutrophils, basophils, eosinophils, and
lymphocytes.
·
Their
collective function is to fight infection.
°
For
example, monocytes and neutrophils are phagocytes, which engulf and digest bacteria
and debris from the body’s dead cells.
°
Lymphocytes
develop into specialized B cells and T cells, which produce the immune response
against foreign substances.
°
White
blood cells spend most of their time outside the circulatory system, patrolling
through interstitial fluid and the lymphatic system, fighting pathogens.
°
A
microliter of human blood normally has about 5,000 to 10,000 leukocytes, but
their numbers increase temporarily when the body is fighting infection.
·
The
third cellular element of blood, platelets,
are fragments of cells about 2 to 3 microns in diameter.
°
They
have no nuclei and originate as pinched-off cytoplasmic fragments of large
cells in the bone marrow.
°
Platelets
function in blood clotting.
·
The
cellular elements of blood wear out and are replaced constantly throughout a
person’s life.
°
For
example, erythrocytes usually circulate for only about 3 to 4 months and are
then destroyed by phagocytic cells in the liver and spleen.
°
Enzymes
digest the old cell’s macromolecules, and the monomers are recycled.
°
Many
of the iron atoms derived from hemoglobin in old red blood cells are
incorporated into new hemoglobin molecules.
·
Erythrocytes,
leukocytes, and platelets all develop from a single population of cells,
pluripotent stem cells, in the red marrow
of bones, particularly the ribs, vertebrae, breastbone, and pelvis.
°
“Pluripotent”
means that these cells have the potential to differentiate into any type of
blood cells or cells that produce platelets.
°
This
population arises in the early embryo and renews itself while replenishing the
blood with cellular elements.
·
A
negative-feedback mechanism, sensitive to the amount of oxygen reaching the
tissues via the blood, controls erythrocyte production.
°
If
the tissues do not produce enough oxygen, the kidney synthesizes and secretes a
hormone called erythropoietin (EPO),
which stimulates production of erythrocytes.
°
If
blood is delivering more oxygen than the tissues can use, the level of
erythropoietin is reduced, and erythrocyte production slows.
·
Physicians
use synthetic EPO to treat people with anemia, a condition of low hemoglobin
levels.
°
Some
athletes abuse EPO by injecting themselves with the drug to increase their
erythrocyte levels.
°
This
practice is known as blood doping. It is banned by the International Olympic
Committee and other sports federations.
·
Through
a recent breakthrough in isolating and culturing pluripotent stem cells,
researchers may soon have effective treatments for a number of human diseases,
such as leukemia.
°
Individuals
with leukemia have a cancerous line of stem cells that produce leukocytes.
§
These
cancerous cells crowd out cells that make red blood cells and produce an
unusually high number of leukocytes, many of which are abnormal.
°
One
strategy now being used experimentally for treating leukemia is to remove
pluripotent stem cells from a patient, destroy the patient’s bone marrow, and
restock it with noncancerous pluripotent cells.
°
As
few as 30 of these cells can repopulate the bone marrow.
·
Blood
contains a self-sealing material that plugs leaks from cuts and scrapes.
°
A
clot forms when the inactive form of the plasma protein fibrinogen is converted to fibrin,
which aggregates into threads that form the framework of the clot.
°
The
clotting mechanism begins with the release of clotting factors from platelets.
°
An
inherited defect in any step of the clotting process causes hemophilia, a disease characterized by
excessive bleeding from even minor cuts and bruises.
°
The
clotting process begins when the endothelium of a vessel is damaged and connective
tissue in the wall is exposed to blood.
§
Platelets
adhere to collagen fibers and release a substance that makes nearby platelets
sticky.
°
The
platelets form a plug.
°
The
seal is reinforced by a clot of fibrin when vessel damage is severe.
·
More
than a dozen clotting factors have been discovered, and the mechanism is still
not fully understood.
·
A
genetic mutation that affects any step of the clotting process causes hemophilia, a disease characterized by
excessive bleeding from even minor cuts.
·
Anticlotting
factors in the blood normally prevent spontaneous clotting in the absence of
injury.
°
Sometimes,
platelets clump and fibrin coagulates within a blood vessel, forming a clot
called a thrombus, and blocking the
flow of blood.
