Title: Homeostasis
1Homeostasis The Digestive System
Hungry???
2Nutritional requirements
- Animals are heterotrophs
- need to take in food
- Why? fulfills 3 needs
- fuel chemical energy for production of ATP
- raw materials carbon sources for biosynthesis
- essential nutrients substances animals cannot
make themselves - elements (N, P, K, Fe, Na, K, Ca, etc.), NAD,
FAD, etc.
3Energy budget
basal (resting) metabolism activity
temperature regulation
food intake
ATPproduction
growth reproduction
biosynthesis
glycogen fat
storage
4- A body functions properly only when the needs of
the organisms (water, food, heat, oxygen and
pressure) remain within the narrowly required
limits. - Homeostasis The tendency to maintain a stable
internal environment. - Ex Furnace and air conditioner unit to maintain
constant temperature
5- Negative feedback mechanism
- Negative feedback occurs when an increase in some
factor is sensed and is lowered - A response the body has to an occurrence that
disturbs the homeostasis of the body. As the
body reacts to that occurrence and moves closer
to homeostasis, the receptors are shut down, thus
causing fewer effectors to produce a product
thats needed to bring the body back to
homeostasis, in the end having a negative
effect on the production. The purpose of this is
to stop overproduction or overreaction.
6- Homeostatic mechanism in regulating body
temperature - Shivering in a cold environment muscles will
contract involuntarily producing heat - Sweating - in an overheated environment the
brain triggers a changes that promotes the
increased loss of body heat
7Managing glucose levels
- Human body regulates the use storage of
glucose, a major cellular fuel - insulin reduces blood glucose levels
- when glucose levels rise above set point,
pancreas secretes insulin - promotes transport of glucose into cells
storage of glucose as glycogen in liver muscle
cells - dropping blood glucose levels
- glucagon increases blood glucose levels
- when glucose levels drop below set point,
pancreas secretes glucagon - promotes breakdown of glycogen release of
glucose into the blood - increasing blood glucose levels Show PDF of
insulin
8 Regulation Maintaining Homeostasis
- Balancing glucose levels in blood
glucose uptake
pancreas
insulin
depress appetite
glucose storage
glucose release
pancreas
stimulatehunger
glucagon
9Essential Nutrients
- What happens if an animals diet is missing an
essential nutrient? - deficiency diseases
- scurvy vitamin C (collagen production)
- rickets vitamin D (calcium absorption)
- blindness vitamin A (retinol production)
- anemia vitamin B12 (coenzyme function)
- kwashiorkor protein deficiency
10Digestion
- The reduction of large food molecules into
smaller absorbable units and conversion of
insoluble units into soluble ones. - This is accomplished by mechanical action,
chemical and enzymatic action. - Enzymes are synthesized by cells in the mouth,
stomach, pancreas and small intestine
11- Normally 92- 95 of a diet is digested and
absorbed, but the process varied for each nutrient
http//www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/7155.html
12Types of digestive action
- Mechanical
- Movement of the teeth grinding the food in the
mouth - Chemical
- Changing the food molecules into new and
different molecules - Lipids Lipase Fatty acids
glycerol -
13Alimentary Tract
- Alimentary canal
- A muscular tube about 9 meters long
- Appendage organs include
- Liver, biliary tree and pancreas
- Extends from the mouth to the anus
- Receives food . . . Digestion/absorption occurs .
. .transport to cells . . .excretion of waste
14Diagram of Alimentary canal
- Peristalsis propelling movements which are a
forward motion that is wavelike - Peristalsis pushes tubular contents ahead of it
through the alimentary canal
15Mouth
- Teeth mechanically grind and crush food
- Saliva moistens and binds food mass
- Salivary amylase begins digestion of starch
- Chewed food mass bolus
- Passes from mouth into esophagus
- Movement is controlled by peristalsis
16- Approximately 1.5 liters of saliva are produced
daily by salivary glands ( 6 cups) Figure 12.1 - Amylase is a digestive enzyme
- It splits starch and glycogen (both
carbohydrates) into disaccharides via hydrolysis - Mucus binds food particles and acts as a
lubricant in swallowing - Esophagus straight tube that provides a
passageway between the pharynx and stomach
17Stomach
- Chemical digestion begins in the middle of the
stomach mixing food with gastric juices - Gastric juices contain HCl, intrinsic factor,
pepsinogen, gastric lipase mucus - Food becomes semi-liquid chyme (50 water)
- Stomach is emptied in 1 4 hours
- Sphinctervalves at either end of stomach
18- The lining of the stomach is covered with
numerous small holes. These are the openings of
gastric pits which extend into the mucosa forming
gastric glands.
19- Stomach helps to initiate the digestion of
proteins, but also helps speed up the digestion
of carbohydrates and fats - Pepsin is the most important digestive enzyme in
the stomach - Pepsin is a protein-splitting enzyme
- It carries on a limited amount of absorption
20- The pyloric sphincter (pylorus) is a muscle that
acts as a valve to prevent regurgitation of food
from intestines back into the stomach
21Rugae thick folds in stomach wall
22Pancreas
- Functions as an endocrine gland
- Releases hormones
- Functions as an exocrine gland
- Secretes digestive juices
- Pancreatic juices move into the intestine
(duodenum) - Contains enzymes that digest carbohydrates, fats,
proteins and nucleic acids
23- Viewing the digestive system in the anatomical
position, the pancreas is found in under the
stomach in the left hypochondriac epigastric
regions
24Liver
- Located below the diaphragm in the right
hypochondriac and epigastric regions of the
abdominal area.
