chemistry of living things context 2

Internal Systems Allowing Life

  • Cellular respiration

    • Glucose + Oxygen -> Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy (ATP)

  • Humans:

    • Digestion:

      • Function: Breaks down food into nutrients to be transported to cells

        • Ingest

        • Break food down

        • Eliminate what can’t be ingested

      • Nutrients: glucose (help atp), amino acids (help enzymes, proteins), fatty acids (long term energy), vitamins (metabolic processes), minerals (functions)

      • Absorbed into bloodstream thru the walls of the intestines so they can be transported to cells

      • Use glucose in cellular respiration to produce ATP

    • Respiratory system

      • Function: gas exchange of oxygen & carbon dioxide

      • Oxygen is inhaled into the lungs and the alveoli

      • Alveoli transfer oxygen to the capillaries

      • Use oxygen in cellular respiration to produce ATP

      • Expels carbon dioxide in cellular respiration and transported to lungs

    • circulatory system

      • Function: to transport oxygen, nutrients, hormones, glucose… to cells while also removing waste products

      • Cellular respiration: transports oxygen and glucose to cells and carbon dioxide out of cells

    • Excretory system

      • Function: Removes wastes from the body

      • Cellular respiration: expels water and carbon dioxide

        • Gas exchange - carbon dioxide

        • Kidneys regulate balance of water by filtering water from blood and expelling as urine

  • Plants

    • Photosynthesis

      • Energy (sunlight) + Carbon Dioxide + Water -> Glucose + Oxygen

    • Cellular Respiration


Control Systems: Nervous & Endocrine

Nervous System

  • Function: Network of cells of Neurons that send electrochemical messages around the body rapidly allowing us to react to changes in surroundings and respond to them

  • Stimulus: Any internal or external change in the environment

  • Receptors: group of specialised cells that detect stimuli

    • Stimuli detections converted into electrical impulses

    • Located in sense organs

  • Coordinator: when receptor stimulated, sends signal along the neurons to brain

    • CNS (central nervous system) = brain + spinal cord

    • Brain then coordinates response

  • Effectors: part of the body that produces the response

  • Conscious Responses: the change in the body

  • Stimulus -> receptor -> Coordinator -> Effector -> Response

  • Reflex Responses: 

    • Involuntary action

    • A nerve impulse taking a short-cut to the spinal cord and back

    • Super fast response to a stimulus - usually a response to danger

    • eg; touching something hot, arm moves away from hot object

  • Reflex Arc

    • Receptor detect stimulus

    • Sensory neuron sends signal to relay neuron

    • Motor Neuron send signal to effector

    • Effector produces response

  • Parts of Neauron:

  • Dendrites

    • Receive signals from other neuron cells

  • Cell Body

    • Contains cell nucleus

  • Nucleus

    • Contains the genetic material (chromosomes) of the neuron cell

  • Axon

    • Conducts electrical impulses along the neuron cell

  • Myelin Sheath

    • Insulates the axon to help protect the neuron cell & speed up transmission of electrical impulses

  • Axon Terminal 

    • Transmits electrical & chemical signals to other neuron cells & effector cells

Endocrine System

  • Function: Collection of glands that release hormones (chemical messages) to transfer info around the body

    • Hormones provide slower messages than the nervous system, buy they occur over a longer period of time

    • Hormones control processes in the body eg; storage, release of glucose into the blood, growth, water balance, reproduction…

    • Glands work together but are not controlled from one central location

    • Hormones travel in the blood and only target particular cells respond to each hormone - many substances 

  • Homeostasis: constant conditions - the maintenance of constant internal conditions in an organism

  • Negative feedback: type of control that is found in homeostasis - responds when conditions change

  • Stimulus reaction: Chemical internal changes that brings a slow but long lasting response 

Interactions

  • Stress response: Nervous system initiates fight or flight response and then endocrine system release hormones for a reaction

  • Both control reactions and responses



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