°
These
potentially dangerous clots are more likely to form in individuals with
cardiovascular diseases, diseases of the heart and blood vessels.
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause
of death in the
·
More
than half of the deaths in the
·
The
tendency to develop cardiovascular disease is inherited to some extent, but
lifestyle also plays a important role.
°
Nongenetic
factors include smoking, lack of exercise, a diet rich in animal fat, and high
levels of cholesterol in the blood.
·
One
measure of an individual’s cardiovascular health or risk of arterial plaques
can be gauged by the ratio of low-density
lipoproteins (LDLs) to high-density
lipoproteins (HDLs) in the blood.
°
LDL
is associated with depositing of cholesterol in arterial plaques.
°
HDL
may reduce cholesterol deposition.
·
Exercise
increases HDL concentration, while smoking increases LDL:HDL ratio.
·
Healthy
arteries have smooth inner linings that permit unimpeded blood flow.
·
Deposition
of cholesterol thickens and roughens this smooth lining.
°
Growths
called plaques develop in the inner wall of the arteries, narrowing their bore
and leading to a chronic cardiovascular disease known as atherosclerosis.
°
At
plaque sites, the smooth muscle layer of an artery thickens abnormally and
becomes infiltrated with fibrous connective tissue and lipids such as
cholesterol.
°
The
rough lining of an atherosclerotic artery encourages the adhesion of platelets,
triggering the clotting process, and interfering with circulation.
·
Hypertension (high blood pressure)
promotes atherosclerosis and increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.
°
Atherosclerosis
raises blood pressure by narrowing the vessels and reducing their elasticity.
°
According
to one hypothesis, high blood pressure causes chronic damage to the endothelium
that lines the arteries, promoting plaque formation.
°
Hypertension
is simple to diagnose and can usually be controlled by diet, exercise,
medication, or a combination of these.
§
A
diastolic pressure over 90 is cause for concern, and extreme hypertension
(200/100) courts disaster.
·
As
atherosclerosis progresses, arteries become more and more clogged and the
threat of heart attack or stroke becomes much greater, but there may be
warnings of this impending threat.
°
For
example, if a coronary artery is partially blocked, a person may feel
occasional chest pains, a condition known as angina pectoris.
°
This
is a signal that part of the heart is not receiving enough blood, especially
when the heart is laboring because of physical or emotional stress.
·
However,
many people with atherosclerosis experience no warning signs and are unaware of
their disease until catastrophe strikes.
°
The
final blow is usually a heart attack or stroke.
°
A
heart attack is the death of cardiac
muscle tissue resulting from prolonged blockage of one or more coronary
arteries, the vessels that supply oxygen-rich blood to the heart.
°
A
stroke is the death of nervous
tissue in the brain.
·
Heart
attacks and strokes frequently result from a thrombus that clogs a coronary
artery or an artery in the brain.
·
A
key process leading to the clogging of an artery is an inflammatory response
triggered by the accumulation of LDLs in the inner lining of an artery.
·
Such
an inflammation can cause plaques to rupture, releasing fragments that form a
thrombus.
°
The
thrombus may originate at the site of blockage or it may develop elsewhere and
be transported (now called an embolus)
until it becomes lodged in an artery too narrow for it to pass.
°
Cardiac
or brain tissue downstream of the blockage may die from oxygen deprivation.
°
If
damage in the heart interrupts the conduction of electrical impulses through
cardiac muscle, heart rate may change drastically or the heart may stop beating
altogether.
·
Still,
the victim may survive if a heartbeat is restored by cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) within a few minutes of the attack.
·
The
effects of a stroke and the individual’s chance of survival depend on the
extent and location of the damaged brain tissue.
Concept 42.5 Gas exchange occurs across
specialized respiratory surfaces
·
Gas exchange is the uptake of
molecular oxygen (O2) from the environment and the discharge of
carbon dioxide (CO2) to the environment.
°
While
often called respiration, this process is distinct from, but linked to, the
production of ATP in cellular respiration.
·
Gas
exchange, in concert with the circulatory system, provides the oxygen necessary
for aerobic cellular respiration and removes the waste product, carbon dioxide.
