Title: Osmoregulation and Excretion
1Osmoregulation and Excretion
- A.P. Biology
- Ch. 44
- Rick L. Knowles
- Liberty Senior High School
2Osmoregulation
- Maintaining a balance of both water and ions
across a membrane/organism. Solute and water
homeostasis. - Osmolarity moles of total solute per liter of
water usually in milliosmoles/L. - Mechanism of homeostasis varies with the
environment in which theyve adapted (freshwater,
saltwater, terrestrial).
3Some Comparison
Freshwater 0.5 -15
0
300 Human Plasma
1,000 Seawater
5,000 Dead Sea
Distilled,deionized Water
Milliosmoles/L (mosm/L)
4- Most animals are said to be stenohaline
- And cannot tolerate substantial changes in
external osmolarity both osmoconformers and
osmoregulators. - Euryhaline animals
- Can survive large fluctuations in external
osmolarity.
Tilapia, freshwater up to 2,000 mosm/L
5Osmoregulation and Nitrogenous Wastes
- Other waste solutes must be removed from cells
and organisms. - A waste product of metabolizing amino acids and
nucleic acids (deamination)- ammonia.
6- Concept 44.2 An animals nitrogenous wastes
reflect its phylogeny and habitat. - The type and quantity of an animals waste
products - May have a large impact on its water balance.
7Ammonia
- Direct by-product of protein and nucleic acids
(deamination). - Very toxic to cells.
- Highly soluble in water.
- Molecule of choice for freshwater organisms
eliminated easily through kidneys, gill
epithelia, etc. - Downside requires a lot of water.
8Urea
- Saltwater and terrestrial mammals convert ammonia
into urea. - Less toxic accumulate more in tissue.
- Less soluble in water than ammonia.
- Allows conservation of water.
9Uric Acid
- Birds and reptiles accumulate waste in an egg.
- Convert ammonia into uric acid.
- Insoluble in water crystallizes.
- Semisolid paste-guano.
- Requires less water to eliminate.
10- Among the most important wastes
- Are the nitrogenous breakdown products of
proteins and nucleic acids
Figure 44.8
11Osmoconformers
- Most marine protists and invertebrates.
- Are isoosmotic with marine environment.
- Open channels and carriers for most ion transport
(Not all ions are in equilibrium). - Ex. Invertebrates like sea anemones, jellyfish,
and only vertebrate, Class Agnatha- hagfish.
12Class Agnatha- Hagfish
13Show me a real hagfish!
- Video Discovery- Blue Planet Ocean World
14Osmoregulators
- Maintain constant osmotic concentration in body
fluids and cytoplasm despite external variations. - Continuous regulation since environment and
intake (diet) changes. - Evolved special mechanisms for different
environments. - Ex. Most Vertebrates
15The Problems
- Freshwater Vertebrates- are hyperosmotic, water
enters body, tend to lose ions. - Marine Vertebrates- are hypoosmotic, water leaves
body, tend to gain ions. - Terrestrial Vertebrates- are hypoosmotic, water
leaves body through respiration, perspiration,
skin.
16Freshwater Protists
- Problem hyperosmotic impossible to become
isoosmotic with dilute fresh water tend to gain
water lose ions no excretory organ. - Solution Contractile Vacuoles active
transport of water out of cell less permeable to
ions - Downside Active transport requires energy.
17Freshwater Invertebrates
- Water and wastes are passed into a collecting
vessel or primitive excretory organ. - Membrane retains proteins and sugars and allows
water and dissolved wastes to leave-selectively
permeable. - Ex. Freshwater jellyfish, etc,
18- Concept 44.3 Diverse excretory systems are
variations on a tubular theme. - Excretory systems
- Regulate solute movement between internal fluids
and the external environment.
19Excretory Processes
- Most excretory systems
- Produce urine by refining a filtrate derived from
body fluids
Figure 44.9
20Protonephridia Flame-Bulb Systems
- A protonephridium
- Is a network of dead-end tubules lacking internal
openings.
Figure 44.10
21- The tubules branch throughout the body
- And the smallest branches are capped by a
cellular unit called a flame bulb. - These tubules excrete a dilute fluid
- And function in osmoregulation
22Metanephridia
- Each segment of an earthworm
- Has a pair of open-ended metanephridia
Figure 44.11
23- Metanephridia consist of tubules
- That collect coelomic fluid and produce dilute
urine for excretion.
24Terrestrial Insects
- Problem Must minimize water loss.
- Solution Use chitin as an exoskeleton.
