
Excretion and Deamination of protein
Presentation
•
Biology
•
9th - 12th Grade
•
Medium
Eko Febriadi
Used 13+ times
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20 Slides • 12 Questions
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Excretion and Deamination of Protein
By Eko Febriadi
2
Objectives
By the end of this subtopic, you will be able to:
state that the kidneys excrete urea and excess water and ions
identify the kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra.
identify the structure of the kidney, limited to the cortex and medulla
outline the structure and function of a nephron and its associated blood vessels
describe the role of the liver including assimilation and deamination of amino acids
state how urea is formed and why it needs to be excreted.
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Poll
How much do you already know about the process of excretion?
I know a lot
I know a little
I know nothing
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Open Ended
From what you know, what is the purpose of excretion and examples of its process?
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by removing excess water, urea, carbon dioxide, and other wastes from our blood.
How does excretion occur in the human body?
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The liver
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Subject | Subject
Some text here about the topic of discussion
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The liver
Uptake of amino acids
Assimilation is the movement of digested food molecules into the cells of the body where they are used, becoming part of the cells. The liver has a role in the assimilation of amino acids. It can convert them into proteins, including fibrinogen and other plasma proteins.
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Protein in food is broken down in the stomach and small intestine to form amino acids.
Excess amino acids are converted into urea in the liver.
The process of converting amino acids into urea is called deamination
.
Excess amino acids
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Involves the removal of the nitrogen-containing (–NH 2 group) part of amino acid molecules.
The formula of amino acids is CHON; here we remove the nitrogen from the molecule, to get a carbohydrate. This is called deamination. Nitrogen is made into urea (CH4N2O)
Deamination
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Urea formation
Ammonia is a very soluble and highly toxic compound that is produced during deamination.
It can be very damaging if allowed to build up in the blood
This is avoided by converting ammonia to urea, Urea is less soluble and less toxic than ammonia
Ammonia is combined with carbon dioxide to form urea
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Multiple Choice
What is a function of the liver?
A converting bile to urea
B converting urea to amino acids
C deamination of amino acids
D deamination of carbon dioxide
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Multiple Choice
The liver converts amino acids into protein in a process called ___________.
assimilation
deamination
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Multiple Choice
Urea is made from _________.
amino acid
fat
fibre
salts
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The urinary system rids the blood of wastes produced by the cells.
The urinary system also controls blood volume by removing excess water produced by body cells during respiration.
Gets rid of excess salts
The urinary system
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Homeostasis - kidneys and water balance
ADH and control of the water balance
The amount of water in the blood must be kept more or less the same all the time to avoid cell damage as a result of osmosis. There has to be a balance between the amount of water gained and the amount of water lost. This is achieved by the action of the hormone ADH (anti-diuretic hormone). How does it work?
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The urinary system
On the next slide, you will observe the urinary track to learn about this system. As you observe, take notes of your thought about the differences between excretion and egestion.
Some text here about the topic of discussion
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Multiple Choice
Urine is released and flows into the bladder through the ________.
ureter
urethra
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Open Ended
What is the function of the kidney and what makes the waste product produced by the kidneys different from the waste from the digestive system?
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The structure of the kidney
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How the kidney works
Each kidney contains about a million tiny structures called nephrons. A nephron has a cup-shaped Bowman's capsule leading into the renal tubule. On the next slide, you will explore a nephron diagram to learn about how the kidney balanced the blood. As you explore, pay attention to the composition of the of substances in the liquid as it filtered by the nephron
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Multiple Choice
Blood enters the kidneys through the ___________.
renal arteries
renal veins
tubules
ureter
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Multiple Choice
Which of the following is not in the renal cortex?
Loop of Henle
Bowman's capsule
Glomerulus
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Blood enters the kidneys through the renal artery.
Blood enters the nephrons.
Water, sugar, salt and wastes in the blood enter Bowman’s capsule in the nephron.
Capillaries reabsorb most of the water, sugar, and salt.
The renal vein returns purified blood to be circulated.
Urine drains from each collecting tubule into funnel-shaped areas of the kidney
Urine flows from the ureters to the urinary bladder
Urine flows from the bladder through the urethra and out of the body.
The Nephron
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Multiple Choice
Which of the following is not a function of the kidney tubules?
absorb plasma
filter blood
decide how much water is excreted
remove waste
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Multiple Choice
________ is formed when small molecules like salts, glucose, urea and water are forced out from the blood plasma when blood flows through the kidney tubules.
Filtrate
Urine
Waste
Excretion
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Multiple Choice
Due to high pressure, 20% of the fluid in the blood is squeezed out from the ____________ into the Bowman's capsule.
tubules
blood vessels
glomerulus
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Substances in blood plasma and urine compared
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Summary
Excretion is the removal of metabolic waste products created in the cell during respiration. These waste products include carbon dioxide, ions and urea.
The lungs excrete carbon dioxide.
The kidney excretes excess water, urea and ions out of the blood. These waste products make up the fluid urine. The urine is transported by the ureters to the bladder, where it is temporarily stored. The urine is transported from the bladder out of the body through the urethra.
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Excretion and Deamination of Protein
By Eko Febriadi
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