·
The
source of oxygen, the respiratory
medium, is air for terrestrial animals and water for aquatic animals.
°
The
atmosphere is about 21% O2 (by volume).
°
Dissolved
oxygen levels in lakes, oceans, and other bodies of water vary considerably,
but are always much less than an equivalent volume of air.
·
The
part of an animal where gases are exchanged with the environment is the respiratory surface.
°
Movements
of CO2 and O2 across the respiratory surface occur
entirely by diffusion.
°
The
rate of diffusion is proportional to the surface area across which diffusion
occurs, and inversely proportional to the square
of the distance through which molecules must move.
°
Therefore,
respiratory surfaces tend to be thin and have large areas, maximizing the rate
of gas exchange.
°
In
addition, the respiratory surface of terrestrial and aquatic animals must be
moist to maintain the cell membranes.
§
As
a result, gases must dissolve in water before diffusing across respiratory
surfaces.
·
Because
the respiratory surface must supply O2 and expel CO2 for
the entire body, the structure of a respiratory surface depends mainly on the
size of the organism, whether it lives in water or on land, and on its
metabolic demands.
°
An
endotherm requires a larger area of respiratory surface than a similar-sized
ectotherm.
·
Gas
exchange occurs over the entire surface area of protists and other unicellular
organisms.
·
Similarly,
for some relatively simple animals, such as sponges, cnidarians, and flatworms,
the plasma membrane of every cell in the body is close enough to the outside
environment for gases to diffuse in and out.
·
However,
in most animals, the bulk of the body lacks direct access to the respiratory
medium.
°
The
respiratory surface is a thin, moist epithelium, separating the respiratory
medium from the blood or capillaries, which transport gases to and from the
rest of the body.
·
Some
animals, such as earthworms and some amphibians, use the entire outer skin as a
respiratory organ.
°
Just
below the moist skin is a dense net of capillaries.
°
However,
because the respiratory surface must be moist, the possible habitats of these
animals are limited to water or damp places.
°
Animals
that use their moist skin as their only respiratory organ are usually small and
are either long and thin or flat in shape, with a high ratio of surface area to
volume.
·
For
most other animals, the general body surface lacks sufficient area to exchange
gases for the entire body.
°
The
solution is a respiratory organ that is extensively folded or branched,
enlarging the surface area for gas exchange.
°
Gills,
tracheae, and lungs are the three most common respiratory organs.
Gills are respiratory adaptations of most
aquatic animals.
·
Gills are outfoldings of the
body surface that are suspended in water.
·
In
some invertebrates, such as sea stars, gills have a simple shape and are
distributed over much of the body.
·
Many
segmented worms have flap-like gills that extend from each body segment, or
long feathery gills clustered at the head or tail.
·
The
gills of clams, crayfish, and many other animals are restricted to a local body
region.
°
The
total surface area of gills is often much greater than that of the rest of the
body.
·
Water
has both advantages and disadvantages as a respiratory medium.
°
There
is no problem keeping the cell membranes of the respiratory surface moist,
since the gills are surrounded by the aqueous environment.
°
However,
O2 concentrations in water are low, especially in warmer and saltier
environments.
°
Thus,
gills must be very effective to obtain enough oxygen.
·
Ventilation, which increases the flow
of the respiratory medium over the respiratory surface, ensures that there is a
strong diffusion gradient between the gill surface and the environment.
°
Without
ventilation, a region of low O2 and high CO2
concentrations can form around the gill as it exchanges gas with the
environment.
°
Crayfish
and lobsters have paddle-like appendages that drive a current of water over
their gills.
°
Fish
gills are ventilated by a current of water that enters the mouth, passes
through slits in the pharynx, flows over the gills, and exits the body.
§
Because
water is dense and contains little oxygen per unit volume, fishes must expend
considerable energy in ventilating their gills.
·
Gas
exchange at the gill surface is enhanced by the opposing flows of water and
blood at the gills.
°
This
flow pattern is countercurrent exchange.
°
As
blood moves through a gill capillary, it becomes more and more loaded with
oxygen, but it simultaneously encounters water with even higher oxygen
concentrations because it is just beginning its passage over the gills.
°
All
along the gill capillary, there is a diffusion gradient favoring the transfer
of oxygen from water to blood.