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26Malpighian Tubules
- In insects and other terrestrial arthropods,
malpighian tubules - Remove nitrogenous wastes from hemolymph and
function in osmoregulation
Figure 44.12
27Malpighian Tubules
K
Hemolymph
Water and K
K
Water and waste
K
Na/K-ATPase
Conc. Waste
Hindgut
28Malpighian Tubules
- Use Malpighian tubules- blind end tubules that
extend into hemocoel (body cavity). - Cells ? waste and salts into hemolymph?lumen of
tubule by diffusion and active transport. - K are actively transported into lumen set up a
gradient. - Water and other ions leave the hemolymph and
follow into the lumen by passive diffusion. - Empty into hindgut water reabsorbed urine is
concentrated. - Na/K-ATPase moves ions from lumen of hindgut
into hemolymph.
29Insects versus other Vertebrates
- Insects use a gradient to pull water through a
membrane open circulatory system low blood
pressure. - Vertebrates- push water through a membrane
closed circulatory system higher blood pressure.
30More Complex Organisms Need Another Solution
- Introducing the Vertebrate Kidney!
31Nephron (Tubule)
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40Gill Epithelia is Permeable
41Hypotonic Env.
Hypertonic Cells
Water
42Freshwater Bony Fishes
- Problems Water enters cells from environment,
solutes leave cells. - Solutions Drink very little water excrete
large amounts of dilute (hypoosmotic) urine with
large kidneys reabsorb ions in kidney tubules
(active transport) back into blood use chloride
cells in gill epithelium (active transport).
43- Freshwater animals maintain water balance
- By excreting large amounts of dilute urine.
- Salts lost by diffusion
- Are replaced by foods and uptake across the gills.
Figure 44.3b
(b) Osmoregulation in a freshwater fish
44Hypotonic Cells
Water
Hypertonic Env.
45Saltwater Bony Fishes
- Problem Tend to lose water, gain ions, mostly
at gills. - Solutions Drink large amount of water kidney
retains water and excretes ions (isoosmotic
urine) use chloride cells in gills to actively
transport some ions across gill epithelium.
46- Marine bony fishes are hypoosmotic to sea water
- Lose water by osmosis and gain salt by both
diffusion and from food they eat. - These fishes balance water loss
- By drinking seawater.
Figure 44.3a
(a) Osmoregulation in a saltwater fish
47Cartilaginous Fishes
- Problem Same as marine bony fishes.
- Solution Reabsorb urea from nephron tubule back
into the blood 100X blood urea than mammals
(special protective solute,TMAO to protect
proteins)?blood is slightly hyperosmotic? kidneys
and gills do not have to remove ions do not have
to drink large volume of water.
48Cartilaginous Fishes
- Problem Still must remove excess Na and Cl-
that diffuse across gills, diet, etc. - Solution Rectal Gland- uses Na/K-ATPase
pumps to actively transport Na and Cl- out of
blood by setting up a gradient.
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51How the Rectal Gland Works
Extracellular Fluid
Na
K
Na
Cl-
Na/K-ATPase
Na
Cotransporter
Cl-
Na
Cl-
Chloride Channel
Na
Cl-
To Rectum
Lumen of Rectal Gland
52How could a marine shark enter freshwater?
- By controlling the amount of solutes!
- Video National Geographic Presents Attacks of
the Mystery Shark
53Rectal Gland
- Very common mechanism for removing salt in marine
animals. - Problem Marine birds and reptiles have
freshwater kidneys designed to reabsorb salt from
urine into blood. - Use similar salt glands in nostrils to excrete
salt.
54- An example of transport epithelia is found in the
salt glands of marine birds. - Remove excess sodium chloride from the blood.
Figure 44.7a, b
55Show me some marine reptiles! Salt glands in
action!
- Video Corwin Experience- Galapagos
56Animals That Live in Temporary Waters
- Some aquatic invertebrates living in temporary
ponds - Can lose almost all their body water and survive
in a dormant state - This adaptation is called anhydrobiosis.
Figure 44.4a, b
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67- The nephron, the functional unit of the
vertebrate kidney - Consists of a single long tubule and a ball of
capillaries called the glomerulus
Figure 44.13c, d
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71Vertebrate Kidneys
- Four Functions
- 1. Filtration
- 2. Reabsorption
- 3. Secretion
- 4. Excretion
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771. Filtration
- Glomerulus- tightly-woven ball of capillaries
embedded in a cup-shaped tubule- Bowmans
capsule. - Slits/pores in capillaries and capsule allow
liquid/solutes through but prevent cells and
large proteins from entering the nephron. - Produces isoosmotic filtrate with blood
78Filtration of the Blood
- Filtration occurs as blood pressure
- Forces fluid from the blood in the glomerulus
into the lumen of Bowmans capsule.
