Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Digestion (Ch.11) All organisms require energy to run cell processes and maintain life. The energy needed is in the form of glucose or ATP. The substances needed to provide energy and materials needed for metabolism are called nutrients (H20, fats, carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins and minerals). Nutrition- process whereby organisms get food and break it down so it can be used for metabolic activities. There are 2 patterns of nutrition that we’ve studied before: Autotrophs- make their own food; materials are absorbed from environment through the cells and sunlight energy converts these into energy and cell molecules (i.e. glucose). Heterotrophs- get their food by digesting other heterotrophs or autotrophs In order to understand chemical digestion - we need to do some organic chemistry. Organic Chemistry Organic compounds are compounds that contain the element carbon and they always bond covalently or by sharing electrons. (Most compounds also contain Hydrogen and may contain either Oxygen or Nitrogen or both. Organic compounds are often larger and complex. This is due to: - the carbon atom can form 4 covalent bonds - carbon can bond with other carbon atoms forming long chains and/or rings - carbon can form single, double, and/or triple bonds. Most organic compounds occur naturally in living organisms or in their products; although many of them can be chemically produced in laboratories. Organic compounds are classified as one of four types: - carbohydrates - nucleic acids (building blocks for DNA, not used for digestion) - lipids - proteins These types of organic compounds are also the basic food nutrient groups that our food is broken down into during the digestive process. Carbohydrates - compounds composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. As such, they are known as CHO compounds. These substances are fairly easily broken down into simple sugars and provide most of the body's energy for cellular respiration carbohydrates are an energy source. The simplest carbohydrates are the simple sugars or monosaccharides. Disaccharides (double sugars) and polysaccharides (many sugars) can be broken up into monosaccharides. Monosaccharides Disaccharides Polysaccharides a) Glucose a) Maltose a) starch (straight) b) Fructose b) Sucrose b) cellulose (branched) c) Galactose c) Lactose Monosaccharides - Simplest of the Carbohydrates - all have the C6H12O6 formula chemical formula - they just have different structural formulas. *Glucose Fructose Galactose Monosaccharides such as glucose can be absorbed directly into the bloodstream. Disaccharides - compounds formed when two monosaccharides combine. Ex. Glucose + Glucose = Maltose Glucose + Galactose = Lactose Glucose + Fructose = Sucrose Sugar molecules can be bonded together chemically through dehydration synthesis. Synthesis means ‘putting together’ and dehydration means ‘removing water’, therefore, Dehydration Synthesis means putting 2 simple sugars together by removing water. In living organisms, dehydration synthesis is brought about by the action of enzymes. Polysaccharides - compounds formed when 3 or more monosaccharides are put together. Ex. Glucose + Glucose + Glucose Recall that the only organ in our body which uses glucose directly as an energy source is the brain. All other organs and cells use ATP (adenosine triphosphate) which is an energy-rich compound stored in cells. Glycogen- animal starch Hydrolysis - the opposite process of dehydration synthesis. - disacharides and polysaccharides can be broken apart with the addition of the parts of a water molecule (H+ and OH-). Just as a maltose molecule is formed by the addition of two glucose molecules, maltose can be broken down into two glucose molecules. Starch is converted into sugar and vice versa in animals; in humans, this occurs in the liver. Two hormones produced by the pancreas control blood sugar levels; they are insulin and glucagon. Dehydration synthesis takes place when your blood sugar levels are too high. Insulin tells the liver to convert sugar into starch. Otherwise, coma could result. When you have low blood sugar, glucagon tells the liver and muscles to convert the polysaccharide glycogen (often called ‘animal starch’) into sugar. This is called hydrolysis - which is also digestion. When the pancreatic cells cannot produce these hormones, a disease called diabetes occurs. Chitin, which is found in arthropod exoskeletons and fungal cell walls, is also a polysaccharide. Lipids Lipids are made up of C, H and O. Lipids are formed when fatty acids combine with an alcohol. They are harder to burn or breakdown into energy. A fatty acid consists of a chain of carbon and hydrogen atoms with a carboxyl group at one end. Broken down into fatty acids & glycerine. There are three types of lipids: waxes, fats, oils Synthesis of A Fat Molecule: Alcohol + 3 Fatty Acids Your body uses fat for 3 things: Fat Molecule + 3 Water molecules A) Energy Reserve B) Thermal Insulator C) Shock Absorber Saturated fats - solids at room temperature, found primarily in animal products. - increase the amount of cholesterol in the body A fat is saturated when all the carbon-carbon bonds in the fatty acid are single bonds....the molecule is saturated (loaded to capacity) with hydrogen atoms. Unsaturated fats - liquids/oils at room temperature, found primarily in vegetable products. - decrease blood cholesterol levels cholesterol- an essential compound found in most animal tissues which plays an important role in the build-up of deposits that harden and narrow the arteries. This can lead to heart attacks and strokes. Medical personnel recommend a reduced intake of saturated fats and an increased intake of unsaturated fats in our diets. A fat is unsaturated when the carbon-carbon