25(No Transcript)
26- The liver metabolizes carbohydrates lipids and
proteins - Stores glycogen, vitamins A, D, B12 and iron
- Filters blood
- Detoxifies blood
- Secretes bile
- An Introduction to the Liver PDF File
27Other functions of the liver
- Producing quick energy when it is needed
- Manufacturing new body proteins
- Preventing shortages in body fuel by storing
certain vitamins, minerals, and sugars - Regulating transport of fat stores
- Regulating blood clotting
- Aiding in the digestive process by producing
bile - Controlling the production and excretion of
cholesterol - Neutralizing and destroying poisonous
substances - Metabolizing alcohol
- Monitoring and maintaining the proper level of
many chemicals and drugs in the blood - Cleansing the blood and discharging waste
products into the bile - Maintaining hormone balance
- Serving as the main organ of blood formation
before birth - Helping the body resist infection by producing
immune factors and by removing bacteria from the
bloodstream - Regenerating its own damaged tissue and
- Storing iron.
28- Bile -
- Yellowish, green liquid made of bile salts, bile
pigments, water, cholesterol and electrolytes - Bile salts aid the digestive enzymes and enhance
the absorption of fatty acids and fat-soluble
vitamins - Bile salts act as emulsifiers, breaking up fat
into droplets, allowing lipases to digest them
better
5.1.3 state source of one lipase substate,
source and optimum pH
29- Bile is stored in the gall bladder until a
hormone stimulates its release into the small
intestines
http//www.foxriverwatch.com/liver_hepatic_damage_
pcbs_1a.html
30Small Intestine
- Approx. 20 -25 feet long with villi and
microvilli for a total surface area of 25 sq
meters - 3 areas
- Duodenum
- Jejunum
- Ileum
- Most digestion occurs in the duodenum
- Most absorption occurs in the jejunum and ileum
31- The intestines are lined with villi
- Increase the surface area of the intestinal
lining - Increase the absorption of digestive products
- Capillaries carry away absorbed products from
villi - Nutrients are absorbed by several means
- Simple diffusion (higher to lower concentration
area) - Facilitated diffusion (Against the gradient using
channel or carrier proteins) - Active transport (diffusion with ATP)
32- Microvilli on intestinal epithelial cells
33- As chyme enters duodenum it stimulates the
release of pancreatic juices and mixes with
enzymes from the pancreas and small intestine as
well as with bile, fluid and bicarbonates - All the gastric, small intestinal secretions and
pancreatic secretions are controlled by the
nervous system and by hormones
34Digestive enzymes in sm. intestine
- Enzymes are specific to a particular substrate
- Proteins
- Peptidases break peptides into amino acids
- Lipids
- Lipases break lipids into glycerol and fatty
acids
35Carbohydrate Digestion
- Begins in mouth with salivary amylase
- Halted by hydrochloric acid
- Digestion mostly occurs in small intestine by
pancreatic amylase - Passes through intestinal wall in monosaccharide
form (ex glucose)
36- They quickly move through the digestive system
- Some carbohydrates cannot be digested by humans
and are excreted - They provide short term energy
37Protein Digestion
- Begins in stomach by proteolytic enzymes
- Most of digestion takes place in the duodenum by
pancreatic and intestinal enzymes Protein
hydrolysis - Final phase occurs in the brush border of the
microvilli - Absorbed in the amino acid form
- Allergic reactions can occur when intact proteins
pass through intestinal wall
38- Proteins move through digestive system 2nd
fastest after carbohydrates - Once protein is broken down into amino acids,
these are reassembled into 1º,2º,3º and 4º
proteins the body needs - Hemoglobin blood protein
- Albumin in plasma aids in blood clotting
- Fibrinogen blood clotting agent
39Lipid Digestion
- Begins in stomach with gastric lipase
- Major digestion occurs in small intestine
- Bile and action of stomach/small intestine break
down large globules into smaller pieces - Lipase breaks down particles into fatty acids.
- Cholesterol and fat soluble vitamins follow
similar process
40- Lipids move slowly through the digestive system
- They are stored as long term storage in the form
of adipose tissue
http//www.sunyniagara.cc.ny.us/val/adipose2.html
http//www.gen.umn.edu/courses/1135/lab/kidneylab/
kidneylab.html
41Vitamins, Minerals and Fluids
- Absorbed in the intestine
- Eight liters of fluid are passed back and forth
across the membrane of small intestine to keep
nutrients in solution - Vitamins and water pass unchanged from small
intestinal wall into the blood stream - Absorption of mineral occurs in stages in small
intestine
42Large Intestine
- Includes
- Ascending colon
- transverse colon
- descending colon
- sigmoid colon
- rectum
http//www.fruit-eze.com/education/colon/
43- Large intestine primarily absorbs water,
electrolytes and some vitamins - Bacteria break down undigested material
- Formation and absorption of vitamin K
- Formation and excretion of waste products
http//www.fujinon.com/product/medical/ed0114.htm
44- Little digestion now occurs as it is mostly
completed by this time. - Large intestine are about 5 feet long
- Mixing movement and peristalsis occur but are
much slower here. - Peristalsis occurs only 2 to 3 times/day.
45- Contain E. Coli (good form not 0157) that break
down remaining food and aid in the formation of
vitamin K - Newborns and vitamin K
- The solid waste consists of dead bacteria,
undigested fiber and other products of digestion.