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Fueling Body Activities: Digestion

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Single-celled organisms digest their food intracellularly. ... cloaca or rectum - waste storage. 8. Human Digestive System. 9. 10. Vertebrate Digestive Systems ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fueling Body Activities: Digestion


1
Fueling Body Activities Digestion
  • Chapter 43

2
Outline
  • Types of Digestive Systems
  • Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • The Mouth and Teeth
  • Esophagus and Stomach
  • The Small Intestine
  • The Large Intestine
  • Accessory Organs
  • Neural and Hormonal Regulation of Digestion
  • Food Energy and Energy Expenditure

3
Classic Amoeba
4
Real Amoeba Eating Something
5
Types of Digestive Systems
  • Single-celled organisms digest their food
    intracellularly.
  • Other animals digest their food extracellularly
    within a digestive cavity.
  • digestive enzymes released into a cavity
  • Specialization occurs when the digestive tract,
    or alimentary canal, has a separate mouth and
    anus.

6
Types of Digestive Systems
  • Ingested food may be stored or first subjected to
    physical fragmentation.
  • Chemical digestion occurs next.
  • Hydrolysis reactions release individual
    molecules.
  • Products pass through the epithelial lining of
    the gut into the blood (absorption).
  • Waste products are excreted.

7
Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • Consists of tubular gastrointestinal tract and
    accessory digestive organs.
  • mouth and pharynx
  • esophagus - delivers food to stomach
  • stomach - preliminary digestion
  • small intestine - absorption
  • large intestine - water absorption
  • cloaca or rectum - waste storage

8
Human Digestive System
9
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10
Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • Accessory digestive organs include
  • liver
  • produces bile
  • gallbladder
  • stores and concentrates bile
  • pancreas
  • produces pancreatic juice

11
Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • Tubular gastrointestinal tract has a
    characteristic layered structure.
  • mucosa - epithelium
  • submucosa - connective tissue
  • muscularis - double layer of smooth muscle
  • serosa - connective tissue

12
Gastrointestinal Tract Layers
13
The Mouth and Teeth
  • Vertebrate teeth
  • Carnivorous mammals have pointed teeth that lack
    flat grinding surfaces.
  • Herbivores must pulverize cellulose of cell walls
    of plant tissue before digestion.
  • have large, flat teeth suited to grinding
  • Humans are essentially carnivores in the front,
    and herbivores in the back.

14
Generalized Vertebrate Dentition
15
The Mouth and Teeth
  • Mouth
  • The tongue mixes food with saliva.
  • moistens and lubricates food
  • secretions controlled by nervous system
  • Taste-sensitive neurons in the mouth send
    impulses to the brain, which responds by
    stimulating the salivary glands.

16
The Mouth and Teeth
  • When food is ready to be swallowed, the tongue
    moves it to the back of the mouth.
  • elevated by soft palate
  • pressure against pharynx triggers an automatic,
    involuntary reflex
  • larynx contracted and raised
  • glottis pushed against epiglottis
  • keeps food out of respiratory tract

17
Human Pharynx, Palate, and Larynx
18
Esophagus and Stomach
  • Structure and function of the esophagus
  • Swallowing center stimulates successive waves of
    contraction that moves food along esophagus to
    stomach.
  • controlled by ring of smooth muscle (sphincter)
  • Structure and function of the stomach
  • Surface is highly convoluted, enabling it to fold
    when empty and expand as it fills with food.

19
Esophagus and Stomach
  • Secretory systems
  • Exocrine glands contain two cell types
  • parietal cells - secrete hydrochloric acid
  • chief cells - secrete pepsinogen
  • Action of acid
  • Human stomach produces about 2 liters of HCl and
    other gastric juices everyday.
  • helps denature food proteins
  • chyme

20
Stomach and Duodenum
21
Esophagus and Stomach
  • Ulcers
  • Gastric ulcers are rare because epithelial cells
    in the mucosa are protected by a layer of
    alkaline mucus.
  • Susceptibility increased when mucosal barriers
    are weakened by Helicobacter pylori.
  • Chyme leaves the stomach through the pyloric
    sphincter.

22
The Small Intestine
  • Digestion
  • approximately 4.5 m long, and divided into
    duodenum, jejunum and ileum
  • epithelial wall covered with villi
  • covered by microvilli
  • greatly increase surface area

23
Small Intestine
24
Accessory Organs
  • Secretions of the pancreas
  • Pancreatic fluid is secreted into duodenum
    through the pancreatic duct.
  • host of enzymes trypsin, chymotrypsin,
    pancreatic amylase, and lipase
  • Digest proteins into smaller polypeptides,
    polysaccharides into shorter sugar chains, and
    fat into free fatty acids.

