Title: Digestive System http://health.howstuffworks.com/adam-200142.htm
1Digestive Systemhttp//health.howstuffworks.com/
adam-200142.htm
2(No Transcript)
3Salivary Glands
- Secrete enzyme amylase (breaks down carbs)
- cover food to produce bolus (Mucous lubricates
food)
4Tongue
- moves food side to side to be chewed and keeps
between teeth - moves bolus to back of throat
- closes off mouth when swallowing
5Trachea
- Wind Pipe
- Epiglottis flap of skin that covers the trachea
so food does not enter the wind pipe and cause
you to choke.
6Esophagus
- a. Food to the stomach by peristalsis
7Liver
- produces and secretes bile which emulsifies fats
- detoxifies blood
- stores glycogen (animal form of starch)
- Reduces/neutralizes acidse. bile breaks up fats
8Gall Bladder
9Stomach
- churn/mix food
- digestion of proteins starts here
- Gastric juice is acidic (HCl) and contains pepsin
(enzyme to digest proteins) - Gastrin (hormone) stimulates to release of
gastric juice - vomiting-reverse peristalsis
- pyloric sphincter controls opening and end of
stomach
10Bile Duct
- a. duct or tube from gall bladder to small
intestine
11Trachea
- wind pipe
- protected by epiglottis during swallowing
(covering)
12Small Intestine
- 20 30 feet long
- parts of sm. Intestine are
- duodenum listed above
- jejunum has folds of skin called the brush
border membrane. - ileum selective absorption of some nutrients.
What remains is liquid stool - Final digestion occurs here
- food is absorbed in simplest forms amino acids,
fatty acids, glycerole. - Villi small finger like projects that contain
vessels to absorb food
13Duodenum
- a. Most of the digestion begins here (proteins,
fats and carbs)
14Pancreas
- produces powerful digestive enzymes
- Produces and secretes insulin important in
regulating blood sugar levels
Pancreas Duct a. A duct or tube from pancreas
to small intestine
15Appendix
- Vestigial organ dead end
- a. May at one time have aided in digestion of
cellulose but has no function today
16Large Intestine (colon)
- Parts are Cecum large entrance controlled by a
sphincter that protects the small intestine from
the large intestines concentrated bacteria, - Ascending colon upwards,
- Transverse colon across,
- descending colon down,
- sigmoid colon end
f. reabsorbs water g. Some solid wastes are
stored before they enter rectum
17Rectum
- Rectum
- a. Stores solid waste until full
- Anus
- a. Controlled by sphincter muscle by peristalsis.
-
18Digestion animation review
- http//highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/s
tudent_view0/chapter26/animation__organs_of_digest
ion.html
19Digestive Processes
- I. Ingestion
- Takes food in mouth
- II. Peristalsis
- a. Muscular contractions along digestive
tract-esophagus ? small and large intestine
20- Absorption
- Taking of digested food into blood stream
- Occurs in Sm. Intestine
- Storage
- Animal starch stored as glycogen in liver
- Elimination
- Solid waste eliminated from large intestine
21- Mechanical Digestion
- Physically chewing-mouth
- Churning action-stomach
- Chemical Digestion
- Uses enzymes
- Starts carbohydrate breakdown in mouth
- Starts protein breakdown in stomach
- Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are fully
digested in Sm. Intestine
22Types of Food
- Food Type Diet Purpose Digestive End
Product - Fats lt30 Store energy Glycerol
3 Absorb Vitamins fatty acids - Protect
organs - Carbohydrates 55 Energy source
monosaccharides Absorption of food
glucose - Fiber
- Proteins gt15 Growth Amino Acids
- maintenance/repair
- makes enzymes
23What happens to the Digestive End Product (listed
above)
- ? Absorbed into blood and delivered to cells and
organs - For Fats ? used or stored
- For Carbohydrates ?used for energy or stored
- For Proteins ?used to rebuild/enzymes
- Remember organisms are very efficiently adapted
to providing the nutrients they need. The
complex process of changing one type of
macromolecule into another is very complex with
any one able to change into the other, through
many steps and much energy input.
24To speed Digestion organisms use chemicals and
enzymes
- Acids
- Gastric acid in stomach
- Contains HCl
- Bile
- Secreted by liver-stored in gall bladder
- Emulsifies fats (dissolves-NOT digest)
- Enzymes each enzyme (made of protein) is
regulated, with a special job - Jobs include
- Operate by Lock and Key approach
- Some examples
- Hydrolysis (Breaking down polysaccharides to
create simple sugars)
25Enzymes are
1. Highly specific 2. Can speed up the same
chemical reaction in either
direction. 3. NOT used up in the reaction.
26Lipase is an enzyme that digests fat. Bile is a
solution that emulsifies fats. Together, they
speed up the breakdown of fats in the
digestive system.
27Enzymes in Plants
- Remember, Autotrophs make their own organic
nutrients (simple sugars). How do plants do
this? - Enzymes speed the necessary chemical reactions
and give organisms the ability to control how
much, where, and when these reactions occur
Glucose is coupled together into starch in the
roots of plants for storage. - The enzyme for this reaction is called Sucrase
- The chemical reaction that occurs is a
Dehydration Synthesis, draw the structures of two
glucose molecules being joined to create a
disaccharide.
28How do they work?
- Enzymes function by binding to one or more of the
reactants (substrate) in a reaction. - The exact location on the enzyme where substrate
binding takes place is called the active site of
the enzyme. - The shape of the active site just fits the shape
of the substrate, somewhat like a lock fits a
key. - In this way only the correct substrate binds to
the enzyme
29http//www.efhealing.com/images/enzymes.jpg
30Types of Enzymes
- Enzyme Made Here Acts
Purpose - Amylase Mouth Mouth
breaks polysacs to - Pancreas Sm. Intestine
disacs (digests carbs) - Pepsin Gastric glands Stomach
Starts digestion - of stomach
- Rennin Stomach Stomach
Coagulates (thickens) - protein in milk
- Lipase Pancreas Sm. Intestine
Reduces fats to fatty -
acids and glycerol -
(building blocks of fats)
31Enzymatic Digestion of food types (Macromolecules)
- Name the chemical process used by these enzymes
to help digest fats, carbohydrates, and proteins - Use diagrams of Macromolecules to fill in the
chart below. Use circled numbers to indicate
locations of hydrolysis - http//www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tnamefaqdbid
16digestion
Hydrolysis
32Digestive Problems
- Lactose Intolerence -
- Inability to digest milk sugar (enzyme lactase)
- Appendicitis -
- Bacteria gets in appendix and causes flu like
symptoms and eventually shooting pain in right
side. Surgically removed.
33- Tape worms
- Parasite that stays in your intestines and
absorbs all the nutrients. Get it from
undercooked meat. - Diabetes
- Cannot produce insulin in pancreas