in excretion?
Excretion is the removal of waste products secreted by cells from the body
some of the substances we remove from the body aren’t?
metabolic waste products - e.g. faeces
Faeces?
what is not excretion?
any matter that has not taken part in a metabolic reaction is not metabolic waste so its removal is not excretion
which part of faeces is excretion?
why does CO2 need to be removed?
urea journey?
- travels in blood to kidney where it’s excreted as urine
urea is stored in?
in the bladder (in urine)
2 blood vessels that carry blood to the liver are?
- hepatic portal vein
the hepatic artery?
carries oxygenated blood to the liver (for respiration)
the hepatic portal vein?
- the vein carries blood straight from the duodenum - a part of the small intestine
the hepatic vein ?
carries deoxygenated blood away from the liver
bile?
produced by hepatocytes, stored in the gall bladder
blood that is travelling in sinusoids?
bile?
travels in the opposite direction to blood in the sinusoids, bile travels in bile cannaliculi
hepatocytes?
- metabolically active so many mitochondria
Kupffer cells?
- clean up liver and protect it from disease
why can’t we store excess amino acids?
bc pH would become dangerously high. AAs contain a nitrogen group (amine group) which makes the molecule alkaline
what is the point of deamination?
why is it called deamination?
bc the amino group has been removed from the AA
what is the point of the ornithine cycle?
the ammonia produced by deamination is toxic, so it needs to be processed further. Ammonia is turned into less toxic urea.
Ornithine cycle overall equation?
CO2 + 2NH3 (+2H2O) -> (NH2)2CO + H2O
Ornithine cycle shorthand?
O ➡C➡A ➡ O…
Stages of the ornithine cycle?