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Introduction To Human Physiology: Prepared By: DR - Mustafa Al-Shehabat
Introduction To Human Physiology: Prepared By: DR - Mustafa Al-Shehabat
Human Physiology
The science that is concerned with the function of the living organism and its parts, and of the physical and chemical processes involved.
Cells: the basic structural and functional unit (~ 100 trillion) Tissues: (e.g. muscles, epithelial, nervous ) Organs: (e.g. kidney, heart, liver, pancreas) Organ systems: (e.g. cardiovascular, urinary)
Human physiology is a science which analyzes the body functions and their interaction with the environment Humans are influenced by the external environment in which they live
Physiologi cal Homeosta sis Metabolis m Blood pH adaptation Physical work Mental work Reproduct ion Psychosoc ial adaptation
Human body interacts with the external environment through contact systems :Examples Respiratory system with atmospheric air Digestive system with food and drink Skin with the external temperature Sensory organs with smell , taste or sounds
Homeostasis
Homeostasis refers to the constancy or steady state of the internal environment Homeostatic mechanisms refer to all the automatic physiological processes which occur in response to changes in the external or internal environments and which tend to correct all deviations from the normal Physiological processes called homeostatic mechanisms precisely regulate the temperature, pH and the concentration of chemical components of the internal environment
Cell wall
Lipid Bilayer:
barrier to water and water-soluble substances CO2 ions glucose H2O urea N2 O2
halothane
Cell Membrane
but, other molecules still get across! urea ions H2O CO2 N2 O2
glucose
halothane
Molecular Gradients
inside outside
(in mM)
Na+ K+ Mg2+ Ca2+ H+ HCO3ClSO42PO3protein 14 140 0.5 10-4 (pH 7.2) 10 5-15 2 75 40
(in mM)
142 4 1-2 1-2 (pH 7.4) 28 110 1 4 5
Proteins:
provide specificity to a membrane provide function ion channels carrier proteins
K+
Diffusion
occurs down a concn. gradient no mediator or involves a channel or carrier no additional energy
Active Transport
occurs against a concn. gradient involves a carrier requires ENERGY
Simple Diffusion
(a) lipid-soluble molecules move readily across the membrane (rate depends on lipid solubility) (b) water-soluble molecules cross via channels or pores
(a) (b)
Characteristics:
Ion Channels
un-gated determined by size, shape, distribution of charge, etc. gated voltage (e.g. voltage-dependent Na+ channels) chemically (e.g. nicotinic ACh receptor channels)
in
out
Na+
Facilitated Diffusion
(also called carrier mediated diffusion) Rate of diffusion is limited by Vmax of the carrier protein the density of carrier proteins in the membrane (i.e., number per unit area)
Osmosis:
Osmosis occurs from pure water toward a water/salt solution. Water moves down its concn gradient.
Active Transport
Primary Active Transport
molecules are pumped against a concentration gradient at the expense of energy (ATP) direct use of energy
subunit 100,000 MW
subunit 55,000 MW
function ???
Transport is electrogenic but contributes less than 10% to the membrane potential
inside
2. Counter-transport (anti-porters):
substance is transported in the opposite direction as the driver ion (Na+)
Ca2+
H+ inside
Cl-/H+