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Digestion
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Chemical digestion
The hydrolysis of large polymers e.g. proteins/starch into smaller, soluble,
diffusible monomers e.g. amino acids and glucose.
Starch
CH2OH
O
OH
CH2OH
O
OH
CH2OH
O
OH
O
OH
O
OH
OH
n
Glucose
amylose
OH
CH2OH
O H
OH
OH
CH2OH
O
OH
O
CH2OH
O
OH
OH
amylopectin
O
OH
n
OH
CH2
O
OH
O
OH
OH
H
OH
b-glucose
Monomers can then be
absorbed across the gut
lining and assimilated into
polymers e.g. glycogen again.
OH
O
a-glucose
CH2OH
O OH
OH
Digestion
Food moves through the digestive tract by contractile waves of smooth muscle – peristalsis.
This muscle is myogenic but the parasympathetic nervous system stimulates activity, the
sympathetic inhibits it.
There are a number of different juices involved in the digestion process.
Mouth
• Moistening and physical breakdown of food
• Very little enzymatic digestion by amylase before food is swallowed
Stomach
• Hydrochloric acid kills micro-organisms
• Physical churning
• Peptidases begin initial protein digestion
Small intestine
Entry of acidic stomach fluids (chyme) triggers hormonal feedback loops which
cause the release of pancreatic juices:
• Sodium bicarbonate neutralizes the acidic chyme
• Lipase digests fats
• Amylases digest carbohydrates
• RNase/DNase digest nucleotides
• Trypsin and chymotrypsin digest protein
• Bile from the gall bladder emulsifies/increases surface area of fats so that they
can be attacked by the lipase
Large intestine
Water re-absorption and compaction and storage of faeces.
Extracellular digestion : Stomach
Protein digestion
• The enzyme pepsin begins protein digestion in the stomach.
• Pepsin is an endopeptidase which attacks peptide bonds inside the
molecules. Produces peptides of varying length.
What is produced
What the juice does
Hydrochloric acid
•
•
•
•
Pepsinogen
Activated to pepsin which digests proteins to peptides
Rennin
Only in babies where, together with Ca2+, it coagulates milk
proteins to curd making it more digestible
Lipase
Digests fats to fatty acids and monoglycerides
Intrinsic factor
Promotes vitamin B12 absorption which stimulates red blood
cell formation
Provides an optimum pH for stomach enzymes.
Disinfects the food
Changes inactive pepsinogen to pepsin
Promotes absorption of ions
Stomach structure & adaptations
Gastric pits
Gastric pits
Mucous cell
Mucosa
Gastric
glands
parietal cell
peptic cell
submucosa
•
•
•
Gastric pits contain gastric glands that produce HCl. Intrinsic factor and pepsinogen
Mucous cells produce mucus to prevent auto-digestion
Muscle layers to churn food
Pancreactic and liver functions
Bile duct from liver
Duodenum
Stomach
blood
Endocrine portion of pancreas
(Islets of Langerhans)
Duct cells
Secrete aqueous
NaHCO3 solution
Acinar cells
Secrete digestive enzymes
including amylase
Exocrine portion of pancreas
Duodenum & ileum adaptations
Duodenum and ileum have adaptations to maximise absorption:
•
•
•
•
Large size: 6m long, 350m2.
Folded inner wall increases surface area.
Villi –projections of inner wall – move and
increase surface area.
Surface epithelial cells have microvilli which
hugely increase the surface area.
Mucosa
Submucosa
Muscle
layers
Capillary
bed
microvilli
lacteal
Duct
Lumen
Villi
Villi
Structure to function: absorption in the ileum
Pancreas, liver and other functions
Pancreas
Involved in
carbohydrate &
protein
digestion
Bile from the
liver
What is produced
What the juice does
Amylase
Digests starch & glycogen to maltose
Lipase
Digests fats to fatty acids and monoglycerides
Trypsinogen
Activated to trypsin which digests proteins to peptides and
which activates chymotrypsinogen
Chymotrypsinogen
Forms chymotrypsin which digests proteins to peptides
Carboxypeptidase
Digests peptides to amino acids
What is produced
What the juice does
Bile salts
Emulsifies fats into 1 micrometer droplets which increase the
surface area for lipase action. Also aids the absorption of fats
(Bile pigments) e.g.
bilirubin
Breakdown products of haemoglobin which will be excreted in
the faeces
Succus entericus
(small intestine)
& Brunner’s gland
(Duodenum)
What is produced
What the juice does
Aminopeptidase
Digests peptides to amino acids
Maltase
Digests maltose to glucose
Sucrase
Digests sucrose to glucose and fructose
Lactase
Digests lactose to glucose and galactose
Enterokinase
Activates trypsinogen to trypsin
Protein Digestion : Small intestine
Digestion of proteins
•
•
Pancreatic secretions are a mixture of peptide-digesting enzymes.
Trypsin and chymotrypsin endopeptidases release short chain dipeptides
and tripeptides (2 or 3 amino acids).
•
•
Dipeptides and tripeptides may be absorbed directly.
Alternatively exopeptidases complete peptide digestion.
Dipeptides/
tripeptides
exopeptidases
Amino acids
Exopeptidases cleave amino acids from the edges of the
peptide chain, hydrolysing inwards.
Digestion: Summary
Intermediate Digestion
Nutrient
Final Digestion
Carbohydrate
Sugar polymer
Amylase
Protein
Amylases
Pepsin,
Trypsin
Proteases
Triglyceride
Monosaccharides
(glucose, galactose, fructose)
Maltase
peptide fragments
Protein
Chymotrypsin,
Carboxypeptidase
Fats
disaccharide
Amino acids
Aminopeptidase
Monoglyceride
Lipase
Lipases
Free fatty acids