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Maintenance of Living Things.  Remember, to be “alive” you need to carry out the eight life processes! 1. Respiration 2. Regulation 3. Repair/ Growth.

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Presentation on theme: "Maintenance of Living Things.  Remember, to be “alive” you need to carry out the eight life processes! 1. Respiration 2. Regulation 3. Repair/ Growth."— Presentation transcript:

1 Maintenance of Living Things

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3  Remember, to be “alive” you need to carry out the eight life processes! 1. Respiration 2. Regulation 3. Repair/ Growth 4. Reproduction 5.Transport 6. Excretion 7. Nutrition 8. Synthesis

4  Is the internal stability, maintaining your body  Three main ways your body maintains homeostasis:  Temperature regulation  Waste disposal and water regulation  Hormones

5  Defined as thermoregulation ( home thermostat)  Negative feedback- change in the condition triggers the response in the body  Example- when your body temperature rises above a set point- your brain will stimulate an activity to lower it  - Sweating: cools your body through evaporation

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7  Regulates the chemical makeup of body fluids- blood and interstitial fluid.  Removes waste products and balances intake and loss of water  Kidneys play a major role in excretion removing urea and regulate the water and salt balance

8  Chemical messengers called hormones can triggers responses to maintain homeostasis  Hormones can regulate blood pressure, heart rate, digestion, water and salt balance  Hormones are secreted into the bloodstream and reach target cells- hormone will trigger the action within the cell

9 Pancreas

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11 How does the immune system help to maintain homeostasis? Why do some people tend to get sick more often then others? How does your body respond to infection?

12  Immunity- the ability to resist disease due to the presence of antibodies  Our immune system fights against:  Pathogens: an antigen that causes disease, infection

13 Pathogen Antibodies and Antigens

14  Antigen- a large molecule which provokes an immune response  Antibodies- proteins found on the surface of WBC’s which attach to specific antigens. anything the body sees as foreign (bacteria, virus or harmless pollen) protein made by lymphocytes to attract phagocytes; alerts phagocytes to destroy antigen (like Paul Revere!)

15  your body produces antibodies against the infection; usually permanent  Occurs when you come in contact with or get the disease  Or when you get a vaccine (a dose of a pathogen or part of the pathogen that has been disabled or destroyed so it is no longer harmful) How does this work???? -are made from the antigens of the pathogen. Your body is fooled into “thinking” it is fighting against the pathogen.

16  Usually temporary; immunity given to you  Your body receives antibodies from another source.  Mother to Fetus during pregnancy; breast feeding  Injected with antibodies

17  Occurs when certain “harmless (dust pollen, insect bites)” substances are seen as harmful antigens  A specific type of WBC called Mast Cells  produce antibodies which produce histamines (chemicals that cause sneezing, itching, watery eyes)  Receptors!  Allergy medicines contain “anti-histamines”

18 Actions that May Cause Disease Why? 1 Airborne pathogens are inhaled Flu, Common Cold 2 Physical Contact/ Sexual Contact Handshake, Touch nose, mouth can transfer virus to mucous membranes – cause virus to multiply. STD’s 3 Contamination of Food and Water E coli, Hepatitis A 4 Transmission through an animal Deer Ticks  Lyme Disease

19  IR- non specific defense – redness, heat, swelling and pain  Histamine: mast cells release a “chemical alarm” which cause blood vessels to dilate  Interferons: a family of proteins produced by cells in response to becoming infected by a virus  What does a inflammatory response activate? -removing pathogens and cleans injured tissue

20  First Line of Defense: “Barriers”  Second Line of Defense- Internal Non Specific  Third Line- “Targeted”

21  Skin - Constantly growing and shedding hard to embed bacteria  Mouth, eyes, nostrils  Mucous Membranes -Inside trachea, stomach

22  White Blood Cells- will identify what to attack and which “cell” to use  Inflammatory Response – site of the invasion( redness, swelling). Removes the pathogen and cleans injured tissue  Proteins- can attack invaders or halt their reproduction

23  The Immune system – the system recognizes specific pathogens and defends against them.  Pathogens, cancer, chemicals  Specific Response!

24 2 nd Line of Defense :Types of WBC’s TypeFound?Role/ Job? Macrophages (large WBC) Interstitial FluidDestroy organism through “eating them” (phagocytosis) - Engulfs Neutrophiles Smaller and more numerous then macrophages Interstitial Fluid Also destroy by “eating them” release a chemical (like bleach) to destroy them – but this will also kill the neutrophile Natural Killer Cells Bloodstream -Recognize body cells which have been infected and target them -Play a key role in defending against cancer

25 TypeFound?Role/ Job? B Cells Interstitial fluid and blood -A protein that helps to bind to the antigen -Specific to attacking bacteria and viruses -has the ability to clone themselves Plasma Cells Lymphatic system-Secretes large amounts of antibodies -need to be activated by helper T cells in immune response

26 3 rd Line of Defense – WBC’s TypeFound?Role/Job? Helper T Cells Bloodstream-Secrete chemical to activate other WBC -Bind to infected cell Cytotoxic T Cells Bloodstream-Bind to infected cell- poke holes thus causing the cell to leak and die -Attack cells that are damaged Memory Cells Bloodstream 1 st response produces antibodies 2 nd response, remember and recognize pathogen -Long lasting lymphocytes

27  Self Attack: body fails to recognize its own molecules  Rejection: Associated with  Common with heart, lung, and digestive organs  Skin grafts- “use their own skin” transplants

28  A disease which specifically attacks the  It targets the  Deactivates other WBC’s  This is a type of autoimmune disease  The immune system turns against its own molecules  Other examples are Lupus,Multiple Sclerosis, and Lou Gehrig's disease Helper T cells Immune system

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