Intro to digestion and absorption Flashcards
Digestion
The breakdown of larger molecules to simpler, smaller chemical compounds that can be absorbed
Digestion is complete when…
molecules are small enough to be absorbed
3 main types of digestion
- physical/mechanical digestion
- chemical digestion
- enzymatic digestion - primary importance
4 ways in which physical digestion occurs
- chewing (mastication)
- grinding in the GI tract (gizzard, birds only)
- omasum - ruminant only
- digestive turbulence (stomach rumbles)
Chemical digestion (2)
- HCl - produced in the stomach, digest protein
- bile acids - produced by the liver, and function in lipid digestion and absorption
Enzymatic digestion
- proteins make up the enzymes
- enzymes have specific substrates
- work within a narrow set of conditions (pH)
- require cofactors
- function via hydrolysis
Absorption
a set of processes that result in the passage of small molecules from the lumen (interior) of the gut through cells of the GI tract to the bloodstream
The best way to make absorption more efficient is….
to increase surface area via intestinal modification (villi and microvilli)
microvilli are also called…
the brush border of the intestine
Types of absorption (5)
- passive diffusion
- active transport
- secondary active transport
- facilitated diffusion
- phagocytosis
Passive diffusion
substances move down concentration gradient (from high -> low concentration)
does NOT require energy
Active transport
absorption from the lumen to an intestinal cell AGAINST the concentration gradient (from low concentration -> high concentration)
requires a carrier protein and energy (ATP)
Secondary active transport
requires a transport protein
indirectly requires energy - Na/K pump creates the gradient of sodium and potassium
moving one substance (usually sodium) down the concentration gradient in exchange for moving another molecule against the concentration gradient (like glucose)
facilitated diffusion
requires a carrier protein, but not energy
molecules move down concentration gradient (high->low concentration)
occurs when molecules are too large/polar/etc to diffuse through the membrane by itself
phagocytosis
occurs when a part of a villi cell breaks off and engulfs a nutrient
does not require digestion
occurs soon after birth as the infant absorbs antibodies from colostrum - MOST COMMON
phagocytosis stops a few days after birth