Lecture 4- Digestive tract and the small intestine Flashcards

1
Q

What is the primary role of the digestive system?

A

• Primary role: transfer of nutrients, water and electrolytes from the food into the body • The act of eating does not make nutrients available to the body, they need to be digested or biochemically broken down • ~95% of ingested food is made available to the body

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2
Q

What does the digestive tract look like?

A

-

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3
Q

What are the 4 basic digestive processes?

A
  1. Motility • Muscular contractions that mix and move forward the contents of the digestive tract 2. Secretion • A number of secretions are produced by the lumen of exocrine glands • Water, electrolytes, enzymes, bile salts, mucus etc. 3. Digestion • Biochemical breakdown into smaller absorbable units • Carbohydrates, proteins or fats 4. Absorption • Completed in the small intestine • Transfer of units into the blood or lymph
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4
Q

What happens in the mouth?

A

•Entry to digestive system is via the mouth •Palate •Tongue & taste buds •Teeth •Secretion of saliva •Amylase •Mucus •Lysozyme •Carbohydrate digestion begins •No absorption of foodstuffs •Some medications can be absorbed

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5
Q

What is chewing/mastication?

A

• Slicing/tearing/grinding/mixing of food • Tooth enamel cannot be regenerated (cavities!) • Malocclusion • Grind and break food to facilitate swallowing, mix with saliva and stimulate the taste buds • Molars can exert 200 pounds of force • More than necessary • Mix food with saliva and aid in swallowing • Taste – important! • Pleasure • Stimulates secretions of saliva, gastric and pancreatic secretions

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6
Q

What does saliva do?

A

• Produced by salivary glands in the mouth • 99.5% water & 0.5% electrolytes and proteins • Low salt concentration (important for taste of salt) • No glucose present (important for sweet tastes) • Begins digestion of carbohydrates • Amylase • Polysaccharides (carbs) → maltose • Provides moisture and some antibacterial properties (lysosome) • Aids speech • Cleaning of mouth and teeth • Bicarbonate buffers • NOT ESSENTIAL FOR DIGESTION

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7
Q

What is the salivary secretion like in humans?

A

• Continuous • 1-2 L / day • Can be increased by reflexes • Unconditioned • Chemoreceptors / pressure receptors • Conditioned / acquired • No oral stimulation • Smell, sight, memory – anticipation.

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8
Q

What happens in the esophagus?

A

• Swallowing • Pressure receptors in pharynx stimulate the brain to begin swallowing • Swallowing begins voluntarily but cannot be stopped once initiated • Upper (pharyngoesophageal) sphincter maintains pressure gradients • Prevent excess air → stomach • Peristaltic waves • Ringlike contractions forcing food to stomach • Lower (gastroesophageal) sphincter • Remains closed except during swallowing • Prevents reflux of acidic gastric contents

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9
Q

What happens in the stomach?

A

• J shaped • Stores food prior to digestion/absorption in SI • The entire digestive process takes hours • Secretes HCl & enzymes • Protein digestion begins • Mixes & pulverises food into chyme • Divided into 3 sections • Fundus–above esophagea lopening • Body–middle/main section • Antrum – heavy musculature, peristaltic contractions • Absorbs alcohol and aspirin, but not food or water

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10
Q

How does gastric emptying work?

A

• Gastric emptying controlled by factors in stomach & duodenum • Volume of chime • Empty stomach has a volume of ~50mL, can increase to 1000 mL during a meal • Distension of stomach triggers gastric motility • Gastrin • Duodenum must be ready – neural and hormonal responses • Influencedbyfats,acids,hypertonicityanddistention • Hormone secretions • Cholecystokinin (CCK) – also causes contraction of the gallbladder to secrete bile • Secretin – main target is the pancreas to secrete bicarbonate • Emotions & stress

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11
Q

What are the gastric secretions?

A

1.• Hydrochloricacid • conversion of pepsinogen to pepsin by HCl • bacteriostatic effect 2.• Pepsin • protein digestion • replaceable by pancreatic enzymes 3.• Mucus • protective coating (inhibits pepsin, neutralizes HCl), lubricant • part of gastric mucosal barrier 4.• Intrinsic factor • binds B12 vitamin, absorption in the ileum • the only indispensable substance in gastric juice • Deficiency leads to pernicious anemia

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12
Q

What is the importance of the pancreas?