°
The
countercurrent exchange mechanism is so efficient that the gills can remove
more than 80% of the oxygen from water to blood.
·
Gills
are generally unsuited for an animal living on land.
°
An
expansive surface of wet membrane exposed to air would lose too much water by
evaporation.
°
In
addition, the gills would collapse as their fine filaments, no longer supported
by water, cling together, reducing surface area for exchange.
°
Most
terrestrial animals have their respiratory surfaces within the body, opening to
the atmosphere through narrow tubes.
Tracheal systems and lungs are respiratory
adaptations of terrestrial animals.
·
As
a respiratory medium, air has many advantages over water.
°
Air
has a much higher concentration of oxygen.
°
Also,
since O2 and CO2 diffuse much faster in air than in
water, respiratory surfaces exposed to air do not have to be ventilated as
thoroughly as gills.
°
When
a terrestrial animal does ventilate, less energy is needed because air is far
lighter and much easier to pump than water and much less volume needs to be
breathed to obtain an equal amount of O2.
·
Air
does have problems as a respiratory medium.
°
The
respiratory surface, which must be large and moist, continuously loses water to
the air by evaporation.
°
This
problem is greatly reduced by a respiratory surface folded into the body.
·
The
tracheal system of insects is
composed of air tubes that branch throughout the body.
°
The
largest tubes, called tracheae, open to the outside, and the finest branches
extend to the surface of nearly every cell where gas is exchanged by diffusion
across the moist epithelium that lines the terminal ends.
°
The
open circulatory system does not transport oxygen and carbon dioxide.
·
For
a small insect, diffusion through the trachea brings in enough O2
and removes enough CO2 to support cellular respiration.
°
Larger
insects with higher energy demands ventilate their tracheal systems with
rhythmic body movements that compress and expand the air tubes like bellows.
°
An
insect in flight has a very high metabolic rate, consuming 10 to 200 times more
O2 than it does at rest.
°
Alternating
contraction and relaxation of flight muscles compresses and expands the body,
rapidly pumping air through the tracheal system.
°
The
flight muscles are packed with mitochondria, and the tracheal tubes supply each
with ample oxygen.
·
Unlike
branching tracheal systems, lungs
are restricted to one location.
°
Because
the respiratory surface of the lung is not in direct contact with all other
parts of the body, the circulatory system transports gases between the lungs
and the rest of the body.
°
Lungs
have a dense net of capillaries just under the epithelium that forms the
respiratory surface.
°
Lungs
have evolved in spiders, terrestrial snails, and vertebrates.
·
Among
the vertebrates, amphibians have relatively small lungs that do not provide a
large surface, and many lack lungs altogether.
°
They
rely heavily on diffusion across other body surfaces, especially their moist
skin, for gas exchange.
·
In
contrast, most reptiles (including all birds) and all mammals rely entirely on
lungs for gas exchange.
°
Turtles
may supplement lung breathing with gas exchange across moist epithelial
surfaces in their mouth and anus.
°
Lungs
and air-breathing have evolved in a few fish species (lungfishes) as
adaptations to living in oxygen-poor water or to spending time exposed to air.
·
In
general, the size and complexity of lungs are correlated with an animal’s
metabolic rate (and hence rate of gas exchange).
°
For
example, the lungs of endotherms have a greater area of exchange surface than
the lungs of similar-sized ectotherms.
·
Located
in the thoracic (chest) cavity, the lungs of mammals have a spongy texture and
are honeycombed with a moist epithelium that functions as the respiratory
surface.
·
A
system of branching ducts conveys air to the lungs.
·
Air
enters through the nostrils and is then filtered by hairs, warmed and
humidified, and sampled for odors as it flows through the nasal cavity.
°
The
nasal cavity leads to the pharynx, an intersection where the paths for air and
food cross.
°
When
food is swallowed, the larynx moves
upward and tips the epiglottis over the glottis.
°
The
rest of the time, the glottis is open, and air enters the upper part of the
respiratory tract.
§
The
wall of the larynx is reinforced by cartilage.
§
In
most mammals, the larynx is adapted as a voice box in which vibrations of a
pair of vocal cords produce sounds.
