6.1 Digestion Flashcards
What are the 2 major groups of organs which comprise the human digestive system?
alimentary canal and accessory organs
What does the alimentary canal consist of?
The alimentary canal consists of organs through which food actually passes (oesophagus, stomach, small & large intestine)
What are the accessory organs?
salivary glands, pancreas, liver, gall bladder
What is the difference between alimentary canal an accessory organs?
Food passes through alimentary canal, but accessory organs aid in digestion but do not actually transfer food
What is the structure of the oesophagus?
A hollow tube connecting the oral cavity to the stomach (separated from the trachea by the epiglottis)
What is the role of the oesophagus?
Food is mixed with saliva and then is moved in a bolus via the action of peristalsis
What is the structure of the stomach?
A temporary storage tank where food is mixed by churning and protein digestion begins
What is the stomach lined with?
It is lined by gastric pits that release digestive juices, which create an acidic environment (pH ~2)
What is the structure and role of the small intestine?
A long, highly folded tube where usable food substances (nutrients) are absorbed
What are the 3 sections of the small intestine?
Consists of three sections – the duodenum, jejunum and ileum
What is the structure of the large intestine?
Consists of the ascending / transverse / descending / sigmoidal colon, as well as the rectum
What is the role of the large intestine?
The final section of the alimentary canal, where water and dissolved minerals (i.e. ions) are absorbed
What is the structure of the salivary glands?
Salivary glands include the parotid gland, submandibular gland and sublingual gland
What is the role of the salivary glands?
Release saliva to moisten food and contains enzymes (e.g. amylase) to initiate starch breakdown
What is the role of the pancreas?
Produces a broad spectrum of enzymes that are released into the small intestine via the duodenum
What, apart from enzymes, does the pancreas secrete?
Also secretes certain hormones (insulin, glucagon), which regulate blood sugar concentrations
What is the overall role of the liver?
Takes the raw materials absorbed by the small intestine and uses them to make key chemicals
What are the 5 main functions of the liver?
Its role includes detoxification, storage, metabolism, bile production and haemoglobin breakdown
What is the role of the gall bladder?
The gall bladder stores the bile produced by the liver (bile salts are used to emulsify fats)
Where is bile stored and where is it released into?
Bile stored in the gall bladder is released into the small intestine via the common bile duct
Learn how to draw the digestive system
How is food digested? (methods)
Food can be digested by a combination of two methods – mechanical digestion and chemical digestion
What is mechanical digestion?
In mechanical digestion, food is physically broken down into smaller fragments via the acts of chewing (mouth), churning (stomach) and segmentation (small intestine)
Where is food initially broken down mechanically?
Food is initially broken down in the mouth by the grinding action of teeth (chewing or mastication)
How does the bolus move to the stomach?
The tongue pushes the food towards the back of the throat, where it travels down the esophagus as a bolus
How does the bolus go down the oesophagus and not the trachea?
The epiglottis prevents the bolus from entering the trachea, while the uvula prevents the bolus from entering the nasal cavity
What is churning?
The stomach lining contains muscles which physically squeeze and mix the food with strong digestive juices (‘churning’)
What happens to the food after prolonged churning?
Food is digested within the stomach for several hours and is turned into a creamy paste called chyme
Where does the chyme go?
Eventually the chyme enters the small intestine (duodenum) where absorption will occur
What is peristalsis?
Peristalsis is the principal mechanism of movement in the oesophagus, although it also occurs in both the stomach and gut
How does peristalsis work?
Continuous segments of longitudinal smooth-muscle rhythmically contract and relax
How (general) does food move?
Food is moved unidirectionally along the alimentary canal in a caudal direction (mouth to anus)
What does segmentation involve? (how does it work)
Segmentation involves the contraction and relaxation of non-adjacent segments of circular smooth muscle in the intestines
What is the purpose of segmentation?
Segmentation contractions move chyme in both directions, allowing for a greater mixing of food with digestive juices
Is segmentation effective?
While segmentation helps to physically digest food particles, its bidirectional propulsion of chyme can slow overall movement
What is chemical digestion?
In chemical digestion, food is broken down by the action of chemical agents (such as enzymes, acids and bile)
What does the stomach contain?
The stomach contains gastric glands which release digestive acids to create a low pH environment (pH ~2)
Why does the stomach have an acidic environment?
The acidic environment functions to denature proteins and other macromolecules, aiding in their overall digestion
What lines the stomach and what is its purpose?
The stomach epithelium contains a mucous membrane which prevents the acids from damaging the gastric lining
What pH compounds does the pancreas secrete and why?
The pancreas releases alkaline compounds (e.g. bicarbonate ions), which neutralise the acids as they enter the intestine
Where is bile produced and stored?
The liver produces a fluid called bile which is stored and concentrated within the gall bladder prior to release into the intestine
What does bile contain and what is its role?
Bile contains bile salts which interact with fat globules and divide them into smaller droplets (emulsification)
What does the emulsification of fats cause?
The emulsification of fats increases the total surface area available for enzyme activity (lipase)
What are enzymes?
Enzymes are biological catalysts which speed up the rate of a chemical reaction (i.e. digestion) by lowering activation energy
Why are enzymes needed for digestion?