25
Pancreas
  • Pancreas also functions as endocrine gland,
    secreting hormones to control blood glucose.
  • produced in islets of Langerhans

26
Accessory Organs
  • Liver and gallbladder
  • Liver is largest internal organ of the body.
  • Main secretion is bile, a fluid mixture of bile
    pigments and bile salts delivered into the
    duodenum during digestion.
  • Bile pigments are waste products.
  • Bile salts act as detergents.
  • emulsification of fat
  • stored in gallbladder

27
The Small Intestine
  • Absorption
  • Glucose and amino acids enter the bloodstream via
    the hepatic portal vein.
  • Fat enters the lymphatic system.
  • Approximately 9 liters of fluid passes through
    the small intestine daily.
  • Only about 50 g of solids and 100 ml of liquid
    leave the body as feces.

28
The Large Intestine
  • Small intestine empties directly into the large
    intestine at a junction where two vestigial
    structures, cecum and appendix, remain.
  • no digestion takes place, and only about 4 of
    absorption occurs there
  • undigested material, primarily bacterial
    fragments and cellulose, compacted and stored
  • compacted feces driven by peristaltic
    contractions pass into rectum

29
Variations in Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • Digestive tracts of some animals contain bacteria
    and protists that convert cellulose into
    substances the host can digest.
  • Ruminants have large, divided stomachs.
  • rumen and reticulum
  • omassum and abomasum
  • rumination
  • Rodents and lagomorphs practice coprophagy.

30
Four-Chambered Ruminant Stomach
31
Variations in Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • All mammals rely on intestinal bacteria to
    synthesize vitamin K.
  • necessary for blood clotting
  • prolonged treatment with antibiotics greatly
    reduces bacterial populations in the body

32
Neural and Hormonal Regulation of Digestion
  • Gastrointestinal activities are coordinated by
    the nervous system and endocrine system.
  • Stomach secretions are regulated by food and
    gastrin.
  • The passage of chyme into the duodenum inhibits
    stomach contractions.
  • Duodenum secretes other hormones that inhibit
    stomach emptying and promote bile release and
    bicarbonate secretion.
  • enterogastrones

33
Hormonal Control of Gastrointestinal Tract
34
Accessory Organs
  • Liver regulatory functions
  • Liver chemically modifies substances absorbed in
    the gastrointestinal tract before they reach the
    rest of the body.
  • also removes toxins and poisons, and converts
    them into less toxic forms
  • Liver regulates many compounds such as steroid
    hormones, and produces most proteins found in
    blood plasma.

35
Accessory Organs
  • Regulation of blood glucose concentration
  • After a carbohydrate-rich meal, the liver and
    skeletal muscles remove excess glucose from blood
    and store it as glycogen.
  • stimulated by insulin
  • When glucose levels decrease, the liver secretes
    glucose in the blood.
  • breakdown of glycogen
  • gluconeogenesis - process of converting other
    molecules into glucose

36
Actions of Insulin and Glucagon
37
Food Energy and Energy Expenditure
  • Ingestion of food serves two primary functions
  • provides source of energy
  • provides raw materials that cannot be
    manufactured by the organism
  • Basal metabolic rate (BMR) refers to the minimum
    rate of energy consumption under defined resting
    conditions.

38
Food Energy and Energy Expenditure
  • If the amount of food energy taken in is greater
    than the energy consumed per day, the excess
    energy will be stored in glycogen and fat.
  • As glycogen reserves are limited, ingestion of
    excess food energy results primarily in the
    accumulation of fat.

39
Food Energy and Energy Expenditure
  • Regulation of food intake
  • Recent human studies show activity of ob gene and
    blood concentrations of leptin (satiety factor)
    are higher in obese people than in lean people.
  • Leptin produced by obese people appears to be
    normal.
  • Most cases of human obesity may result from
    reduced sensitivity to action of leptin in the
    brain.

40
Essential Nutrients
  • Essential nutrients are substances an animal
    cannot manufacture for itself but which are
    necessary for health must be obtained in the
    diet.
  • essential amino acids
  • unsaturated fatty acids
  • Essential minerals
  • trace elements

41
Summary
  • Types of Digestive Systems
  • Vertebrate Digestive Systems
  • The Mouth and Teeth
  • Esophagus and Stomach
  • The Small Intestine
  • The Large Intestine
  • Accessory Organs
  • Neural and Hormonal Regulation of Digestion
  • Food Energy and Energy Expenditure

42
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