§
These
sounds are high-pitched when the vocal cords are stretched tight and vibrate
rapidly and low-pitched when the cords are less tense and vibrate slowly.
·
From
the larynx, air passes into the trachea,
or windpipe, whose shape is maintained by rings of cartilage.
°
The
trachea forks into two bronchi, one
leading into each lung.
°
Within
the lung, each bronchus branches repeatedly into finer and finer tubes, called bronchioles.
·
The
epithelium lining the major branches of the respiratory tree is covered by
cilia and a thin film of mucus.
°
The
mucus traps dust, pollen, and other particulate contaminants, and the beating
cilia move the mucus upward to the pharynx, where it is swallowed.
·
At
their tips, the tiniest bronchioles dead-end as a cluster of air sacs called alveoli.
°
Gas
exchange occurs across the thin epithelium of the lung’s millions of alveoli.
°
These
have a total surface area of about 100 m2 in humans, sufficient to
carry out gas exchange for the whole body.
°
Oxygen
in the air entering the alveoli dissolves in the moist film and rapidly
diffuses across the epithelium into a web of capillaries that surrounds each
alveolus.
°
Carbon
dioxide diffuses in the opposite direction.
Concept 42.6 Breathing ventilates the
lungs
·
The
process of breathing, the alternate
inhalation and exhalation of air, ventilates lungs.
·
A
frog ventilates its lungs by positive
pressure breathing.
°
During
a breathing cycle, muscles lower the floor of the oral cavity, enlarging it and
drawing in air through the nostrils.
°
With
the nostrils and mouth closed, the floor of the oral cavity rises and air is
forced down the trachea.
°
Elastic
recoil of the lungs, together with compression of the muscular body wall,
forces air back out of the lungs during exhalation.
·
In
contrast, mammals ventilate their lungs by negative
pressure breathing.
·
This
works like a suction pump, pulling air instead of pushing it into the lungs.
·
Muscle
action changes the volume of the rib cage and the chest cavity, and the lungs
follow suit.
·
The
lungs are enclosed by a double-walled sac, with the inner layer of the sac
adhering to the outside of the lungs and the outer layer adhering to the wall
of the chest cavity.
°
A
thin space filled with fluid separates the two layers.
°
Because
of surface tension, the two layers behave like two plates of glass stuck
together by the adhesion and cohesion of a film of water.
°
The
layers can slide smoothly past each other, but they cannot be pulled apart
easily.
°
Surface
tension couples movements of the lungs to movements of the rib cage.
·
Lung
volume increases as a result of the contraction of the rib muscles and diaphragm, a sheet of skeletal muscle
that forms the bottom wall of the chest cavity.
°
Contraction
of the rib muscles expands the rib cage by pulling the ribs upward and the
breastbone outward.
°
At
the same time, the diaphragm contracts and descends like a piston.
°
These
changes increase the lung volume, and as a result, air pressure within the
alveoli becomes lower than atmospheric pressure.
°
Because
air flows from higher pressure to lower pressure, air rushes into the
respiratory system.
·
During
exhalation, the rib muscles and diaphragm relax.
°
This
reduces lung volume and increases air pressure within the alveoli.
°
This
forces air up the breathing tubes and out through the nostrils.
·
Actions
of the rib muscles and diaphragm account for changes in lung volume during
shallow breathing, when a mammal is at rest.
·
During
vigorous exercise, other muscles of the neck, back, and chest further increase
ventilation volume by raising the rib cage even more.
·
In
some species, rhythmic movements during running cause visceral organs,
including the stomach and liver, to slide forward and backward in the body
cavity with each stride.
°
This
“visceral pump” further increases ventilation volume by adding to the
piston-like action of the diaphragm.
·
The
volume of air an animal inhales and exhales with each breath is called tidal volume.
°
It
averages about 500 mL in resting humans.
·
The
maximum tidal volume during forced breathing is the vital capacity, which is about 3.4 L and 4.8 L for college-age
females and males, respectively.
°
The
lungs hold more air than the vital capacity, but some air, the residual volume, remains in the lungs
because the alveoli do not completely collapse.
·
Since
the lungs do not completely empty and refill with each breath cycle, newly
inhaled air is mixed with oxygen-depleted residual air.
