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Chapter 21 Nutrition and Digestion 1) Animals ingest there food in a variety of ways a) Suspension feeders i) extract food particles suspended in surrounding water ii) Examples (1) baleen whale – krill (Intro) (2) Clams, oysters, scallops b) Substrate feeders i) ii) live in or on food and eat their way through it Examples (1) Earthworms through soil (2) Caterpillars through leaves c) Fluid Feeders i) suck nutrients from a living host ii) Example (1) aphids, mosquitoes, ticks d) Bulk Feeders i) ingest relatively large pieces of food ii) tentacles, pincers, jaws, teeth, etc… to bite into prey 2) Food processing occurs in four stages a) ingestion b) digestion i) mostly ingest macromolecules (proteins, fats, carbohydrates, nucleic acids) ii) need to break macromolecules down to amino acids, glycerol and fatty acids, simple sugars, nucleotides) iii) Two reasons: (1) macromolecules too large to cross plasma membrane (2) animals need monomers to make their polymers iv) Two phases in digestion (1) mechanical breakdown (increase surface area) (2) chemical breakdown (enzymes - hydrolysis) c) absorption i) cells lining digestive tract absorb building blocks ii) building blocks circulate in blood and are (1) used by other cells for building (2) burned for energy (3) stored as glycogen or fat d) elimination (EGESTION) i) passing of undigested material 3) Digestion occurs in specialized compartments a) needs to be contained – don’t want to digest yourself b) Even single-celled organisms must do this i) food vacuoles and lysosomes c) sponges – like single-cells – digests in individual cells d) Gastrovascular cavity i) Hydra (1) gastrovascular cavity with a single mouth opening (a)digestion and distribution of nutrients to body (b) Why do this? Why not just do what a sponge does? (c)allows for ingestion of prey much larger than a single cell could handle (2) Main Food-Processing events (a)stings prey and stuffs in mouth (b) cells secrete digestive enzymes into GV cavity (c)flagella keep food mixed with enzymes (d) cells engulf now tiny particles (endocytosis) into food vacuoles, which have additional enzymes for further breakdown into monomers (e)undigested material leaves through mouth e) Alimentary canal i) tube between two openings – mouth and anus ii) adapted along the way for specialized functions since it is one-way (1) mouth (2) pharynx (throat) (3) esophagus (4) depending on species, food may enter a crop, gizzard or stomach (a)crop (i) organ where food is softened and temporarily stored (b) stomachs and gizzards (i) may also store food temporarily, but are more muscular than crops (ii) use muscles to grind and churn food (iii)gizzards have teeth or grit to assist grinding (c)intestine (i) site of nutrient absorption (d) anus site of egestion iii) regions vary with diet (1) Earthworm (a)omnivorous substrate feeder (i) muscular pharynx sucks soil in mouth (ii) stored and moistened in crop (iii)gizzard retains small bits of sand to pulverize food (iv) nutrients digested and organic matter absorbed in intestines 1. shape increases surface area 2. greater number of cells exposed to food (v) indigestible material (sand, gravel, inorganic substances) exits anus (2) Grasshopper (a)herbivorous (i) jawlike mouth to cut and chew plant leaves (ii) crop similar to earthworm (iii)gizzard with hard teeth – where most chemical digestion occurs (v) nutrients absorbed in stomach and gastric pouches 1. gastric pouches are extensions of stomach (vi) intestines – short – absorb water and compact undigested solids (vii) anus – same old story (3) bird (a)same major organs as earthworm and grasshopper (b) crop – enable them to eat a large amount quickly (c)no teeth (i) food swallowed whole into crop (d) crop stores and softens and passes to stomach (e) stomach – beginning of mechanical and chemical digestion and continues in gizzard (i) many birds eat gravel – collects in gizzard and helps pulverize tough plant parts and hard parts of insects (f) intestines (i) chemical digestion is completed here (ii) nutrients and