Enzymes allow digestive processes to therefore occur at body temperatures and at sufficient speeds for survival requirements
Why is it important that enzymes are specific?
Enzymes are specific for a substrate and so can allow digestion of certain molecules to occur independently in distinct locations
What secretes digestive enzymes?
Digestive enzymes are secreted predominantly by the pancreas, although other organs also contribute (salivary gland, stomach)
What does the type of enzyme secreted and location depend on?
the type of enzyme secreted and location of secretion depends on the specific macromolecule required for hydrolysis
Where does carbohydrate digestion first occur?
Carbohydrate digestion begins in the mouth with the release of amylase from the salivary glands (amylase = starch digestion)
Where is amylase secreted from (apart from salivary glands)?
Amylase is also secreted by the pancreas in order to continue carbohydrate digestion within the small intestine
Where are enzymes used for disaccharide hydrolysis usually located?
Enzymes for disaccharide hydrolysis are often immobilised on the epithelial lining of the small intestine, near channel proteins
Can humans digest cellulose? why?
NO
Humans do not possess an enzyme capable of digesting cellulose (cellulase) and hence it passes through the body undigested
Where does protein digestion begin?
Protein digestion begins in the stomach with the release of proteases that function optimally in an acidic pH (e.g. pepsin = pH 2)
What type of proteins enters the small intestine and what breaks them down?
Smaller polypeptide chains enter the small intestine where they are broken down by endopeptidases released by the pancreas
What is the optimum for endopeptidases?
These endopeptidases work optimally in neutral environments (pH ~ 7) as the pancreas neutralises the acids in the intestine
Where does lipid breakdown occur?
Lipid breakdown occurs in the intestines, beginning with emulsification of fat globules by bile released from the gall bladder
What breaks down lipids after emulsification?
The smaller fat droplets are then digested by lipases released from the pancreas
What does the pancreas secrete, apart from digestive enzymes?
The pancreas also releases nucleases which digest nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) into smaller nucleosides
What is the role of human intestines?
The human intestines function to absorb the products of digestion and have specialised structures to fulfil this function
What is the small intestine composed of? (4)
serosa
muscle layer
submucosa
mucosa
What is the serosa?
a protective outer covering composed of a layer of cells reinforced by fibrous connective tissue
What is the muscle layer?
outer layer of longitudinal muscle (peristalsis) and inner layer of circular muscle (segmentation)
What is the submucosa?
composed of connective tissue separating the muscle layer from the innermost mucosa
What is the mucosa?
a highly folded inner layer which absorbs material through its surface epithelium from the intestinal lumen
How is the inner epithelial intestine arranged?
The inner epithelial lining of the intestine is highly folded into finger-like projections called villi (singular: villus)
What is the role of the villi?
Many villi will protrude into the intestinal lumen, greatly increasing the available surface area for material absorption
What features do villi have to facilitate the absorption of digestive products (monomers, ions and vitamins)?
Microvilli Rich blood supply Single-layer epithelium Lacteals Intestinal glands Membrane proteins
Mr Slim
How do microvilli facilitate absorption of digestive products?
Ruffling of epithelial membrane further increases surface area
How does a rich blood supply facilitate absorption of digestive products?
Dense capillary network rapidly transports absorbed products
How does a single layer epithelium facilitate absorption of digestive products?
inimises diffusion distance between lumen and blood
How do intestinal glands facilitate absorption of digestive products?
Exocrine pits (crypts of Lieberkuhn) release digestive juices
How do lacteals facilitate absorption of digestive products?
Absorbs lipids from the intestine into the lymphatic system
How do membrane proteins facilitate absorption of digestive products?
Facilitates transport of digested materials into epithelial cells
What 4 features does the epithelial lining of villi to optimise capacity to absorb digested materials?
tight junctions
microvilli
mitochondria
pinocytosis vesicles
What are tight junctions?
Occluding associations between the plasma membrane of two adjacent cells, creating an impermeable barrier
What is the role of tight junctions?
They keep digestive fluids separated from tissues and maintain a concentration gradient by ensuring one-way movement
What is the role of microvilli?
Microvilli borders significantly increase surface area of the plasma membrane (>100×), allowing for more absorption to occur
What may be embedded upon microvilli?
The membrane will be embedded with immobilised digestive enzymes and channel proteins to assist in material uptake
What type of organelle do epithelial cells of intestinal villi have a lot of?
Epithelial cells of intestinal villi will possess large numbers of mitochondria to provide ATP for active transport mechanisms
Why do intestinal cells have a lot of mitochondria?
ATP may be required for primary active transport (against gradient), secondary active transport (co-transport) or pinocytosis
What is pinocytosis?
Pinocytosis (‘cell-drinking’) is the non-specific uptake of fluids and dissolved solutes (a quick way to translocate in bulk)
How will liquids be absorbed by pinocytosis?
These materials will be ingested via the breaking and reforming of the membrane and hence contained within a vesicle
During absorption, where must digested food molecules go?
During absorption, digested food monomers must pass from the lumen into the epithelial lining of the small intestine
What is the only option of where the digested food monomers may go and why?
Tight junctions between epithelial cells occlude any gaps between cells – all monomers must cross the membrane
Do all monomers travel the same way during absorption?
NO
Different monomers undertake different methods for crossing the apical and basolateral membranes