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The Digestive System Lab
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Organs of the Digestive System
Gastrointestinal tract (GIT) – continuous passageway which contains the food from the time it enters the body until it leaves; organs include: mouth (oral cavity), pharynx (oropharynx & laryngopharynx), esophagus, stomach, small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, ileum), large intestine (cecum, colon, rectum), anal canal, anus Accessory organs - participate in digestive processes; organs include: teeth, tongue, salivary glands, liver, gall bladder, pancreas 2
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Function of the Digestive System
To break down food into a “usable” (absorbable) form – occurs through mechanical processing & chemical digestion To supply our cells with the nutrients they need for energy, growth & repair 3
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Classes of Nutrients: carbohydrates – including
polysaccharides (“complex” carbohydrates ) starch disaccharides (“simple” sugars) maltose, sucrose, lactose proteins fats (lipids/triglycerides) vitamins minerals water No digestive processes necessary, just absorption
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Digestive processes Mechanical processing – physical breakdown of food; e.g. mastication, emulsification, mixing waves, segmentation Chemical digestion – chemical breakdown of food; disassembling of organic molecules into their component parts; requires enzymes carbohydrates (polysaccharides) disaccharides monosaccharides proteins amino acids lipids (triglycerides) fatty acids & glycerol (monoglycerides)
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Mouth (oral cavity) Digestion (mechanical & chemical) begins within the oral cavity – mastication production of saliva by salivary glands Parotid gland Sublingual gland Submandibular gland saliva – made of H2O, salts & salivary amylase; moistens foods to create “bolus” to help with deglutition, & begins chemical digestion of starch Starch (polysaccharide) Maltose (disaccharide) amylase 6
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Stomach Mechanical digestion – mixing waves to change bolus of food to “chyme” Chemical digestion - secretions from cells of stomach to begin protein digestion: Peptic (chief) cells – pepsinogen Parietal cells – hydrochloric acid (HCL) Pepsinogen + HCL Pepsin Pepsin Proteins polypeptides HCL
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Small intestine Fats + bile emulsified fats
Chyme from stomach (with partially digested starch & proteins) + Bile from liver & gall bladder + Pancreatic juice from pancreas – released into duodenum of small intestine Segmentation mixes chyme with other secretions Fats + bile emulsified fats bile
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Pancreas proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase)
Pancreatic juice – mixture of enzymes & buffers (sodium bicarbonate) secreted by acinar cells into pancreatic duct & released into duodenum pancreatic amylase Starch maltose lipase Lipids (triglycerides) fatty acids + monoglycerol proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase) Proteins & polypeptides small peptides (tripeptides & dipeptides) nucleases – digest RNA & DNA Stomach Head Body Tail sodium bicarbonate – neutralizes acidic chyme because enzymes in small intestine need an alkaline pH 9
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Small intestine Cells in jejunum and ileum produce peptidases and disaccharidases for final digestion of proteins and sugars small polypeptides, tripeptides, dipeptides peptidases amino acids maltose maltase glucose + glucose sucrose sucrase glucose + fructose lactose lactase glucose + galactose
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Absorption Absorption of monosaccharides (glucose, fructose, galactose), amino acids and fatty acids (as well as vitamins/minerals) occurs in small intestine (into blood or lymph (fatty acids) Absorption of water (and some vitamins) occurs in large intestine
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