Intro to digestion and absorption Flashcards

1
Q

Digestion

A

The breakdown of larger molecules to simpler, smaller chemical compounds that can be absorbed

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2
Q

Digestion is complete when…

A

molecules are small enough to be absorbed

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3
Q

3 main types of digestion

A
  1. physical/mechanical digestion
  2. chemical digestion
  3. enzymatic digestion - primary importance
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4
Q

4 ways in which physical digestion occurs

A
  1. chewing (mastication)
  2. grinding in the GI tract (gizzard, birds only)
  3. omasum - ruminant only
  4. digestive turbulence (stomach rumbles)
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5
Q

Chemical digestion (2)

A
  1. HCl - produced in the stomach, digest protein
  2. bile acids - produced by the liver, and function in lipid digestion and absorption
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6
Q

Enzymatic digestion

A
  • proteins make up the enzymes
  • enzymes have specific substrates
  • work within a narrow set of conditions (pH)
  • require cofactors
  • function via hydrolysis
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7
Q

Absorption

A

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

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8
Q

The best way to make absorption more efficient is….

A

to increase surface area via intestinal modification (villi and microvilli)

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9
Q

microvilli are also called…

A

the brush border of the intestine

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10
Q

Types of absorption (5)

A
  1. passive diffusion
  2. active transport
  3. secondary active transport
  4. facilitated diffusion
  5. phagocytosis
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11
Q

Passive diffusion

A

substances move down concentration gradient (from high -> low concentration)
does NOT require energy

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12
Q

Active transport

A

absorption from the lumen to an intestinal cell AGAINST the concentration gradient (from low concentration -> high concentration)
requires a carrier protein and energy (ATP)

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13
Q

Secondary active transport

A

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)

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14
Q

facilitated diffusion

A

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

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15
Q

phagocytosis

A

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

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16
Q

Nutrient metabolism/metabolic pathways are basically the same across species but….

A

nutritional requirements, diet type, and digestion varies

this is because digestive tract morphology determines what an animal can consume