A

-The pancreas secretes enzymes responsible for, approximately, 50% of carbohydrate digestion 50% of protein digestion 90% of lipid digestion The pancreas also secretes bicarbonate to assist in the neutralisation of chyme in duodenum (change from gastric outflow (pH 2.2) to mild alkaline conditions (pH 7.5)

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13
Q

What is the function of the pancreas?

A

• Pancreatic duct penetrates duodenal wall • Endocrine functions • Insulin and glucagons • Exocrine functions • Majority of pancreatic secretions • Pancreatic juice secreted into small intestine • Carbohydrases • Lipases • Nucleases • Proteolytic enzymes

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14
Q

What are the pancreatic and bile secretions?

A

• Exocrine & endocrine pancreas • Exocrine secretion regulated by CCK • Secretin regulates pancreatic duct cells • Liver produces bile • Biliary system = liver, gallbladder & ducts • Pancreas secretes enzymes, amylase and lipase • 1-2 L per day

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15
Q

What is the gall bladder and what is it for?

A

• Bile is continuously secreted by the liver and stored in the gall bladder between meals • Diverted UP from the doudenum when the sphincter of Oddi is closed • 250 – 1000 mL bile secreted per day • Bile = aqueous alkaline fluid • + bile salts, cholesterol, lecithin & biliruben • Gallstones • Cholesterol, bile salt & lecithin secretion out of proportion

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16
Q

What are gallstones?

A

• Excess cholesterol precipitates into microcrystals • Aggregate into gallstones • Gall bladder removal (cholecysterectomy) • No site of bile storage • Changes to digestion • Fat digestion issues • Bile salts have detergent actions • Lipid emulsion – lipase needs to contact the triglycerides but they are not water soluble & form large droplets • Fat digestion is prolonged when bile is not present • Micellar formation • Dissolve water insoluble (lipid soluble) substances

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17
Q

What is the liver and what is it for?

A

• Largest metabolic organ • ‘biochemical factory’ • Metabolic processing of nutrients post-absorption • Detoxification • Synthesis of plasma proteins • Storage of glycogen, fats, iron, copper and vitamins • Activation of Vitamin D • in conjunction with kidneys • Removal of bacteria and RBC • Excretion of cholesterol and bilirubin

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18
Q

What is the hepatic portal system in the liver like?

A

• Hepatic portal systems • Connects digestive system and liver • Veins from stomach and intestines enter the hepatic portal vein to allow processing, detoxification and storage • Organised into lobules • Each with 3 vessels: hepatic artery, portal vein and bile duct • Kupffer cells destroy old RBC and bacteria from blood • Hepatocytes secrete bile continuously into channels (carried to bile ducts then stored in gallbladder between meals)

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19
Q

What are the enzymes in the digestive tract suited for?

A

-The array of enzymes in the digestive tract are suited for nutrient processing in different sections of the gut.

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20
Q

What are the enzymes used to utilise carbohydrate?

A

amylase, maltase, lactase, sucrase

21
Q

What are the details about amylase?

A

-food source which it acts on: starch, glycogen, dextrin -origin: saliva and pancreas -product: maltose and glucose

22
Q

What are the details about maltase?

A

-food source which it acts on: maltose -origin: small intestine -product: glucose

23
Q

What are the details about lactase?

A

-food source which it acts on: lactose -origin: small intestine -product: glucose and galactose

24
Q

What are the details about sucrase?

A

-food source which it acts on: sucrose -origin: small intestine -product: glucose and fructose

25
Q

What are the enzymes used to utilse proteins?

A

-rennin, pepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase and aminopeptidase

26
Q

What is the enzyme acting on milk proteins?

A

-rennin -origin: gastric mucosa -product: curd

27
Q

What is the enzyme acting on proteins?

A

-pepsin -origin: gastric mucosa -product: polypeptides

28
Q

What are the enzymes acting on polypeptides?

A

-trypsin and chymotrypsin -origin: pancreas -product: peptides

29
Q

What are the enzymes acting on peptides?

A

-carboxypeptidase and aminopeptidase -origin: pancreas and small intestine respectively -product: peptides and amino acids

30
Q

What are the enzymes used to utilise lipids?

A
  • lipase and colipase
  • origin: pancreas
  • product: monoglycerides and free fatty acids
31
Q

What are the plicae?

A

-small intestine -transverse folds of the intestinal lining

32
Q

What are the villi?