°
Therefore,
the maximum oxygen concentration in the alveoli is considerably less than in
the atmosphere.
°
Although
this limits the effectiveness of gas exchange, the carbon dioxide in residual
air is critical for regulating the pH of blood and breathing rate in mammals.
·
Ventilation
is much more complex in birds than in mammals.
°
Besides
lungs, birds have eight or nine air sacs that do not function directly in gas
exchange, but act as bellows that keep air flowing through the lungs.
·
The
entire system—lungs and air sacs—is ventilated when the bird breathes.
°
Air
flows through the interconnected system in a circuit that passes through the
lungs in one direction only, regardless of whether the bird is inhaling or
exhaling.
°
Instead
of alveoli, which are dead ends, the sites of gas exchange in bird lungs are
tiny channels called parabronchi,
through which air flows in one direction.
·
This
system completely exchanges the air in the lungs with every breath.
°
Therefore,
the maximum lung oxygen concentrations are higher in birds than in mammals.
°
Partly
because of this efficiency advantage, birds perform much better than mammals at
high altitude.
§
For
example, while human mountaineers experience tremendous difficulty obtaining
oxygen when climbing Earth’s highest peaks, several species of birds easily fly
over the same mountains during migration at altitudes of 9,000 m or more.
Control centers in the brain regulate the rate
and depth of breathing.
·
While
we can voluntarily hold our breath or breathe faster and deeper, most of the
time autonomic mechanisms regulate our breathing.
·
This
ensures that the work of the respiratory system is coordinated with that of the
cardiovascular system, and with the body’s metabolic demands for gas exchange.
·
Our
breathing control centers are
located in two brain regions, the medulla oblongata and the pons.
°
Aided
by the control center in the pons, the medulla’s center sets basic breathing
rhythm, triggering contraction of the diaphragm and rib muscles.
°
A
negative-feedback mechanism via stretch receptors prevents our lungs from
overexpanding by inhibiting the breathing center in the medulla.
·
The
medulla’s control center monitors the CO2 level of the blood and
regulates breathing activity appropriately.
°
Its
main cues about CO2 concentration come from slight changes in the pH
of the blood and cerebrospinal fluid bathing the brain.
§
Carbon
dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid, which lowers the pH.
·
When
the control center registers a slight drop in pH, it increases the depth and
rate of breathing, and the excess CO2 is eliminated in exhaled air.
·
Oxygen
concentrations in the blood usually have little effect of the breathing control
centers.
°
However,
when the O2 level is severely depressed—at high altitudes, for
example—O2 sensors in the aorta and carotid arteries in the neck
send alarm signals to the breathing control centers, which respond by
increasing breathing rate.
°
Normally,
a rise in CO2 concentration is a good indicator of a fall in O2
concentrations because these are linked by the same process, cellular
respiration.
°
However,
deep, rapid breathing (hyperventilation) purges the blood of so much CO2
that the breathing center temporarily ceases sending impulses to the rib muscles
and diaphragm.
·
The
breathing center responds to a variety of nervous and chemical signals and
adjusts the rate and depth of breathing to meet the changing demands of the
body.
°
However,
breathing control is only effective if it is coordinated with control of the
circulatory system, so that there is a good match between lung ventilation and
the amount of blood flowing through alveolar capillaries.
°
For
example, during exercise, cardiac output is matched to the increased breathing
rate, which enhances O2 uptake and CO2 removal as blood
flows through the lungs.
Concept 42.7 Respiratory pigments bind
and transport gases
Gases diffuse down pressure gradients in the
lungs and other organs.
·
For
a gas, whether present in air or dissolved in water, diffusion depends on
differences in a quantity called partial
pressure, the contribution of a particular gas to the overall total.
°
At
sea level, the atmosphere exerts a total pressure of 760 mm Hg.
°
Since
the atmosphere is 21% oxygen (by volume), the partial pressure of oxygen is
0.21 × 760, or about 160 mm Hg.
°
The
partial pressure of CO2 is only 0.23 mm Hg.
·
When
water is exposed to air, the amount of a gas that dissolves in water is
proportional to its partial pressure in the air and its solubility in water.
°
An
equilibrium is eventually reached when gas molecules enter and leave the
solution at the same rate.
