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Happy Wednesday! Bellwork: March 5 • Write one similarity and one difference between the nervous and endocrine systems. GO BUFFS! CO: I will describe how the digestive system interacts with other systems. LO: I will fill in a graphic organizer. I will listen to descriptions. I will create a brochure. Think-Pair-Share • What do animals (includes humans) need to survive? • How/where do they get what they need? What do animals need to live? • Animals make energy using: – Food (glucose) – Oxygen • This process is known as cellular respiration • Animals build bodies using: food ATP – food for raw materials • amino acids, sugars, fats, nucleotides – ATP energy for synthesis – Water for hydrolysis and dehydration synthesis O2 mitochondria Take Off, Touch Down! Stand up for true, sit down for false. • Food spends 2-6 hours partially digested in the stomach • In 12 to 24 hours, any undigested material passes through the large intestine, and feces are expelled through the anus • Your stomach can stretch to fit ~1/2 gallon of food in it. 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 intracellular digestion • Absorb – absorb nutrients across cell membranes • diffusion • active transport • Eliminate – undigested material passes out of body extracellular digestion Digestive systems Everybody’s got one! Human digestive system Mouth • Functions – mechanical digestion • teeth – break up food – chemical digestion (saliva) • amylase enzyme – digests starch • mucus – protects soft lining of digestive system – lubricates food for easier swallowing • buffers – neutralizes acid to prevent tooth decay • anti-bacterial chemicals – kill bacteria that enter mouth with food All that in spit! Swallowing (& not choking) • Epiglottis (flap of cartilage) – closes trachea (windpipe) when swallowing – food travels down esophagus • Peristalsis – involuntary muscle contractions to move food along • (NERVOUS SYSTEM) mouth break up food digest starch kill germs moisten food Stomach • Functions –disinfect food • hydrochloric acid = pH 2 – kills bacteria –food storage • can stretch to fit ~2L food –digests protein • pepsin enzyme But the stomach is made out of protein! What stops the stomach from digesting itself? mucus secreted by stomach cells protects stomach lining mouth break up food digest starch kill germs moisten food stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food sphincter sphincter Pancreas • Produces digestive enzymes – digest proteins • trypsin, chymotrypsin – digest starch • amylase – digest lipids • lipase • Buffers – neutralizes acid from stomach small intestine pancreas mouth break up food digest starch kill germs moisten food pancreas produces enzymes to digest all foods stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food Liver & Gall Bladder • Produces bile – breaks up fats – gallbladder only stores bile • that’s why you can have your gall bladder removed bile contains colors from old red blood cells collected in liver = iron in RBC rusts & makes feces brown 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 & starch stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food Small intestine • Functions – digestion • digest carbohydrates – amylase from pancreas • digest proteins – trypsin & chymotrypsin from pancreas • digest lipids (fats) – bile from liver & lipase from pancreas – absorption • nutrients move into body cells by: – diffusion – active transport This is where all the work is done! Absorption in Small Intestines • Absorption through villi & microvilli – finger-like projections – increases surface area for absorption SMALL INTESTINES 6 meters long, but can stretch to cover a tennis court 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 & starch stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food small intestines breakdown food - proteins - starch - fats absorb nutrients Large intestines (colon) • Function – re-absorbs water • use ~9 liters of water every day in digestive juices – if don’t reabsorb water would die of dehydration • > 90% of water re-absorbed – not enough water re-absorbed » diarrhea » can be fatal – too much water re-absorbed » constipation • reabsorb by diffusion 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 You’ve got company! • Living in the large intestine is a community of helpful bacteria – Escherichia coli: E. coli • digest cellulose – digests fruits & vegetables • produce vitamins PEE-YOO! – vitamin K & B vitamins • BUT generate gases – by-product of bacterial metabolism – methane, hydrogen sulfide – STINKY! Appendix Vestigial organ 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 appendix stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food small intestines breakdown food - proteins - starch - fats absorb nutrients large intestines absorb water Rectum • Last section of large intestines – eliminate feces – what’s left over? • undigested materials – mainly cellulose from plants – called roughage or fiber – keeps everything moving & cleans out intestines • masses of bacteria So don’t forget to wash your hands! Vegetarian diets • Need to make sure you get enough protein – 20 amino acids to make protein • 12 amino acids humans can produce • 8 we have to eat = “essential amino acids” – Grains (like corn) have 6 amino acids • missing 2 – Beans (like soybean & red beans) have 6 amino acids • missing different 2 • mix beans & grains for complete group of amino acids – – – – rice & beans taco/tortilla & beans tofu & rice peanut butter & bread Homeostasis Balancing Blood Sugar levels insulin liver stores sugar body cells take up sugar from blood pancreas high reduces appetite liver blood sugar level low triggers hunger liver releases sugar liver pancreas glucagon Feedback 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 Ulcers Colonized by H. pylori • Used to think ulcers were caused by stress inflammation of stomach – tried to control with antacids • Now know ulcers caused by bacterial infection of stomach – H. pylori bacteria – now cure with antibiotics Free of H. pylori inflammation of esophagus H. pylori inflammatory proteins (CagA) cell damaging proteins (VacA) cytokines helper T cells neutrophil cells white blood cells Eating a balanced diet • What happens if an animal’s diet is missing an essential nutrient? – deficiency diseases • • • • • scurvy — vitamin C (collagen production) rickets — vitamin D (calcium absorption) blindness — vitamin A (retinol production) anemia — vitamin B12 (energy production) kwashiorkor — protein Digestion Brochure • Choose and research one of the following diseases/disorders: – – – – – – – Ulcers Scurvy Rickets Diarrhea Constipation Anemia Acid Indigestion (heartburn) Given the information about the disorder, YOU have to determine how it could it fixed or treated! • Create a brochure (like you might see at a doctor’s office) that explains: – – – – what the disease is how it’s caused how to treat it illustrate the part of the digestive system it affects • The front cover needs to have a question as a title. For example, if you were researching lactose intolerance, “Why can’t I drink milk?” Ulcers Peptic ulcers are holes or breaks in the protective lining of the upper part of the small intestine or the stomach -- areas that come into contact with stomach acids and enzymes Scurvy Rickets A disease resulting from a deficiency (lack) of vitamin C (“pirate disease) Diarrhea Constipation A softening of bones in immature mammals due to deficiency or impaired metabolism of vitamin D, phosphorus, or calcium, potentially leading to fractures and deformity. It can also be caused by severe diarrhea and vomiting The condition of having three or more loose or liquid bowel movements per day. The loss of fluids through diarrhea can cause dehydration and electrolyte disturbances such as potassium deficiencies or other salt imbalances Refers to bowel movements that are infrequent or hard to pass. Constipation is a common cause of painful defecation. Severe constipation includes obstipation (failure to pass stools or gas) and fecal impaction, which can progress to bowel obstruction and become life-threatening. Anemia A decrease in number of red blood cells (RBCs) or less than the normal quantity of hemoglobin in the blood. A deficiency in iron can result in anemia. Acid Indigestion (“Heartburn”) The pain often rises in the chest and may radiate to the neck, throat, or angle of the jaw. Heartburn is usually associated with regurgitation (bringing back up) of gastric acid.