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