water absorbed (g) anus (i) same old with some gravel (iv) stomach 4) Humans digestive system – alimentary canal and some specialized glands a) Main parts of canal i) mouth ii) oral cavity iii) tongue iv) pharynx v) esophagus vi) stomach vii) small intestine viii) large intestine ix) rectum x) anus b) digestive glands i) salivary glands ii) pancreas iii) liver (secretions stored in gall bladder) 5) Main food processing events i) Digestion starts in the mouth (1) salivary glands (a)can secrete over a liter of saliva a day (b) activate in response to sight or smell of food (i) tingling in jaw (c)contents of saliva (i) slippery glycoprotein 1. protects lining of mouth, lubricates solid food for easier swallowing 2. Buffers a. neutralize food acids – help prevent tooth decay 3. antibacterial agents (antibodies) 4. salivary amylase (chemical digestion) a. digestive enzyme that starts to hydrolyze starch (start – starch) (2) chewing (mechanical digestion) (a)makes food easier to swallow and increases surface area for enzyme digestion (b) four kinds of teeth (i) two bladelike incisors - biting (ii) canine tooth – tearing (iii)premolar and molars 1. grind and crush (3) tongue (a)muscular organ covered with taste buds (b) manipulates food (c)shapes into a ball (bolus) (d) pushes bolus into back of oral cavity and into pharynx during swallowing 6) Food and breathing passages both open into the pharynx a) esophagus and trachea opening are both in pharynx b) esophageal sphincter i) closes off esophagus most of the time ii) trachea open for breathing c) swallowing reflex i) triggered by bolus entering pharynx (1) esophageal sphincter relaxes (2) larynx (voice box) moves upward and tips epiglottis (flap of cartilage and fibrous connective tissue) over trachea (3) feel your larynx (adam’s apple) when you swallow (4) after swallowing everything goes back to original positions 7) esophagus squeezes food along the stomach a) muscular tube i) muscles run in two layers (smooth muscle) (1) circular muscle layer (a)constriction constricts the esophagus (2) longitudinal muscle layer (a)constriction shortens the esophagus (3) whenever one contracts, the other relaxes (4) RESULT: peristalsis (a)circular muscles contract above bolus (b) longitudinal muscles contract below to shorten distance to stomach (c)Time from pharynx to stomach – 5 to 6 seconds 8) Stomach stores food and breaks it down with acid and enzymes i) ii) stomach is main reason we dont need to constantly eat can hold two liters of food and drink (1) enough for several hours iii) chemical digestion (1) secretes gastric juice (a)mucus, enzymes, and strong acid (2) surface is highly folded (3) many pits leading to tubular gastric glands (4) gastric glands (a)three types of cells (i) mucous cells 1. secrete mucous – lubricates and protects cells lining stomach 2. parietal cells – secrete hydrochloric acid (HCl) a. pH of stomach b/w 1 and 2 3. chief cells – secrete pepsinogen (inactive form of digestive enzyme pepsin) (5) Activation of pepsinogen (a)HCl and pepsinogen secreted into gastric gland (b) HCl converts pepsinogen to pepsin (c)Pepsin activates more pepsinogen (positive feedback) (6) Pepsin begins chemical digestion of proteins (a)(pepsin – proteins) (7) Mucous protects cells from pepsin (8) stomach lining needs to be replaced every three days (mitosis) – it is continuous (9) gastric glands are not always on (a)regulated by nerve signals and hormones (b) initial signal (i) see, smell, taste food sends nerve signal to glands (c) continuous signal (i) food in stomach stimulates cells to release hormone gastrin into blood of circulatory system (ii) gastrin circulates and upon return causes further release of gastric juice (iii)keeps gastric juice going while food is in stomach (iv) negative feedback – if contents become too acidic (too much gastric juice), gastrin release is inhibited iv) mechanical digestion (1) contraction of muscle in stomach wall (2) acid chyme formed – churned food with gastric juice v) stomach usually closed at both ends (1) keeps acid chyme from going up esophagus (a)heartburn (acid reflux) (2) pyloric sphincter (a)regulates passage of acid chyme to small intestines (b) leaves one squirt at a time (c)takes 2 to 6 hours to empty stomach vi) Vomiting (1) reverse peristalsis 9) Small intestines – the major organ of chemical digestion and nutrient absorption a) Recap – starch and protein digestion began, but nowhere near complete, acid chyme is a thick soup b) virtually all chemical digestion occurs here c) nutrients are absorbed here d) over 6 meters long i) longest organ of alimentary canal ii) small refers to diameter (2.5cm) e) pancreas and liver help with digestion here i) pancreas (a)produces (i) digestive enzymes (trypsin, chymotrypsin, Pancreatic Lipase, Pancreatic amylase, Ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, carboxypeptidase) (ii) alkaline solution rich in bicarbonate – neutralizes acid chyme ii) liver (1) produces bile (a)NO ENZYMES (b) contains bile salts that help weaken fats to enzyme attack (break globules to tiny droplets) (2) gallbladder stores bile until needed f) duodenum i) first 25 cm of small intestines ii) site where acid chyme meets bile salts, pancreatic enzymes, and enzymes from wall of intestines itself iii) all for types of macromolecules digested iv) Carbohydrates: (1) pancreatic amylase (a)hydrolyzes starch into maltose (2) maltase (from intestine wall) (a)hydrolyzes maltose into two glucose monomers (3) sucrase (intestine wall) (a)hydrolyzes sucrose (4) lactase (intestine wall) (a)hydrolyzes lactose v) proteins (1) trypsin and chymotrypsin (a)break polypeptide products of pepsin into even shorter chains (2) aminopeptidase (intestine wall) and carboxypeptidase (a)hydrolyze one amino acid at a time from the ends (3) dipeptidase (intestine wall) (a)hydrolyzes fragments only 2 or 3 AA long (4) work as a team vi) Nucleic acids (1) nucleases (a)split DNA and RNA into nucleotides (2) nucleotides then broken down to nitrogenous base, sugar, phosphate by other enzymes vii) Fat (1) special problem due to insolubility (2) emulsification (a)bile salts coat tiny droplets and keep them separate from each other so they don’t form large ones (b) increases surface area exposed to lipase (3) lipase (a)breaks fat to glycerol and fatty acids g) beyond the duodenum, the small intestine is all about absorption i) surface area about 300 m2 – size of a tennis court (1) due to fold and projections (2) villi – fingerlike projections (3) each epithelial cell of the villi has tiny surface projections called microvilli h) lymph vessels and capillaries penetrate villi i) nutrients pass into capillaries or lymph vessels (1) some by diffusion (2) some by active transport ii) nutrients head first to liver (hepatic portal system) (1) processes nutrients to new substances that body needs (2) removes excess glucose and stores as glycogen iii) next they go to heart and then to rest of your cells 10) Large Intestines Reclaim water a) large intestines = colon b) 1.5m long and 5cm diameter c) another sphincter controls entrance to colon d) cecum e) appendix – fingerlike extension of cecum i) contain a mass of WBCs that make a minor contribution to immunity ii) prone to infection f) main function i) absorb water from alimentary canal g) 7 liters enter canal each day in digestive juices i) 90% absorbed back into blood by small intestines ii) large intestines finished job h) as water is removed, indigestable material becomes more solid i) peristalsis moves it along j) feces i) mostly indigestible plant fibers and prokaryotes living in your colon k) E. coli and other colonic flora i) produce important vitamins (1) biotin (2) folic acid (3) several B vitamins (4) vitamin K (a)absorbed into blood through colon l) rectum i) terminal portion of colon ii) storage site for feces iii) strong colon contractions create urge to defecate m) anus i) two rectal sphinctors regulate opening (1) one voluntary and one involuntary n) If lining is irritated by bacteria or virus less water absorption occurs = diarrhea o) peristalsis is too slow i) too much water absorbed = constipation (1) lack of exercise, too little plant fiber