The Mammalian Liver: Function (OCR A Level Biology): Revision Note
The mammalian liver: function
Liver functions include:
storage of glycogen
formation of urea
detoxification
Storage of glycogen
The liver plays a vital role in the conversion of glucose into glycogen; this process is known as glycogenesis
Insulin triggers this process after the pancreas detects an increase in blood glucose concentration
The synthesis of glycogen removes glucose molecules from the bloodstream and decreases the blood glucose concentration to within a normal range
The glycogen produced during glycogenesis is stored inside hepatocytes
Glycogen is a compact storage molecule that allows for easy release of glucose when it is needed
Formation of urea
The protein in our diets is broken down into amino acids, which are absorbed into the blood and transported to the liver via the hepatic portal vein
Excess amino acids are processed inside hepatocytes during a two-step process that involves:
deamination
the ornithine cycle
Deamination
During deamination:
The amino group (NH2) is removed from each amino acid, together with an extra hydrogen atom (H+)
NH2 and H+ combine to form ammonia (NH3)
The part of the amino acid that remains after deamination is a keto acid which can:
enter the Krebs cycle to be respired
be converted to glucose
be converted to glycogen or fat for storage
Deamination of an amino acid involves removal of the amino group
The ornithine cycle
Ammonia is a very soluble and highly toxic compound that can be very damaging if it builds up in the blood
To avoid the toxic effects of ammonia it is converted into urea, which is less toxic than ammonia
The series of events during which ammonia is converted into urea is known as the ornithine cycle
During the ornithine cycle ammonia is combined with carbon dioxide to form urea
One molecule of urea is produced from one molecule of carbon dioxide and two amino groups
The urea diffuses through the phospholipid bilayer of the hepatocytes and is transported to the kidneys dissolved in the blood plasma; here it is excreted
Ammonia is combined with carbon dioxide to produce urea during the ornithine cycle
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You are expected to know that urea is formed when ammonia reacts with carbon dioxide during the ornithine cycle, but you do not need to know any more details of the ornithine cycle.
Detoxification
Detoxification is the breakdown of substances that are not needed, or are toxic
Substances that undergo detoxification in the liver include:
alcohol
hydrogen peroxide
lactate
medicinal drugs
Detoxification of alcohol
Once consumed alcohol, or ethanol, is absorbed in the stomach and transported in the blood until it reaches the hepatocytes
Inside the hepatocytes the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase converts ethanol into a molecule called ethanal, which is then converted into other molecules that enter respiration
Continuous alcohol detoxification can cause liver problems:
The metabolism of ethanol generates ATP, so hepatocytes do not metabolise as much fat as usual and instead store the fat, which causes the condition known as fatty liver
Stored fat reduces the ability of hepatocytes to carry out other functions, and can eventually lead to severe problems such as cirrhosis, which is scarring of the liver caused by excessive alcohol consumption
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