Lesson 3 (Nutrition in Man - Small Intestine Part 1)
Download
Report
Transcript Lesson 3 (Nutrition in Man - Small Intestine Part 1)
Nutrition in Man
Recap!
Crossword puzzle!
Lesson Objectives
• By the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
• State the 3 parts of the small intestine.
• Describe the functions of the duodenum in
terms of digestion by stating the enzymatic
reaction that takes place.
• Explain the role of bile in the process of fats
digestion in the small intestine.
Structure of the
small intestine
Parts of Small Intestine
Three parts:
1) Duodenum
2) Jejunum
3) Ileum
Structure
6 metres long!!!
Structure
Lining of the walls the small
intestine contains intestinal glands
which secrete digestive enzymes
Structure
• Walls contain villi and microvilli,
and single-cell epithelium, blood
and lymph capillaries for
absorption of digested food
particles
Duodenum
Duodenum
• Structure
• Receive pancreatic juice from pancreas via
pancreatic duct.
• Receive intestinal juice from the intestinal gland
• Receive bile(produced from liver, stored in gall
bladder and released via bile duct
Small intestine (Duodenum)
• All three fluids are alkaline
bile
duct
bile
pancreatic juice
pancreatic
duct
• Neutralise the acidic chyme
• Provide a suitable alkaline medium
(~pH 8.5) for the action of the
pancreatic and intestinal enzymes
intestinal
juice
Functions
Secretion of Intestinal Juice
• Functions
• Intestinal juice contain digestive enzymes : maltase, protease
(erepsin) and lipase
Intestine juice
• Functions – enzymes
Substrate
Enzyme
Product
Maltose
Maltase
Glucose
Polypeptide
Protease
(erepsin)
Amino acids
Fats
Lipase
Fatty acid
+glycerol
Duodenum
Pancreatic juice
• Function
Pancreatic juice contain enzymes
pancreatic amylase, pancreatic lipase
and trypsin
Pancreatic juice
Substrate
Enzyme
Product
Starch
Amylase
Maltose
Protein
Protease
(trysin)
Polypeptide
Fats
Lipase
Fatty acid
+glycerol
Bile
• Liver cells secrete bile
• Alkaline greenish-yellow liquid
• Has no enzymes so cannot digest food
• Aid in digestion of fats
• Bile stored temporarily in gall bladder
• When gall bladder contracts, bile flows
into duodenum via bile duct
Simulate action of Bile
• Add a small amount of oil to a beaker of water
• Shake it
• Add liquid detergent to simulate bile.
Observe!
big drop
of fat
• In the small intestine, bile salts
emulsify fats.
+
bile salts
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
big drop
of fat
• In the small intestine, bile salts
emulsify fats.
• They lower the surface tension of
the fats, that is, they reduce the
attractive forces between the fat
molecules.
+
bile salts
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
big drop
of fat
• In the small intestine, bile salts
emulsify fats.
• They lower the surface tension of
the fats, that is, they reduce the
attractive forces between the fat
molecules.
• This causes the fats to break into
tiny fat droplets suspended in water,
forming an emulsion.
+
bile salts
tiny fat
droplets
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
big drop
of fat
• In the small intestine, bile salts
emulsify fats.
• They lower the surface tension of
the fats, that is, they reduce the
attractive forces between the fat
molecules.
+
bile salts
• This causes the fats to break into
tiny fat droplets suspended in water,
forming an emulsion.
tiny fat
droplets
• Note that this is just a physical
break-up, but no chemical digestion
of fat molecules has occurred.
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
• Emulsification increases the
surface area to volume ratio of the
fats, speeding up their digestion by
lipase.
tiny fat
droplets
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
• Emulsification increases the
surface area to volume ratio of the
fats, speeding up their digestion by
lipase.
tiny fat
droplets
+
lipase
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
• Emulsification increases the
surface area to volume ratio of the
fats, speeding up their digestion by
lipase.
• Emulsified fats are digested by
lipases to fatty acids and glycerol.
tiny fat
droplets
+
lipase
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
• Emulsification increases the
surface area to volume ratio of the
fats, speeding up their digestion by
lipase.
• Emulsified fats are digested by
lipases to fatty acids and glycerol.
tiny fat
droplets
+
lipase
fatty acids and glycerol
Bile salts emulsify fats into tiny
fat droplets.
Summary
Small intestine
Carbohydrate digestion
Substrate
Enzyme
Product/
Substrate
Enzyme
Product
Starch
Pancreatic
amylase
Maltose
Maltase
Glucose
Small intestine
Fat digestion
• Bile emulsifies fats and breaks them up into minute
fat globules
• Enlarges surface area of fats
• Speed up digestion
• End products are fatty acids and glycerol
Substrate
Fats
Enzyme
Product
Lipase
Fatty acids and
Glycerol
Small intestine
Protein digestion
• Some digested in the stomach
• Undigested proteins enter small intestine
• Converted to polypeptides by protease (trypsin)
Substrate
Enzyme
Product/
Substrate
Proteins
Protease
(Trypsin)
Polypeptides
Enzyme
Product
Protease
(Erepsin)
Amino
acids
Small intestine
Region of Secretion
digestion
Source
Enzyme
Action
Small
intestine
Bile
Liver
-
Emulsifies fat
Pancreatic
juice
Pancreas
Amylase
Protease
(Trypsin)
Lipase
Starch maltose
Proteins polypeptides
Fats fatty acids and glycerol
Intestinal
juice
Intestinal
glands
Maltase
Protease
(Erepsin)
Lipase
Maltose glucose
Polypeptides amino acids
Fats fatty acids and glycerol
Muddiest Point
• Any Question?