°
At
this point, the gas is said to have the same partial pressure in the solution
as it does in the air.
°
Thus,
in a glass of water exposed to air at sea-level air pressure, the partial
pressure of O2 is 160 mm Hg and the partial pressure of CO2
is 0.23 mm Hg.
·
A
gas will always diffuse from a region of higher partial pressure to a region of
lower partial pressure.
·
Blood
arriving at the lungs via the pulmonary arteries has a lower partial pressure
of O2 and a higher partial pressure of CO2 than the air
in the alveoli.
°
As
blood enters the alveolar capillaries, CO2 diffuses from blood to
the air within the alveoli, and oxygen in the alveolar air dissolves in the
fluid that coats the epithelium and diffuses across the surface into the blood.
°
By
the time blood leaves the lungs in the pulmonary veins, its partial pressure of
O2 has been raised and its partial pressure of CO2 has
been lowered.
·
In
the tissue capillaries, gradients of partial pressure favor the diffusion of
oxygen out of the blood and carbon dioxide into the blood.
°
Cellular
respiration removes oxygen from and adds carbon dioxide to the interstitial
fluid by diffusion.
°
After
the blood unloads oxygen and loads carbon dioxide, it is returned to the heart
and pumped to the lungs again, where it exchanges gases with air in the
alveoli.
·
The
low solubility of oxygen in water is a fundamental problem for animals that
rely on the circulatory systems for oxygen delivery.
°
For
example, a person exercising consumes almost 2 L of O2 per minute,
but at normal body temperature and air pressure, only 4.5 mL of O2
can dissolve in a liter of blood in the lungs.
°
If
80% of the dissolved O2 were delivered to the tissues (an
unrealistically high percentage), the heart would need to pump 500 L of blood
per minute—a ton every 2 minutes.
·
In
fact, most animals transport most of the O2 bound to special
proteins called respiratory pigments
instead of dissolved in solution.
°
Respiratory
pigments, often contained within specialized cells, circulate with the blood.
°
The
presence of respiratory pigments increases the amount of oxygen that can be
carried in the blood to about 200 mL of O2 per liter of blood.
°
For
our exercising individual, the cardiac output would need to be a manageable
12.5 L of blood per minute to meet the oxygen demands of the systemic system.
·
A
diversity of respiratory pigments has evolved in various animal taxa to support
their normal energy metabolism.
°
One
example, hemocyanin, found in the
hemolymph of arthropods and many molluscs, has copper as its oxygen-binding
component, coloring the blood bluish.
°
The
respiratory pigment of almost all vertebrates is the protein hemoglobin,
contained within red blood cells.
§
Hemoglobin
consists of four subunits, each with a cofactor called a heme group that has an
iron atom at its center.
§
Because
iron actually binds the O2, each hemoglobin molecule can carry four
molecules of O2.
·
Like
all respiratory pigments, hemoglobin must bind oxygen reversibly, loading
oxygen at the lungs or gills and unloading it in other parts of the body.
°
Loading
and unloading depend on cooperation among the subunits of the hemoglobin
molecule.
°
The
binding of O2 to one subunit induces the remaining subunits to
change their shape slightly such that their affinity for oxygen increases.
°
When
one subunit releases O2, the other three quickly follow suit as a
conformational change lowers their affinity for oxygen.
·
Cooperative
oxygen binding and release is evident in the dissociation curve for hemoglobin.
·
Where
the dissociation curve has a steep slope, even a slight change in PO2
causes hemoglobin to load or unload a substantial amount of O2.
°
This
steep part corresponds to the range of partial pressures found in body tissues.
°
Because
of the effect of subunit cooperativity, a slight drop in PO2 causes
a relatively large increase in the amount of oxygen the blood unloads.
·
As
in all proteins, hemoglobin’s conformation is sensitive to a variety of
factors.
·
For
example, a drop in pH lowers the affinity of hemoglobin for O2, an
effect called the Bohr shift.
·
Because
CO2 reacts with water to form carbonic acid, an active tissue will
lower the pH of its surroundings and induce hemoglobin to release more oxygen.
·
In
addition to oxygen transport, hemoglobin also helps transport carbon dioxide
and assists in buffering blood pH.
°
About
7% of the CO2 released by respiring cells is transported in
solution.
