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Anatomy and Physiology II, Unit 2 Lecture Objectives

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Summary of all class notes and topics covered in Anatomy and Physiology II, Unit 2 from a former PAL leader

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Blood

List the functions of blood
●​ Delivers oxygen
○​ Red blood cells contain hemoglobin which is specialized to deliver oxygen
●​ Transports metabolic wastes
○​ Wastes are released into the bloodstream and carried away
○​ Examples of waste products: CO2, ammonia
●​ Transports hormones
○​ Blood is the travel medium of the endocrine system
○​ Hormones are released from glands into the bloodstream
●​ Maintains body temperature
○​ Blood is brought closer to the surface to dispacate heat and cool us down and
can be kept near our core to keep us warm
●​ Maintains body pH
●​ Maintains fluid volume
○​ Water in the blood can be exchanged with cells
●​ Prevents blood loss
○​ Blood clotting
●​ Prevents infection
○​ Phagocytic cells, leukocytes, antibodies, complement proteins → function in
immune system

Describe the composition of whole blood
●​ Erythrocytes
●​ Leukocytes
●​ Plasma
○​ Liquid component, background matrix of blood
○​ Accounts for 55% of total blood volume
○​ 90% water
○​ Proteins, primarily albumin which is produced by the liver, float in plasma
○​ Globulins function in immunity
○​ Plasma can carried dissolved O2 and CO2
●​ Platelets


Describe the structure, function, and production of erythrocytes
●​ Erythrocytes = red blood cells
●​ Start out as living cells but are no longer living in their mature form (lack a nucleus and
organelles)
●​ Account for 45% of total blood volume
●​ Function: carrying respiratory gases, primarily oxygen
●​ Structure
○​ Small (compared to WBCs)

, ○​ Biconcave
○​ Anucleate
○​ Contains hemoglobin (protein)
○​ Contains antioxidant enzymes (discard free radicals produced by metabolism)
●​ Erythropoiesis (formation of RBCs)
○​ Hemocytoblast → myeloid stem cell
○​ Myeloid stem cell → proerythroblast (first committed cell)
○​ Proerythroblast → early erythroblast
○​ Early erythroblast → late erythroblast
○​ Late erythroblast → normoblast
○​ Normoblast → loses organelles and nucleus → reticulocyte
■​ Accumulation of hemoglobin begins here and pushes out organelles
■​ Organelles are recycled to produce new proteins
○​ Reticulocyte → mature in bloodstream → erythrocyte
●​ Regulation of erythropoiesis
○​ Erythropoietin
■​ Hormone released from the kidneys
■​ Monitors blood oxygen levels and releases erythropoietin to stimulate
RBC production when blood oxygen is low
○​ Testosterone
■​ Stimulates the kidneys to produce erythropoietin
○​ Iron
■​ Stored in cells as ferritin and hemosiderin
■​ Transported as transferrin (circulating in bloodstream)
○​ B-vitamins
■​ B12 and folic acid
■​ Included in prenatal vitamins to promote RBC production to account for
increased blood volume during pregnancy
○​ Dietary nutrients
●​ Erythrocyte longevity
○​ Last about 3.5-4 months
○​ Old erythrocytes are destroyed by macrophages
■​ Cells in the spleen detect abnormal or aging RBCs and send
macrophages to destroy them
○​ RBC is recycled
■​ Heme is split from globin
■​ Iron bound to proteins is stored as ferritin
■​ Bilirubin (heme - iron) is produced
●​ Picked up by the liver and excreted as bile (stored in the
gallbladder) and released in feces
■​ Globin is broken down into amino acids

Describe the chemical makeup of hemoglobin
●​ Globin protein bound to heme pigment

, ●​ 4 globin units, 2 alpha chains and 2 beta chains
●​ Heme is the pigment that gives blood its red color
○​ Contains an iron core that oxygen can bind to
○​ One heme per globin subunit
●​ 1 hemoglobin can carry 4 oxygens
○​ increasing oxygen affinity with each oxygen added
●​ Oxyhemoglobin: loaded with O2
●​ Deoxyhemoglobin: O2 has been offloaded
●​ Carbaminohemoglobin
○​ Hemoglobin carrying CO2 → binds to globin proteins, not iron
○​ Only 20% of CO2 is carried in this form
■​ Majority is carried as bicarbonate is plasma

Define diapedesis
●​ ability of blood cells to leave circulation (blood vessel → interstitial space/other tissues)
●​ Only some white blood cells can do this

List the classes, structural characteristics, and functions of leukocytes
●​ Leukocytes = white blood cells
●​ Living cells (contain a nucleus and organelles)
●​ Many different types of leukocytes exists in the blood
●​ Function: immunity
●​ Account for less than 1% of total blood volume when combined with platelets
●​ Only component of blood with DNA
●​ Positive chemotaxis → attracted to the chemical secretions of other cells, such as those
released by damaged cells
●​ WBC count increases when we are fighting a bacterial infection
●​ Types
○​ Granulocytes
■​ Neutrophils
●​ Phagocytic
●​ 50-70% of WBCs
●​ Multilobe nuclei
●​ Count increases with inflammation
■​ Eosinophil
●​ 2 lobe nuclei
●​ 4-6% of WBCs
●​ Attack parasitic worms by releasing enzymes
■​ Basophil
●​ 0.5-1% of WBCs (rarest)
●​ Contain histamine which is a vasodilator that functions in
inflammatory response
○​ Agranulocytes
■​ Lymphocytes

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Uploaded on
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