Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Thermoregulation
- Endotherms
- Generate their
own heat
internally e.g.
mammals
- Internal heat generation gives more
reliable thermoregulation, as well as
allowing faster biological processes -
evolved competitive advantage
- More energy required for high metabolism
- Risk of overheating
- Constant body temperature needs
a balanced heat gain and loss
- Need to
generate and
retain heat
- Need to gain and
avoid losses to
external heat in a
cold environment
- Lose excess heat
and avoid gains
when in a warm
environment
- Retaining
internal
heat
- Vasoconstriction
- Reduces the blood
flow to the skin to
decrease heat loss
from the core
- Behaviour - stand on one leg
to keep the other warm, build
nests, burrowing, huddling
- Anatomical - subcut
fat like blubber; hair,
fur or feathers to
trap warm air in skin
- Countercurrent
exchangers
- Densely packed blood
vessels in the limbs
- Warm arterial blood from
the core to the periphery
warms venous blood
returning to the core
through conduction
- Helps to
reduce heat
loss from
blood
- Temporal
countercurrent
exchangers
- Such as nasal cavity
fold (maxilloturbinals)
to prevent the loss of
moisture and heat
- During expiration
of warm, moist air,
water condenses
on cool surfaces of
the nasal cavity
folds, warming it up.
- Water evaporates
during inspiration,
cooling the folds
- Generating
more internal
heat
- Higher
metabolism, O2
consumption, ion
pump use and
thyroid hormone
levels in order to
generate heat
- Most generated by organs,
but extra is made by muscle
contraction (shivering) and
chemical thermogenesis
- Chemical
thermogenesis is carried
out by brown adipose
tissue, which contains
specialised mitachondria
and more triglycerides
- Cold temps cause
the release of
noradrenaline and
thyroid hormones,
which cause
triglycerides to be
used as fuel
- Energy is used to
generate heat from H+
ions passing through a
proton channel called
thermogenin
- Hypothalamic Control
- Thermoreceptors are located
all over the body and they
detect changes in temperature
- Receptors in the
hypothalamus
detect changes to
the core
- Receptors in
the skin detect
changes to the
periphery
- Allow anticipatory
feedback regulation
without changes in
core temp
- Peripheral Receptors
- Warm receptors
- Heat activated
cation channels
- Transient Receptor Potential
Vanilloid (TRPV) family
- TRPV1 - activated over 42 degrees - pain threshold,
TRPV2 - activated over 52 degrees - nociceptor,
TRPV3 - activated over 33 degrees - thermoregulation,
TRPV4 - activated less than 33 degrees
- 3 and 4 cause the
hypothalamus to keep the
temp in an optimal range
- Cold receptors
- Cold activated
cation channels
- Cold and menthol
receptor 1 (CMR1)
activated between
8-28 degrees
- Thermoregulation
- Ankyrin-like with
transmembrane
domains protein
1 (ANKTM1)
- Nociceptor
- Information from
thermoreceptors is
processed in various
places before being
sent to the
hypothalamus.
