The Human Digestive System
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Transcript The Human Digestive System
The Human
Digestive System
Mechanical & Chemical
Digestion
A Tour of the
Mammalian
Digestive System
The Oral Cavity
Presence of food triggers a nervous
reflex that causes salivary glands to
deliver saliva.
Even before food is actually in the mouth,
salivation may occur in anticipation
because of learned associations between
eating and the time of day, cooking,
odors, or other stimuli.
…continued
More than 1 L of saliva is secreted into
the oral cavity each day.
Saliva contains the following:
mucin: glycoprotein that lubricates food
buffers: prevents tooth decay
salivary amylase: digestive enzyme that
breaks down starch and glycogen into
smaller polysaccharides and disaccharides
The Pharynx
The swallowing reflex is triggered
when a bolus of food reaches the
pharynx
… continued
The esophageal sphincter (a muscle that
is usually contracted) relaxes, allowing
the esophagus to open and the bolus of
food to enter the esophagus.
The larynx moves upward and tips the
epiglottis over the glottis, preventing food
from entering the trachea.
After the food has entered the
esophagus, the larynx moves downward
and opens the breathing passage
The Esophagus
Conducts food from the pharynx down to
the stomach.
Peristalsis squeezes a bolus along the
narrow esophagus.
Salivary amylase continues to break
down starch and glycogen as the bolus
passes through the esophagus.
Peristalsis
Waves of muscular
contraction move
the bolus down the
esophagus to the
stomach.
The Stomach
Located on left side of the abdominal
cavity, just below the diaphragm.
This organ has very elastic walls and
accordion-like folds which allow it to
stretch to accommodate about 2 L of
food and fluid.
Anatomy of the Stomach
Secretion of Gastric
Juices
The epithelium that lines the lumen of the
stomach secretes gastric juices - a
digestive fluid that mixes with the food.
Contains a high concentration of
hydrochloric acid (HCl) - pH ~ 2
Function of acid is to help break down
meat and plant material aswell as to kill
most bacteria that are swallowed with the
food.
… continued
Gastric Juice also contains pepsin, an
enzyme that breaks down protein.
Pepsin works well in acidic environments.
The precursor to pepsin is pepsinogen.
HCl in gastric juice converts pepsinogen
to pepsin.
… continued
The mucosa that lines the stomach
consists of simple columnar epithelium
organized into gastric glands.
Gastric pits lead into the gastric glands
which have three types of secretory
cells.
Mucous Cells
Chief Cells
Parietal Cells
Control of Gastric
Secretion
Controlled by a combination of nervous
impulses and hormones.
When we see, smell, or taste food,
impulses from the brain to the stomach
initiate the secretion of gastric juices.
Substances in the food itself stimulate
the walls of the stomach to release a
hormone called gastrin.
… continued
The production of gastrin further
stimulates the secretion of gastric juices
(example of positive feedback).
If the pH of the stomach contents
becomes too low, the acid will inhibit the
release of gastrin thus decreasing the
secretion of gastric juices.
3 L of gastric juices are secreted every
day.
Chyme
Every 20 seconds, the stomach contents
are mixed by the churning action of the
smooth muscle.
As a result of mixing and enzyme action
is a nutrient broth called acid chyme.
Rate of Release from
Stomach
Much of the time, the stomach is closed
off at either end.
The cardiac orifice normally only dilates
when a bolus is driven through by
peristalsis.
The occasional backflow of acid chyme
from the stomach into the lower end of
the esophagus causes heartburn.
Anatomy Review
… continued
The pyloric sphincter helps regulate the
passage of the chyme into the small
intestine.
A squirt at a time, it takes about 2 - 6
hours for the stomach to empty its
contents following a meal.
The Small Intestine
Although some digestion takes place
in the mouth and stomach, most
enzymatic digestion of food occurs in
the small intestine.
Most absorption also takes place in the
S.I.
Name is based on diameter not length.
Approx. 6 metres in length in humans.
The Liver
Performs many important functions
including the production of bile.
Bile is a mixture of substances that is
stored in the gall bladder until needed.
Bile contains no digestive enzymes, but
does contain salts which aid in the
digestion of and absorption of lipids.
The Pancreas
Produces several digestive
enzymes.
Carbohydrases - break down
carbohydrates (eg. Pancreatic
amylase and maltase)
Proteases - break down proteins
(eg. Trypsin, Chymotrypsin, and
Carboxypeptidase)
… continued
Lipases - break down lipids (eg.
Pancreatic lipase)
Nucleases - break down nucleic acids
(into nucleotides which are then broken
down into bases, sugars and
phosphates.
Summary: Digestive
Juices
… Specifics
The Duodenum
First segment of small intestine.
Approx. 25 cm in length.
Receives digestive juices from the
pancreas, liver, gall bladder, and gland
cells of the intestinal wall itself.
Hormone Regulation
At least 4 regulatory hormones help ensure
that digestive secretions are present only
when needed.
Gastrin (already discussed)
Secretin (stimulates pancreas to release
buffer)
Cholecystokinin or CCK (stimulates
pancrease to release enzymes and gall
bladder to release bile)
Enterogastrone (inhibits peristalsis and
acid secretion of stomach)
Jejenum & Ileum
Remaining portions of small intestine.
Function mainly in the absorption of
nutrients.
Absorption
Large folds of epithelium line the small
intestine.
Villi project outward from the folds.
Each villus has a small lymphatic vessel
called a lacteal and a network of blood
capillaries surrounded by a layer of
epithelial cells
Microvilli extend into the intestinal
lumen to create a “brush border”.
Intestinal Wall
… continued
Nutrients are absorbed across the
epithelium and then across the unicellular
wall of the capillaries or lacteals.
In some cases the transport is passive
(down concentration gradient).
In some cases the transport is active
(ATP used).
… continued
Sugars and amino acids are carried away
from the intestine by the bloodstream.
After glycerol and fatty acids are absorbed by
epithelial cells, they are recombined to form
fat again.
The fats are then mixed with cholesterol and
coated with special proteins, forming
chylomicrons. (HDL or LDL).
Chylomicrons are then transported into
lacteals.
Fate of Macromolecules
The capillaries and veins that drain
nutrients away from the villi converge into
a single circulatory channel, the hepatic
portal vessel.
Liver has the ability to interconvert
various organic molecules.
Once the liver makes changes, blood
flows to the heart to be pumped around
the body.
Hepatic Portal System
Large Intestine
a.k.a. colon.
Major function is to reabsorb water.
About 7 L of fluid are secreted into the lumen
of the digestive tract each day.
Most water reabsorption occurs along with
nutrient absorption in the S.I.
The colon finishes the job by reclaiming most
of the water that remains in the lumen.
Together, the S.I. & colon reclaim 90%.