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Lab: Blood Samples
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In your lab notebook, choose 4 different slides of blood samples and draw and label what you see at 400X.
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Blood
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Blood Evidence Blood typing = class evidence
DNA profiling = individual evidence Blood-spatter: recreate crime scene
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History of the study of blood
2500 B.C. Egyptians - bloodletting to cure diseases 500 B.C. Greeks – distinguished between arteries and veins 1659 A.D. Leeuwenhoek – view blood cells with microscope 1795 First blood transfusion performed 1901 Landsteiner – discovered 3 blood types (A, B, O)
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1902 Decastello – discovered AB blood type 1922 Oliver – established blood donor service 1935 Mayo Clinic – developed a method to store blood for transfusions 1900s Kastle – developed first presumptive blood test 1959 Belgian Congo – first AIDS case recorded 1984 Gallo – identified virus causing AIDS Development of blood-screening tests for infectious disease
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Composition of Blood Cells (45%) Plasma (55%) red blood cells (RBC)
white blood cells (WBC) Platelets Plasma (55%) 90% water Dissolved proteins (antibodies, hormones, clotting factors) Nutrients (O2, glucose, amino acids, salts, minerals) Wastes (urea, CO2)
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Red Blood Cells Erythrocytes carry gases (oxygen, carbon dioxide)
produced in bone marrow no internal organelles (no nucleus) hemoglobin is iron-containing protein that binds to O2 gives blood the red color
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White Blood Cells Leukocytes fights disease and foreign invaders
produced in bone marrow true cell – has nucleus
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Platelets Tiny cell fragments Helps in blood clotting
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Kastle-Meyer Presumptive Blood Test
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If blood is present, swab will turn PINK.
Procedures Wet cotton swab with distilled water and gently rub on stain Ethyl alcohol: breaks open cells, exposes hemoglobin Phenolphthalein (Kastle-Meyer Reagent): reducing agent; turns pink when oxidized Hydrogen peroxide: reacts with hemoglobin If blood is present, swab will turn PINK.
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False Positives Some non-blood substances can yield a positive Kastle-Meyer test: vegetables with peroxidases (potatoes, beets, horseradish, broccoli, cauliflower) copper and nickel salts
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Blood Typing
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Why do blood typing? Less expensive and quicker than DNA profiling
Class evidence Can be used to link or exclude suspect to crime scene (but doesn’t prove guilt)
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Discovery of Blood Types
Karl Landsteiner (1901) Blood from one person did not always mix freely with another person Clumping of mixed blood results in death Cell-Surface Proteins (RBC’s): A and B proteins Rh factor proteins Antibody reaction test used to identify blood types
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ABO Blood Types 42% 12% 3% 43% Type A: has A antigen on surface of RBC
Type B: has B antigen Type AB: has both A & B antigens Type O: has no antigens on surface
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Antibodies Our bodies have the ability to recognize between own cells (self) and foreign invaders (non-self) White blood cells engulf and digest invaders Antibodies: Y-shaped proteins secreted by WBC’s which aid in immune response Antibodies bind to antigens (foreign substance or cell that reacts to antibodies)
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Antibodies Type A: makes anti-B antibodies
Type B: makes anti-A antibodies Type AB: no antibodies Type O: makes anti-A and anti-B antibodies
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Antigen-Antibody Response
Immune system attacks and destroys foreign invaders: WBC’s make antibodies that attach to foreign proteins WBC’s engulf invader Agglutination: clumping of blood cells
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Rh Factor Rh protein found on RBC’s when Alexander Weiner worked with Rhesus monkeys (1940) Rh+ : 85% Rh- : 15%
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Blood Typing Analysis
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Blood Typing Analysis Blood sample mixed with 3 antibodies
If blood clumps, proteins are present If no clumps, no proteins are present Anti-A antibody test Rh antibody test Anti-B antibody test
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Other forms of identification
Additional enzymes and proteins have been found in the blood: Phosphoglucomutase (PGM) Adenylate kinase (AK) Adenosine deaminase (ADA) Esterase D (EsD) Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) Polymorphic proteins: Group-specific Components (Gc) and haptoglobins (Hp)
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