bonds in the fatty acid are double or triple bonds... there are less hydrogens in a unsaturated fat. Hydrogenated Fats - chemically changing an unsaturated fat into a saturated fat by adding hydrogen. - chemically reducing double and triple carbon bonds to single bonds and adding hydrogen atoms to the molecule. - it has been implied that these fats lead to heart disease. Proteins - compounds that contain nitrogen as well as carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Broken down into amino acids (basic building blocks for proteins; 20-22 of them). - the number of possible proteins are virtually unlimited. They have four functions: - control your traits - build muscles - special proteins called enzymes control all the chemical reactions in your body. - poor energy reserve Amino acids contain - a carboxyl group OH | -C=O - an amino group H | -N-H - 1 hydrogen atom -H - one of twenty carbon groups or chains - CH2 - CH2-CH3 - R- Peptide Bond- a bond between 2 amino acids ( C–N– C or C–N bond which is a special dehydration synthesis bond) Dipeptide- 2 amino acids bonded together; smallest possible protein i.e. Alanine + Glycine Dipeptide + H20 Substrate- material that an enzyme attaches to in order to break proteins down Polypeptide- 3 or more amino acids bonded together Minerals - inorganic cmpds (no C); needed in very small amts - enable some chem. rxns.; help build bones & cartilage - readily absorbed into bloodstream -essential components of hemoglobin, hormones, enzymes, vitamins Vitamins -needed in very small amts -serve as co-enzymes which are chemicals needed to make enzymes work -involved in tissue development & growth, helping resist & fight disease -bodies can make vitamins D, K & B; stores only vitamins A & D. See table 11.1 on p. 358. Water -needed for digestion and absorption -carries nutrients & oxygen to cells -removes wastes & toxins Fibre -not considered one of 6 essential nutrients b/c no nutritional value -plays impt. role in digestion…without fibre, food we eat wouldn’t have much bulk which would make it difficult for peristalsis to occur. Digestion in Heterotrophs Digestion - the two-part process that changes food into a form that can be absorbed by and is usable by body cells. Physical digestion breaks large pieces into smaller ones. Most physical digestion starts in the mouth and passes through digestive tract. Chemical digestion breaks complex chemicals into simple ones. Chemical digestion begins in the mouth and continues in the stomach. Animal Digestion One way traffic Animals from roundworms to mammals have a true digestive system of one way digestion with a mouth, gut and anus. Food is broken down in different areas within the digestive tract. In the mouth, food is moistened while in the gut (stomach, intestine) food is ground up. In the lower digestive tract, food is further broken up and absorbed into the circulatory system and wastes are eliminated through the anal opening. Earthworm There are 2 openings. The mouth moistens the food which is sucked in by the muscular contractions of the pharynx. From the pharynx, food moves into the esophagus where it continues to be pushed into the crop which is stretchable and can store food. Next, it passes into the thick-walled gizzard where it is ground into smaller pieces. This allows for enzymes to work on more surface area of food. Chemical digestion begins in the intestine which is the longest portion of the digestive tract and is folded to give it more surface area so it can digest and absorb the maximum amount of food. This is where most of the absorption occurs. Water and minerals are also absorbed at this time. The nutrients get absorbed by the cells lining the intestine. From here, the nutrients enter the bloodstream and get transported to all body parts. Human Digestion Recall, digestion is a two-part process…physical & chemical digestion. Fats, carbohydrates, and proteins are digested and converted to fatty acids, glycerine, monosaccharides, and amino acids. The human cell then rebuilds these into its own complex compounds or burns them up for energy. Water, minerals, and vitamins are also required for the digestive process to take place. Mouth Digestion begins when you put food in your mouth. Teeth bite off and chew/grind food into a soft pulp that is easy to swallow. Enzymes will mix better with the food when it is ground up. The mouth also evaluates texture and taste which would allow us to get rid of spoiled food or foreign particles before it enters further down the digestive tract. Papillae- tiny structures on tongue containing most of taste buds Uvula- hangs @ middle of soft palate preventing food from entering pharynx when swallowing Salivary Glands Chewing mixes the food with watery saliva from 3 sets (6) of salivary glands along the mouth. Taste, thoughts of food, and smell all stimulate salivary action. The saliva flows through small tubes called ducts. Saliva contains mucus that moistens the food for swallowing...this mucus-covered mass of food particles is called bolus. Saliva also contains an enzyme (protein) called salivary amylase that begins the break down of starch into disaccharides called maltose units. Fats and proteins are not digested in the mouth. Pharynx When food is chewed sufficiently, the tongue pushes it to the back of the throat or pharynx which starts the automatic swallowing reflex. This area contains the opening to the esophagus and the trachea (windpipe). Epiglottis This is a muscular flap of tissue over the trachea which closes it off during swallowing to prevent food from entering the trachea. Esophagus The chewed up, moistened, and partly broken food enters the esophagus. The esophagus, or gullet, is a muscular tube which has mucus on its walls to help bolus move along. It takes food from the throat and pushes it down through the neck, and into the stomach. Digestive juices are not added in the esophagus , but the food moves by waves of involuntary muscle contraction called peristalsis. The relaxation and contraction of muscles of the digestive tract push food down into the stomach. Regurgitation- movement of food to mouth from stomach when sick Stomach The stomach has two main parts: a) the larger muscular part is called the fundus b) the smaller, more narrow part is called the pyloris The stomach is a large organ that performs 3 functions: 1) In the fundus, the muscular wall churns food up and breaks down the food physically. The fundus walls also secrete HCl (a gastric juice) to break down the food into a white, soupy paste called chyme. A mucus coating is also secreted to prevent HCl from burning the stomach lining. 