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How Do You Build the Molecules of Life? Better Known as Organic Molecules and Digestion… Living Creatures Have Organization • All organisms are made of the same collection of chemicals, which are organized into… • Molecules • Made up of proteins, fats, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids Living Creatures Have Organization • Molecules are then organized into… • Organelles & Cells, specifically… • Plant Cells & Animal Cells Living Creatures Have Organization • Going from a cell to baby…. • The original fertilized egg has to divide into groups of cells • The groups of cells work together to perform the same function and form tissue Living Creatures Have Organization • Tissue is then organized into… • Organs & Organ systems • Respiratory, Circulatory, Digestive, etc. Making the Body Systems Work • Animals make energy using food and oxygen • Animals build bodies using: • Food for raw Food materials • Amino acids, sugars, fats, nucleotides • ATP energy for synthesis ATP O2 But where do we get the raw material from? Food we eat! Getting & Using Food • Ingest: Taking in food • Digest • Mechanical digestion • Breaking up food into smaller pieces • Chemical digestion • Breaking down food into molecules small enough to be absorbed into cells • Enzymes are proteins that help to speed up the breaking down process • Absorb: Absorb across cell membrane • Diffusion • Active transport • Eliminate: Undigested material passes out of digestive system intracellular digestion extracellular digestion Digestive Systems – Many Forms Ingestion Starts Digestion • Mouth • Mechanical Digestion • Chemical Digestion • Saliva -Enzyme digests starch • Slippery protein • Protects soft lining of digestive system • Lubricates food for easier swallowing Oral Cavity Upper lip Palate Uvula Tongue Lower lip Salivary Glands • Scattered throughout oral cavity • Functions: • Hydrolysis • Dissolve things • Moisten food and mouth • Composition of saliva • pH 6.35-6.85 (Slightly acidic) • Produce 1000-1500 ml a day • 99% of saliva is water • Salivary amylase begins breakdown of starch Esophagus • Moves both air and food • Epiglottis, a flap of tissue, prevents food from entering the trachea • Food enters the esophagus instead • Muscular contractions and relaxations called peristalsis moves food through the esophagus Stomach • • • • • • Can stretch to hold 2 L of food “Growling” is contracting of stomach muscle Three layers of muscle churn the food Gastric pits in the stomach secrete acidic digestive fluid Mucus protects the stomach lining – ulcers are a breakdown of this protective lining Mixed food particles and gastic fluid is called chyme Esophagus Fundus Body Pylorus Duodenum Stomach • Disinfect food • HCl = pH 2, will kill bacteria • Chemical Digestion • Digestion of proteins by pepsin, a gastric protease, into peptides. • Gastric lipase- pH 5-6, splits lipids Liver • Produces bile to break up fats • Bile is composed of bile acids and salts, phospholipids, cholesterol, pigments, water, and electrolyte chemicals • Bile stored in gallbladder until needed • Large organ right of the stomach • Stores glucose, makes proteins, breaks down toxins – including alcohol Pancreas • Lies behind the stomach • Produces sodium bicarbonate, to neutralize stomach acid to protect the small intestine • Produces insulin in the Islets of Langerhans, specialized cells in the pancreas • Pancreatic juices: • Pancreatic amylase – breaks down all starches • Trypsin, Chymotrypsin – separates amino acids (proteins) • Pancreatic lipase - breaks down lipids • Nucleases - break down nucleic acids Islet of Langerhans Gallbladder • A pear shaped sac on underside of the right lobe of the liver. • About 7-10cm long. • Ducts • Hepatic ducts • Cystic ducts • Common bile ducts • Function • Store and concentrate bile by absorbing water • Contracts and releases bile to duodenum when needed Small Intestine • • • Nearly 7 m in length Three sections: • Duodenum (25 cm), Jejunum (2.5 m) and Ileum (4 m) Intestinal Juices • Maltase, sucrase, lactase – break down carbohydrates • Aminopeptidase, Dipeptidase – break down amino acids (proteins) • Deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease- break apart sugars and nucleic acids Duodenum • First section of small intestines • Receives acid food from stomach • Mixes with digestive juices from: • Pancreas • Live • Gallbladder Absorption by Small Intestines • Highly folded lining of the small intestine is called villi, which are covered in microvilli • Give a surface area about 250 square meters (area of a tennis court) • 90% of all nutrients are absorbed in the small intestine, 10% in stomach and large intestine. • Carbohydrates: absorbed on surface of villi. • Proteins: amino acids are transported by active transport into the capillaries • Water absorption: absorption accomplished by osmosis • Lipids: lipase breaks down glycerol Circular creases with villi Colon • Also known as large intestine • Four parts – ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon and sigmoid colon • Waste solidifies into feces and >90 % water is reabsorbed • Diarrhea: not enough water absorbed • Constipation: too much water absorbed Transverse colon Ascending colon Descending colon Sigmoid Rectum Anus You’ve Got Company! • Living in the large intestine is a community of helpful bacteria • Escherichia coli (E. coli) • produce vitamins • vitamin K; B vitamins • generate gases • by-product of bacterial metabolism • methane, hydrogen sulfide mouth break up food digest starch kill germs moisten food liver produces bile - stored in gall bladder break up fats pancreas produces enzymes to digest proteins & carbs stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food small intestines breakdown food - proteins - starch - fats absorb nutrients large intestines absorb water Appendix • Vestigial organ located behind the ascending portion of colon • Darwin suggested it might been used to digest cellulose • Scientists are now studying how it might influence the immune system Rectum • Last section of colon • Eliminate feces which are undigested materials • extracellular waste • mainly cellulose from plants • masses of bacteria Length of Digestive System • Herbivores & Omnivores • Long digestive systems • Harder to digest cellulose • Carnivores • Short digestive systems • Protein easier to digest Teeth • Carnivore • sharp ripping teeth • “canines” • Herbivore • wide grinding teeth • molars • Omnivore • both kinds of teeth Vegetarian Diets • Need to make sure you get enough protein • 20 amino acids to make protein • 10 amino acids humans can produce • 8 “essential amino acids” come from food • Grains (like corn) have 6 (missing 2) • Beans (like soybean & red beans) have 6 (missing different 2) • Mix beans & grains for complete group of amino acids • Rice & Beans • Tofu & Rice • Peanut Butter & Bread Feedback: Maintaining Homeostasis • Balancing glucose levels in blood depress appetite pancreas insulin cells take up glucose from blood liver takes up glucose for storage liver releases glucose to blood glucagon pancreas stimulate hunger