Nutrition (Digestion) Flashcards
What are the structures that food passes through in the human alimentary canal in order?
- Mouth
- Oesophagus
- Stomach
- Small Intestine (Duodenum and Ileum)
- Large intestine (Colon and Rectum)
- Anus
The liver, gall bladder, pancreas and bile duct are also essential for digestion, but food does not pass through them
What are the functions of the mouth/salivary glands?
- Mechanical digestion where teeth break down food, increasing its surface area
- Amylase in saliva begin to break down the starch
What are the functions of the oesophagus?
- Connects the mouth to the stomach
- Food is moved down it by wave-like contractions without relying on gravity
What are the functions of the stomach?
- Mechanically digests food by churning it
- Protease enzymes like pepsin begin to work
- The hydrochloric acid kills off bacteria and provides the optimum pH for pepsin
What are the functions of the small intestine?
- Food is digested by pancreatic enzymes in the duodenum
- Food and water is abosrbed in the ileum
What are the functions of the large intestine?
- Water is absorbed from undigested material to produce faeces in the first part called the colon
- The faeces are stored for conveinant release in the rectum to be moved out of the anus
What are the functions of the pancreas?
- Releases amylase, protease and lipase
- Secretes them into the duodenum
What is the purpose of peristalsis?
To move food along the alimentary canal without the help of gravity
Where does peristalsis happen?
- The oesophagus
- The stomach
- The small intestine
- The large intestine
In the stomach and small intestine, peristalsis is also used for the mechanical breakdown of the bolus into a less solid form called chyme
How does peristalsis work?
- Circular and longitudinal muscles work in an antagonistic muscle pair
- They contract rhythmically in a wave-like action to move the food along
Mucus continuously lubricates the food, and dietary fibre is required for the muscles to push against
What are the roles of digestive enzymes?
To speed up and lower the activation energy of the chemical reactions involved in the chemical breakdown of food
What are the three enzymes produced in the pancreas? (Pancreatic enzymes)
- Lipase
- Protease
- Amylase
What does amylase break down into what and where is it produced?
Amylase is a carbohydrase enzyme
- It breaks down starch into maltose
- It is produced in the salivary glands, pancreas, and also the small intestine
What does maltase break down into what and where is it produced?
- It breaks down maltose into glucose
- It is produced in the small intestine
What do all proteases break down into what?
Proteins into amino acids
What is the protease enzyme produced in the stomach called and what does it break down into what?
- Pepsin
- It breaks down proteins into amino acids
Pepsins optimum pH is 2, which is why it is in the stomach
What do the protease enzymes produced in the pancreas and small intestine break down?
Proteins into amino acids
What does lipase break down into what and where is it produced?
- It breaks down lipids into glycerol and fatty acids
- It is produced in the pancreas only
Where is bile produced?
The liver
Where is bile stored before release to the small intestine through the bile duct?
The gall bladder
What are the functions of bile?
Note that the bile salts are what are doing these things
- Neutralises stomach acid allowing optimum pH for pancreatic enzymes once in the duodenum
- Mechanical breakdown of lipids into smaller droplets to increase surface area for lipase (emulsification)
How is the small intestine adapted for absorption?
The small intestine absorbs food through diffusion or active transport
- It has an extremely high surface area because it is very long and has millions of villi
- Peristalsis occurs here, which mixes up food and enzymes and keeps food moving, allowing for easier absorbtion and mechanically digesting it
- The production of enzymes turns the food molecules into smaller molecules which are easier to absorb
How is the villus adapted for absorption?
- Many microvilli for increased surface area
- Very thin wall for short diffusion distance
- A network of blood capillaries which take amino acids and glucose away to the blood maintain a steep concentration gradient
- A lacteal that runs thorugh the middle takes fatty acids and glycerol away, which also helps to main a steep concentration gradient
- Enzymes assisting in chemical digestion are produced in the walls of the villus
All of these factors are very favourable for diffusion