A
  • small intestine
  • fingerlike projections of the mucosa
33
Q

What are the lacteals?

A

-small intestine -terminal lymphatic ducts in villus

34
Q

What are the intestinal glands?

A

-small intestine -enteroendocrine, goble and stem cells

35
Q

What is the functionality of the small intestine?

A

• Principal site of absorption of amino acids, vitamins, minerals and lipids • Glucose and other sugars in non ruminants • Generally, most absorption occurs in the proximal (upper) part of the small intestine but can occur in all segments • duodenum,jejunumandileum • Ileocecalsphincter • Transition between small and large intestine • Digestion and absorption within small intestine is rapid • within 30 minutes of entering the site of absorption -well coordinated with the stomach

36
Q

What are the conditions in the intestinal lumen?

A

• Maintain fluid balance (secretion vs. uptake) • Maintenance of physicochemical characteristics of chyme • Buffering (bicarbonate and bile) • Maintain digestible organic matter in solution • Brunner’s glands – production of mucus, buffers and urogastrone (duodenum) • Peyers patches – lymphatic secretions (ileum) (skipped this)

37
Q

What is the intestinal motility like?

A

• Peristalsis (muscular contractions in annular and longitudinal) • Segmentation (differential flow within different sections of the tract) • Gastroenteric reflexes • Initiated by stretch receptors in stomach • Gastroileal reflex • Triggers relaxation of ileocecal valve

38
Q

What is the brush border and what happens there?

A

-the absorption in the small intestine takes place there

39
Q

How does nutrient absorption occur in the small intestine?

A
  • Variety of mechanisms
  • Diffusion
  • Facilitated diffusion
  • Active transport
  • Pinocytosis or endocytosis

Dependent upon

  • Solubility of the nutrient (not necessarily related to water solubility)
  • Concentration or electrical gradient
  • Size of the molecule to be absorbed
40
Q

How does diffusion work?

A

• Water and small lipid molecules pass freely through membrane • Move down concentration gradient to equalise concentrations

41
Q

How does facilitated diffusion work?

A

• 1. Carrier loads particle on outside of cell • 2. Carrier releases particle on inside of cell • 3. Reverse • Allows equalization across membrane

42
Q

How does active transport work?

A

• 1. Carrier loads molecule on outside of cell • 2. Carrier releases molecule on inside of cell • 3. Carrier returns to outside to pick up another molecule • Unidirectional movement against a concentration gradient driven by an Na+/K+ ATPase • The Mitchell pump

43
Q

How does pinocytosis or endocytosis work?

A

• Particle/substrate contacts cell membrane • Membrane wraps around or engulfs particle/substrate • Sac formed separates from the membrane and moves into cell

44
Q

How are carbohydrates absorbed?

A

• Active transport for glucose and galactose • Sodium-glucose transporter 1 (SGLT1) • Dependent on Na+/K+ ATPase pump • Facilitated (passive) transport for fructose

45
Q

How are amino acids absorbed?

A

• Multiple energy-dependent transport systems with overlapping specificity for amino acids are present in small intestine • Na+-dependent and Na+-independent active transport systems exist within the gut.

46
Q

How are lipids absorbed?

A

• Fatty acids, 2-monoglycerides, cholesterol, and cholesterol esters move down concentration gradients into the cell system – a passive process • Important issue of molecule solubility within the lipid bi-layer membrane • Repackaged in intestinal cell into chylomicrons • Enzymes (lipases) also require the lipid to be emulsified – action of bile salts • Emulsify fats to micelles (tiny fat droplets) • Na+, K+ salts of bile acids • synthesized from cholesterol • Principal ones are chenodeoxycholic acid and cholic acid • Secreted by liver through bile duct • Activates pancreatic lipase and colipase

47
Q

How is digestion controlled in the small intestine?

A

-Digestion is regulated by hormones and the autonomic nervous system

Duodenal hormones:

1) secretin – stimulates pancreas & liver to secrete alkaline fluids

2) cholecystokinin – triggers release of enzymes from pancreas and gall bladder (amylase, lipase, deoxyribonuclease, proteases)

48
Q

What is the flow of digesta into the gut like?

A

• The hind gut or large intestine will be considered in the next lecture. • This is a major site of absorption, fluid regulation and clearance of waste products (indigestible feed components and toxins loaded into the gut) from the digestive tract.