- Trigeminal nucleus is the
relay for information from
the face and head
- Thalamus receives
temperature information
from the entire body
- Midbrain (raphe
nuclei) is involved in
switching any
responses on and off
- Metabolism
- Thermal Neutral Zone
- Environmental temperature
range in which hardly any
energy is used for
thermoregulation
- Bound by the higher
and lower critical
temperatures (LCT and
HCT)
- Fever is an increase in
body temp due to an
infection or inflammation
- Cytokines released
by leukocytes such
as interleukin-1, bind
to receptors on
hypothalamic neurons
- Causes the body temp
set-point to increase,
which serves to enhance
immune function and
reduce bacterial growth
- Ectotherms
- Cellular Adaptations
- e.g. lactate
dehydrogenase levels
are high in the
muscles of winter
acclimatised alligators
- Lactate
dehydrogenase has
a flexible loop, which
opens and closes
during reactions
- Activity is increased
during cold acclimatisation
due to more flexible loops
- Higher need to
produce heat
- Activity is decreased in
warm acclimatisation as
the loop is more rigid
- Proteins adapt in a trade-off
between stability and
flexibility (homeoflexibility)
- If it's too warm,
the protein
denatures
- Unstable structure
- If it's too cold, the
protein becomes
inflexible
- Slower enzyme reactions
- Plasma
membrane
undergoes
homeoviscous
adaptations
- Viscosity of the fatty
acids in the bilayer
change with
temperature
- Too hot - viscosity
decreases and
membrane
becomes rigid
- Combatted by
adding cholesterol or
saturated fatty acids
to the membrane
- Too cold -
viscosity increases
and membrane
becomes rigid
- Overcome by the
addition of PUFAs to
the membrane, which
decrease viscosity
- Saturation levels
controlled by saturase
and desaturase enzymes
- Changes in pH by buffering H+ ions with
histidine, increasing metabolic enzyme
concentrations in the cold to increase heat
production and expressing isoforms of the
same protein, which may be better suited
to different temperatures
- Rely on external heat sources e.g. reptiles
- Strategies for thermoregulation
- Poikilothermy
- Body temperature
varies with varying
environmental
temperature
- i.e. in the cold,
metabolism
decreases, so the
animal is inactive
- Extreme temperatures
can be avoided using
behaviour and physiology
- Unavoidable extremes induce
adaptations or dormancy
- Basking and movement to
increase internal temperatures
- Dilating blood vessels, seeking shade and latent heat of
evaporation to decrease internal temperatures
- Thermoconformers
- Poikilotherms that have an
identical body temperature to
the environment
- e.g. marine animals
- Extreme Cold
- Some become
dormant - associated
with a massive
decrease in metabolic
rate, which reduces
energy consumption
during dormancy
- Adaptations such as freeze
tolerance are required if the
body temp drops below zero
in these times
- Freeze tolerance
enables animals to
survive the freezing
of over half of their
bodily fluids
- Frozen tissue needs little
energy, but lots to thaw
- Also causes osmotic cell stress, as frozen water in
the extracellular fluid increases the conc of solutes,
making water leave cells down an osmotic gradient
- Freeze tolerance
reduces these effects by
breaking down glycogen
into glucose, which
lowers the freezing point
of water and prevents
osmotic stress. It also
acts as an energy
source to fuel thawing of
cells
- Extreme Heat
- Short term increase of over 5
degrees causes heat shock proteins
to be transcribed and translated
- These are stable at
high temperatures and
are hydrophobic
- Help denatured proteins to fold into a
stable structure by binding the
hydrophobic domains that are exposed
when the proteins denature
- Help to prevent
interactions with
other denatured
proteins
- Heterotherms
- Depend on external
heat and internally
generated heat e.g.
hibernating mammals
- Limited endothermy
- Regional - only heat
part of their bodies,
using countercurrent
exchange
mechanisms
- Temporal -
endothermy
restricted to
certain times e.g.
hibernation
- Requires large
energy reserves
and a much lower
set point for body
temp
- Periodic
re-warming
required
- Torpor - daily hibernation,
associated with a lower
drop in temperature
- Biological functions
have an optimum
temperature range
due to enzymes
- Heat Energy Transfer
- Conduction
- From a warm object
to a cold object via
direct contact
- Rate of transfer depends
on the temperature
difference, as well as
thermal conductivity
- Convection
- Transfer by air currents,
often off the skin
- Air warmed by the body,
rises and is replaced by
colder air
- Evaporation
- Conversion of liquid into gas,
requiring heat of vapourisation
- Absorbed from the skin during sweating
and from the respiratory tract during
panting. Water must be replaced
- Radiation
- From a warm object
to cold object via
electromagnetic
waves
- Body gains or loses heat depending on difference
in temperature of the skin and surroundings, as
well as the amount of sunlight hitting the skin