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Unit 1. Energy Production and Transport
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RespirationDigestion Transport Digestive System Respiratory System Cells C 6 H 12 O 6 + O 2 CO 2 + H 2 O Energy
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What do animals need to live? Animals make energy using: food oxygen Animals build bodies using: food for raw materials amino acids, sugars, fats, nucleotides ATP energy for synthesis O2O2 food ATP mitochondria
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digestion What happens to the food we eat?
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How do animals get their food? filter feedingliving in your food fluid feedingbulk feeding
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Different diets; different lives All animals eat other organisms Herbivores eat mainly plants gorillas, cows, rabbits, snails Carnivores eat other animals sharks, hawks, spiders, snakes Omnivores eat animals & plants cockroaches, bears, raccoons, humans humans evolved as hunters, scavengers & gatherers
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Digestive systems Everybody’s got one!
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When we eat a meal, the food passes through the gut in a series of processes: Ingestion: eating the food Digestion: chemical and physical reactions that break down food into smaller pieces Absorption: the mass of small food molecules from the digestive system into the blood or lymphatic vessels. Transport: the circulatory system delivers the small molecules into your body cells. Assimilation: the small molecules are used in your body cells to build new and larger molecules.
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Structure of The Digestive System
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Human digestive system
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The wall of the alimentary canal is made of living tissues which include: Muscle fibers: circular and longitudinal Secretory cells A single layer of epithelium Associated glands
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Glands Gastric juices are released into the gut by various glands: Salivary glands Stomach wall Pancreas Small intestine wall
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Enzymes in digestion.- Enzymes are chemical catalizers, helping to speed up the process of digestion. Enzymes are sensitive to temperature, pH and substrate concentration. Most enzymes are highly specific, but digestive enzymes tend to act on a broader range of substrates. Enzymes of digestion are all made in glands and are secreted into the gut, where they mix the food.
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Enzyme Main Secreting Gland pH optimum of enzyme Region where enzyme works pH of region where enzyme works Starch Amylase maltose 1. Salivary glands 7Mouth 6.0 – 7.0 1. Pancre as 7 Small intestine 7,0 – 8.3 Protein Protease aminoacids 1. Stomac h wall 2Stomach 1.0 – 3.5 1. Pancre as 7 Small intestine 7.0 – 8.3 Lipids Lipase fatty acids + glycerol 1. Pancre as 7Small intestine 7.0 – 8.3
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Mouth Functions mechanical digestion teeth break up food chemical digestion (saliva) amylase enzyme digests starch mucus protects soft lining of digestive system lubricates food for easier swallowing buffers neutralizes acid to prevent tooth decay anti-bacterial chemicals kill bacteria that enter mouth with food
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Esophagus Epiglottis flap of cartilage closes trachea (windpipe) when swallowing food travels down esophagus Peristalsis involuntary muscle contractions to move food along
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Stomach Functions disinfect food hydrochloric acid = pH 2 kills bacteria food storage can stretch to fit ~2L food digests protein pepsin enzyme But the stomach is made out of protein! What stops the stomach from digesting itself? mucus secreted by stomach cells protects stomach lining
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Small intestine Functions digestion digest carbohydrates amylase from pancreas digest proteins trypsin & chymotrypsin from pancreas digest lipids (fats) bile from liver & lipase from pancreas absorption nutrients move into body cells by: diffusion active transport
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Small intestine Functions Gland Produces enzymes to digests other substances (ex.nucleases) Protection Areas in the wall of the small intestine called Peyer’s patches contain lymphocytes that detect pathogens in food to help in the production of antibodies against them
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Absorption in Small Intestines Absorption through villi & microvilli finger-like projections increases surface area for absorption
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Liver & Gall Bladder Produces bile breaks up fats gallbladder only stores bile that’s why you can have your gall bladder removed bile contains colors from old red blood cells collected in liver = iron in RBC rusts & makes feces brown bile contains colors from old red blood cells collected in liver = iron in RBC rusts & makes feces brown
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Assimilation Filters harmful substances and bacteria in blood. After blood has passed through, it is pumped to the lungs and then to the rest of the body where cells absorb substances. The process by which cells use this substances to build new macromolecules is called assimilation.
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Pancreas Produces digestive enzymes digest proteins trypsin, chymotrypsin digest starch amylase digest lipids lipase Buffers neutralizes acid from stomach small intestine pancreas
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Large intestines (colon) Function re-absorbs water use ~9 liters of water every day in digestive juices if don’t reabsorb water would die of dehydration > 90% of water re-absorbed not enough water re-absorbed diarrhea can be fatal! too much water re-absorbed constipation reabsorb by diffusion
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You’ve got company! Living in the large intestine is a community of helpful bacteria Escherichia coli: E. coli digest cellulose digests fruits & vegetables produce vitamins vitamin K & B vitamins BUT generate gases by-product of bacterial metabolism methane, hydrogen sulfide
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Appendix Vestigial organ
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Rectum Last section of large intestines eliminate feces what’s left over? undigested materials mainly cellulose from plants called roughage or fiber keeps everything moving & cleans out intestines masses of bacteria
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stomach kills germs break up food digest proteins store food mouth break up food digest starch kill germs moisten food small intestines breakdown food - proteins - starch - fats absorb nutrients pancreas produces enzymes to digest proteins & carbs liver produces bile - stored in gall bladder break up fats large intestines absorb water appendix
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Sources: Regents Biology (2012 – 2013) Animal Nutrition, Human Digestion. (On Line) http://www.westlake.k12.oh.us/whsteachers/crist/2012_2 013/Bio/digestion_35.pdf. PPT modified from this source. http://www.westlake.k12.oh.us/whsteachers/crist/2012_2 013/Bio/digestion_35.pdf Allot, Andrew and Mindorff, David (2010) Biology Course Companion, (2 nd ed.). Oxford University Press, New York, 212 – 218 Damon, Alan; McGonegal, Randy; Tosto, Patricia; and Ward, William. (2007) Biology Higher Level, Pearson Baccalaureate, London, 151 – 156
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