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osmoregulation
general process by which animals control solute concentrations and balance water gain and loss
osmolarity
total solute concetration expressed at moles of solute/liter of solution
osmolarity measurement
milliOsmoles/liter or mOsm/L 1 mOsm/L = total solute concentration of 10^-3 M
Osmolarity of Human Blood
300 mOsms/L
Osmolarity of seawater
1000mOsm/L
Salt Water bony fish
Environment: hyperosmotic Osmoregulation strategies: needs to conserve water, eliminate excess salts
Fresh Water Bony Fish
Environment: hypoosmotic Osmoregulation strategies: needs to limit water uptake; conserves salts; absorb salts from the surrounding
Osmoconformers
internal osmolarity is isoosmotic with surrounding environment -animals need to live in water with stable composition
Osmoregulators
controls internal osmolarity independent of its external environment
Kangaroo Rat Water Balance
Water Gain: .2 mL through ingested food; 1.8 mL through metabolism of food Water Loss: Urine .45mL, Feces .09mL, Evaporation 1.46mL
Human Water Balance
Water gain: ingested food 750mL, ingested in liquid 1500mL, metabolism of food 250mL Water Loss: Urine 1500mL, Feces 100mL, Evaporation 900mL
Energetics of Osmoregulations
Costly to maintain osmolarity differences between animal's body and the environment because physiological systems require solute gradients across cell and organelle membranes
How do cells manipulate solute concentrations in the ECF?
Active Transport Mechanisms
Brine Shrimp
-Osmoregulation of brine shrimp that lives in Utah's Great Salt Lakes uses 30% of resting metabolic rate -It is so costly because the gradient between internal and external osmolarity is extremely high
Excretion
process that rids the body of nitrogenous metabolic waste products
How is Ammonia made?
-Proteins and Nucleic acids are metabolized or broken down and the product is very toxic NH3 -It is so toxic because ion (NH4+) interferes with oxidative phosphorylation
Why are excretion and osmoregulation structurally and functionally linked?
most metabolic waste must be dissolved in water to be excreted from the body
Excretory process
functions to dispose metabolic waste and control bod fluid composition
Four key functions of excretory system
Filtration, Reabsorption, Secretion, Excretion
Components of Blood
cells, proteins, large molecules, water, small solutes (salts, sugars, AA, nitrogenous waste)
Which components move through the semipermeable membrane and by what mechanisms?
small solutes via blood pressure
Filtrate in Bowman's Capsule
isoosmotic
Cortical Nephron
-present just in the cortex -about 85% of the nephrons in the kidney are cortical
Juxamedullary Nephron
-crosses the cortex, outer, and inner medulla -about 15% of nephrons in kidney are juxamedullary -mammals and birds have jux. nephrons -advantage: only jux can produce hyperosmotic urine
How much blood flows through the kidney each day?
1600L
How much blood is filtered through the glomerulus?
800L
How much of the filtrate is voided as urine?
1.5L
Molecules Reabsorbed in the Proximal Tubule
HCO3-, NaCl, H20, Nutrients, K+
Molecules Secreted in the Proximal Tubule
H+, NH3 (drugs, toxins)
Molecules that move via Active Transport in Proximal Tubule
NaCl, Glucose
Molecules that move via Passive Transport in Proximal Tubule
HCO3-, K+, AA
Molecules that move via osmosis in Proximal Tubule
water
Osomolarity of filtrate at the end of PT
300mOsm/L
Volume of filtrate though PT
volume has decreased as it passed through the PT
Descending Loop of Henle
-water is moved out (reabsorbed) via osmosis -moves so quickly out because of the aquaporin channels -osmolarity at the bottom of DLOF is 1200mOsm/L
Ascending Loop of Henle
-NaCl is moved out (reabsorbed) via passive transport in thin part and active transport in thick part via ion channels -water does not move out because the ALOF is impermeable to water -osmolarity at the top of the ALOF is 100mOsm/L
Distal Tubule
-NaCl, H20, HCO3- reabsorbed -K+ and H+ secreted -osmolarity at the end of the tube is 300mOsm/L
Collecting Duct - when conserving water
-Water moves out of the collecting duct in the renal cortex and medulla -isoosmotic relative to interstitial fluid at the end of the CD -filtrate is hyperosmotic
Collecting Duct - when getting rid of excess water
-NaCl moves out of the CD in the renal cortex and renal medulla -filtrate is hypoosmotic relative to blood
Where within the nephron is the greatest amount of energy consumed?
thick portion of the ascending loop of henle
What two solutes are the most important for affecting osmolarity within the nephron?
NaCl and Urea
ADH
-Antidiuretic Hormone (vasopressin) -made in the hypothalamus and stored in the posterior pituitary -cannot work alone to overcome dehydration, must also drink water (osmoreceptors trigger thirst)
What type of signal triggers the release of ADH?
-Blood Osmolarity > 300 mOsm/L (dehydrated) -effect: hyperosmotic urine -not released if blood osmolarity <300mOsm/L (over hydrated)
Name and Location of cell that monitors ADH signal
Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus
Where does ADH react on the body and what is its function here?
Collecting duct and distal tubule of the nephron to increase the reabsorption of water
How does ADH exert its effects within the CD?
ADH binds to receptor, stimulates production of cAMP, cAMP is a secondary messenger that functions to stimulate movement of aquaporin water channels to PM of CD. Once in membrane, H20 molecules can move much more quickly through the transport epithelium
Alcohol and ADH
Alcohol prevents the release of ADH therefore creating hypoosmotic urine because without aquaporin molecules in the transport epithelium cells of the CD, water could not be reabsorbed efficiently

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