°
Another
23% binds to amino groups of hemoglobin.
°
About
70% is transported as bicarbonate ions.
·
Carbon
dioxide from respiring cells diffuses into the blood plasma and then into red
blood cells.
°
The
CO2 first reacts with water, assisted by the enzyme carbonic
anhydrase, to form H2CO3, which then dissociates into a
hydrogen ion H+ and a bicarbonate ion (HCO3−)
°
Most
of the H+ attaches to hemoglobin and other proteins, minimizing the
change in blood pH.
°
The
HCO3− diffuses into the plasma.
·
As
blood flows through the lungs, the process is rapidly reversed as diffusion of
CO2 out of the blood shifts the chemical equilibrium in favor of the
conversion of HCO3− to CO2.
Elite animal athletes have adaptations that
allow them to meet extreme oxygen demands.
·
The
elite animal marathon runner may be the antelope-like pronghorn that has roamed
the grasslands of
°
Pronghorns
can run as fast as 100 km/hr, a speed second only to the cheetah.
°
Pronghorns
can sustain high speeds over long distances, unlike the cheetah.
·
Stan
Lindstedt and colleagues at the
°
Pronghorns
consume O2 at a rate three times the rate expected for an animal of
their size.
°
The
rate of O2 consumption per gram of tissue by a pronghorn is the same
as a mouse.
·
The
research team compared various physiological characteristics of pronghorns with
similar-sized domestic goats, which are adapted to climbing rather than
running.
·
The
maximum rate of O2 consumption by pronghorns is five times that of
goats.
°
Why?
Pronghorns have a larger surface area for diffusion in the lungs, nearly five
times the cardiac output, much higher muscle mass, and a higher volume and
density of mitochondria than goats.
°
In
addition, pronghorns maintain higher muscle temperatures.
·
The
pronghorn’s extreme O2 consumption rate, which underlies their
ability to run at high speeds over long distances, results from enhancements of
the normal physiological mechanisms present in other animals.
°
These
enhancements are the result of natural selection, perhaps exerted by the
predators that chased pronghorns on the open plains of
·
When
an air-breathing animal swims underwater, it lacks access to its normal
respiratory medium.
°
Most
humans can hold their breath for only 2 to 3 minutes and swim to depths of 20 m
or so.
°
However,
a variety of seals, sea turtles, and whales can stay submerged for much longer
times and reach much greater depths.
·
The
Weddell seal of
°
Elephant
seals can dive to 1,500 m and stay submerged for up to 2 hours.
·
One
adaptation of these deep-divers, such as the Weddell seal, is an ability to
store large amounts of O2 in the tissues.
°
Compared
to a human, a seal can store about twice as much O2 per kilogram of
body weight, mostly in the blood and muscles.
°
About
36% of our total O2 is in our lungs, and 51% is in our blood.
°
In
contrast, the Weddell seal holds only about 5% of its O2 in its
small lungs and stockpiles 70% in the blood.
·
Several
adaptations create these physiological differences between the seal and other
deep-divers in comparison to humans.
°
First,
the seal has about twice the volume of blood per kilogram of body weight as a
human.
°
Second,
the seal can store a large quantity of oxygenated blood in its huge spleen,
releasing this blood after the dive begins.
§
The
spleen can store about 24 L of blood.
°
Third,
diving mammals have a high concentration of an oxygen-storing protein called myoglobin in their muscles.
§
This
enables a Weddell seal to store about 25% of its O2 in muscle,
compared to only 13% in humans.
·
Diving
vertebrates not only start a dive with a relatively large O2
stockpile, but they also have adaptations that conserve O2.
°
They
swim with little muscular effort and often use buoyancy changes to glide
passively upward or downward.
°
Their
heart rate and O2 consumption rate decrease during the dive, and
most blood is routed to the brain, spinal cord, eyes, adrenal glands, and
placenta (in pregnant seals).
°
Blood
supply is restricted or even shut off to the muscles, and the muscles can
continue to derive ATP from fermentation after their internal O2
stores are depleted.
°
During
dives of more than 20 minutes, a Weddell seal’s muscles deplete the O2
stored in myoglobin and then derive ATP from fermentation instead of
respiration.