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80Pathway of the Filtrate
- From Bowmans capsule, the filtrate passes
through three regions of the nephron - The proximal tubule, the loop of Henle, and the
distal tubule - Fluid from several nephrons
- Flows into a collecting duct
81Blood Vessels Associated with the Nephrons
- Each nephron is supplied with blood by an
afferent arteriole - A branch of the renal artery that subdivides into
the capillaries - The capillaries converge as they leave the
glomerulus - Forming an efferent arteriole.
- The vessels subdivide again
- Forming the peritubular capillaries, which
surround the proximal and distal tubules.
82From Blood Filtrate to Urine A Closer Look
- Filtrate becomes urine
- As it flows through the mammalian nephron and
collecting duct.
Figure 44.14
83Transport Epithelium
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852. Reabsorption
- Must return most of the water and solutes to the
blood. (2000 l of blood? 180 l water? 1-2 l urine
daily). - Reabsorb glucose, amino acids, divalent cations
in proximal tubule by active transport carriers.
- If not reabsorbed, lost in the urine.
- Ex. Diabetes mellitus
863. Secretion
- Foreign molecules and wastes (ammonia, urea) are
secreted into lower portions of tubule. - Opposite direction as reabsorption
(Capillary?Tubule). - Ex. Antibiotics and other drugs, bacterial
debris
87- Secretion and reabsorption in the proximal
tubule - Substantially alter the volume and composition of
filtrate - Reabsorption of water continues
- As the filtrate moves into the descending limb of
the loop of Henle
884. Excretion
- Urine is a solution of
- Harmful drugs, hormones, nitrogenous wastes, and
excess K, H, water. - Homeostasis of
- pH, electrolytes, blood volume and pressure.
89- As filtrate travels through the ascending limb of
the loop of Henle - Salt diffuses out of the permeable tubule into
the interstitial fluid. - The distal tubule
- Plays a key role in regulating the K and NaCl
concentration of body fluids. - The collecting duct
- Carries the filtrate through the medulla to the
renal pelvis and reabsorbs NaCl.
90- Concept 44.5 The mammalian kidneys ability to
conserve water is a key terrestrial adaptation. - The mammalian kidney
- Can produce urine much more concentrated than
body fluids, thus conserving water.
91Solute Gradients and Water Conservation
- In a mammalian kidney, the cooperative action and
precise arrangement of the loops of Henle and the
collecting ducts - Are largely responsible for the osmotic gradient
that concentrates the urine.
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93- Two solutes, NaCl and urea, contribute to the
osmolarity of the interstitial fluid. - - Causes the reabsorption of water in the kidney
and concentrates the urine.
Figure 44.15
94- The countercurrent multiplier system involving
the loop of Henle - Maintains a high salt concentration in the
interior of the kidney, which enables the kidney
to form concentrated urine.
95- The collecting duct, permeable to water but not
salt - Conducts the filtrate through the kidneys
osmolarity gradient, and more water exits the
filtrate by osmosis.
96- Urea diffuses out of the collecting duct
- As it traverses the inner medulla
- Urea and NaCl
- Form the osmotic gradient that enables the kidney
to produce urine that is hyperosmotic to the
blood.
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100- Antidiuretic Hormone (ADH)
- Increases water reabsorption in the distal
tubules and collecting ducts of the kidney
(a) Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) enhances fluid
retention by makingthe kidneys reclaim more
water.
Figure 44.16a
101- The Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System (RAAS)
- Is part of a complex feedback circuit that
functions in homeostasis
(b) The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
(RAAS) leads to an increasein blood volume and
pressure.
Figure 44.16b
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103- The South American vampire bat, which feeds on
blood - Has a unique excretory system in which its
kidneys offload much of the water absorbed from a
meal by excreting large amounts of dilute urine.
Figure 44.17
104- Concept 44.6 Diverse adaptations of the
vertebrate kidney have evolved in different
environments. - The form and function of nephrons in various
vertebrate classes - Are related primarily to the requirements for
osmoregulation in the animals habitat.
105Terrestrial Animals
- Land animals manage their water budgets
- By drinking and eating moist foods and by using
metabolic water.
Figure 44.5
106- Desert animals
- Get major water savings from simple anatomical
features
Figure 44.6
107- Exploring environmental adaptations of the
vertebrate kidney
Figure 44.18