Lecture 26: CHEMICAL DIGESTION Flashcards
What are the ain nutrients that undergo chemical digestion?
Carbohydrates (sugars), proteins nd lipids (fats)
What are carbohydrates important for?
A source of energy
What are carbohydrates made of?
Large storage polysaccharides and complex chains of monosaccharides
What is the most common carbohydrate?
Starch and also glycogen
What are starch and glycogen?
Long chains of glucose joined by alpha 1,4 glycosidic linkage
What are some disaccharides?
Sucrose, lactose and maltose
What is sucrose made of?
Glucose and fructose
What is lactose made of?
Glucose and galactose
What is maltose made of?
2 glucose
What doe we ingest a limited amount of?
Monosaccharides (glucose)
Are proteins a source of energy?
No
What are proteins required for?
Amino acids
How many amino acids are there?
21 - 12 can be synthesised but other essentials such s His, Lys and Leu can’t co must come from the diet
What are sources of protein?
50% diet and 50% endogenous (enzymes and immunoglobulins which have been secreted into the lumen)
What is the structure of ingested proteins?
Long chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds
Are lipids essential?
No
What are lipids an important source of?
Energy and fat soluble vitamins A, D, E and K
What effect do lipids have on gastric emptying?
Slow it
What are lipids mainly?
Triglycerides (glycerol backbone with 3 fatty acids attached)
What can fatty acids be?
Variable in chain length
How many carbons in short chain fatty acids?
Less than 6
How many carbons in medium chain fatty acids?
6-12
How many carbons in long chain fatty acids?
12-24
Why do we need chemical digestion?
We ingest nutrients in the form of large complex molecules but can only absorb nutrients as small molecules
What does chemical digestion do?
Decreases the size of nutrients to allow them to be absorbed
Where does chemical digestion occur?
At the surface of food particles
What does mechanical digestion do?
Breaks up food and increases surface area available for chemical digestion