2) The stomach secretes a digestive enzyme called pepsin to start the break down of proteins into smaller polypeptides. 3) The stomach (fundus) acts as a storage area for the slow release of food into the intestines; this allows time for it to be absorbed by the small intestine. The proteins are only partly broken down in the stomach by pepsin (digestive enzyme). The food leaves a narrow part of the stomach called the pyloris and empties into the small intestine. A valve called the pyloric sphincter (ring of sphincter muscle) keeps chyme from going back into the stomach from the small intestine. Pancreas…food doesn’t pass through here The pancreas, like the stomach, makes powerful pancreatic juices called enzymes which help to digest food further as it enters the small intestines. First, a chemical called sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) is produced by the pancreas to neutralize the HCl that coats the chyme when it leaves the stomach and enters the small intestine. Otherwise, the acid would burn a hole in the small intestine. Lipase is an enzyme produced by the pancreas that breaks fat up into glycerol and fatty acids (dehydration synthesis) which can then be absorbed. An enzyme, pancreatic amylase, is also produced in the pancreas. This enzyme (having the same function as salivary amylase) breaks starch up into maltose units (hydrolysis) in case you swallow your food too quickly. Protease is another enzyme produced in the pancreas that breaks down polypeptides into smaller dipeptides. Gall Bladder…food doesn’t pass through here This small bag-like part is tucked under the liver. It stores a fluid called bile, (and bile salts) which are both made in the liver and stored here in the gall bladder. As food from a meal arrives in the small intestine, bile flows from the gall bladder along the bile duct into the intestine. Bile helps emulsify fat into tiny droplets so enzymes can break it down. Small Intestines Most of the chemical digestion takes place and nutrients are absorbed in the small intestine. This part of the tract is narrow, but very long - about 7 meters in adults. The length of the small intestine ensures that food will stay long enough to be broken down and absorbed. The small intestine is a twisted (folded) set of tubes which contain finger-like projections called villi inside its lining to absorb nutrients into the circulatory and lymphatic system. The amount of folding, length of intestine and the villi slow down digestion and allow for maximum absorption. The small intestine is made up of three regions; the duodenum, the jejunum, and the ilium. Here in the small intestine, more enzymes continue the chemical attack on the food to finish digestion. The enzymes maltase, sucrase, -and lactase are produced in the wall of the small intestine. These enzymes break up the disaccharide sugars maltose, sucrose, and lactose into simple sugars (hydrolysis) which are needed for energy. Earlier in the digestive process, polypeptides were broken down in to smaller dipeptides by the enzyme protease. Now in the small intestine, an enzyme called peptidase (which is produced in the wall of the small intestine) breaks the dipeptides into amino acids. Finally the nutrients are small enough to pass through the lining of the small intestine and into the blood. They are carried away to the liver and other body parts to be processed, stored and distributed. Anything else that is left over after digestion is finished in the small intestine is called feces. Feces will then leave the small intestine (pushed by peristalsis) and enter the large intestine. Liver…food doesn’t pass through here Blood from the intestines flows to the liver, carrying nutrients, vitamins and minerals, and other products from digestion. The liver is like a food-processing factory with more than 200 different jobs. It stores some nutrients, changes them from one form to another, and releases them into the blood according to the activities and needs of the body. Large Intestine (Caecum & Colon) Any useful substances in the leftovers, such as spare water and body minerals, are absorbed through the walls of the large intestine, back into the blood. The remaining feces is almost ready to be removed from the body. No digestion takes place in the colon, however, bacteria in our colons are able to take material from the feces and make Vitamin K and B-Complex. Peristalsis pushes the feces along to the end of the colon called the rectum. Appendix- organ suspended from caecum; no function for digestion (maybe for fighting infection) Rectum and Anus The end of the large intestine and the next part of the tract, the rectum, store the feces. The feces then leaves the body through the anal canal which opens into anus. Peristalsis- series of wavelike contractions and relaxation of muscles; involves circular and longitudinal muscles that surround parts of digestive tract Rhythmical segmentation- related to peristalsis; used to mix partially digested food on intestines; food squeezed back & forth