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The Internal Environment Week 9

The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

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External and Internal Environments Organisms are able to regulate their internal conditions despite the changing conditions of the external environment by constant movement of material across membranes.

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Page 1: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

The Internal Environment

Week 9

Page 2: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

External and Internal Environments

The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Page 3: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

External and Internal Environments

Organisms are able to regulate their internal conditions despite the changing conditions of the external

environment by constant movement of material across membranes.

Page 4: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Different environments

Type oforganis

m

Externalenvironment

Tolerance

Internal environmen

t

Control

Unicellular

General environment

Relatively high, little mobility

• Contents of the cell.

• Closely related to external environment.

Tolerate, or move away

Multicellular

General environment

Variable, but high ability to maintain constant internal environment

• Extracellular fluid.

• Often very different from external environment.

High regulation

Page 5: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Homeostasis: keeping

within limits

Page 6: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Structure of the nervous

system

Page 7: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

TheBrai

n

Page 8: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Having a brain wave

• A living brain shows continuous electrical activity which can be measured.

• A range of different ‘brain wave’ patterns is shown.

• A person is declared ‘brain dead’ when no electrical activity can be measured.

Page 9: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Stimulus-Response ModelStimulus Recept

orTransmission

Control Centre

Effector

ResponseTransmission

Page 10: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Stimulus-response model

Set points and optimum conditions are maintained through negative feedback

Page 11: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Negative Feedback

Page 12: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Negative Feedback

Page 13: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Positive feedback mechanisms• Positive feedback system

in which oxytocin produced by the posterior pituitary gland stimulates contraction of the uterus and also stimulates the pituitary gland to produce even more of the hormone.

• Note the positive feedback nature of the inputs.

Page 14: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Homeostasis:

hormones in action• Detecting and

counteracting change.• The two interrelated

stages of homeostasis.• Relies on negative

feedback systems.• If a variable slightly

overshoots the optimal as a result of effector action, the counter negative feedback system will respond to correct the overshoot.

• Occurs continuously in the body so that optimal levels of variables are maintained

Page 15: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Temperature Regulation

Page 16: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Temperature RegulationStimulusHigh CO2 levels in

blood

ReceptorMedulla and aortic and

carotid bodiesControl CentreBrain

EffectorsDiaphragm and

intercostal muscles

ResponseFaster, deeper

breathing

Transmission

Transmission

Page 17: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Examples of factors that animals detect

Environment

Physical factors Chemical factors

Internal Temperature, blood pressure, stress on bones and muscles

Concentrations of O2, CO2, water, ions, wastes

External Light, temperature, gravity, sound

Food, O2, CO2, water, otherorganisms, other chemicals

Page 18: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Types of sensory receptors and their stimuli

Type of receptor

Types of stimuli detected

Example

Chemoreceptor

O2, CO2, pH, ions, signalling molecules

Receptors on dendrites of nerve cells

Photoreceptor Light and infrared radiation

Rods and cones in the eye

Mechanoreceptor

Sound, touch, pressure and gravity

Geotropism receptors that direct roots to grow down

Thermoreceptor

Heat and cold Receptors in skin sensing changes in temperature

Page 19: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Neurons

Page 20: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Neurons

•A typical motor neuron.

•Note the cell body containing the nucleus, with many branching projections, called dendrites, and the single axon that ends with many synaptic terminals that allow it to communicate with other neurons.

Page 21: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

3 types of neuron

Page 22: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Neurons

(a) affector (or sensory) neuron(b) effector (or motor) neuron(c) connecting neuron (or interneuron)

Different kinds of neurons:

Neurone animation – reference to drug use

Page 23: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Neurons

Which type of neuron is located completely within the CNS?

Relationship between different kinds of neurons.

Page 24: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Transmission of an impulse along and between nerve

cells

Page 25: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Synapse

Page 26: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Communication by neurotransmitters

•Notice the gap between the axon of one neuron and the one to which it joins.

•Transmitter substances are produced in vesicles near the end of the axon.

Synapses

Page 27: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Signal transduction across a synapse

Page 28: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Reflex Arc

Page 29: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Communication by neurohormones(a) Electrical

impulses transmit signals along a neuron. Neurotransmitters are secreted at the axon and diffuse across a small gap to deliver a signal to the target cell, another neuron.

(b) Similar to part (a), except the target is striated muscle tissue.

(c) Some neurons release chemicals called neurohormones into the blood. The blood carries the appropriate signal to the target organs that then respond.

Page 30: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Communication by neurohormones

• Neurons in the hypothalamus in the brain secrete neurohormones into blood capillaries that become associated with the pituitary.

• Signals received by cells of the pituitary are transduced and the pituitary responds by producing a hormone as instructed. This hormone enters the bloodstream and is transported to its target cells.

Page 31: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Network of nerve cells

Page 32: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Network of nerve cells

Page 33: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Network of nerve cells

Page 34: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Neuron function impededThyrotoxic goitre

A goitre is caused by the enlargement of the thyroid gland and may vary in size from a small

lump to an enormous swelling.

Page 35: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Toxins can overwhelm

neuron transmissio

n• Many animal toxins

act on the nervous system, particularly at neuro-muscular synapses.

• Some prevent the passage of nerve impulses along a nerve.

• Others act on one or both sides of the neuro-muscular synapse.

Page 36: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Additional animationsCocaine effect

Page 37: The Internal Environment Week 9. External and Internal Environments The internal environment is the interstitial fluid through which cells exchange substances

Chapter 5 and 6 Reviews• Chapter 5

– Biochallenge (p.162), all questions– Chapter Review (p.163), Q. 2-6, 8-9

• Chapter 6– Biochallenge (p.196), all questions– Chapter Review (p.197), Q. 2-3, 6-8

You can start this work as we have covered some of the content, but you will not be able to do all

questions. You will be submitting this work once we have finished Week 10.