Title: Chapter 24: The Digestive System
1Chapter 24 The Digestive System
2Organisms
- Need to acquire nutrients from environment
- Metabolism
- Anabolism
- Uses raw materials to synthesize essential
compounds (ex cell membrane lipids) - Catabolism
- Decomposes organic molecules to provide energy
(ATP) that cells need to function - Usually requires oxygen
3Components of the Digestive System
Figure 241
4Digestive Tract
- Gastrointestinal (GI) tract or alimentary canal
- Is a muscular tube
- Extends from oral cavity to anus
56 Functions of the Digestive System
- Ingestion
- occurs when materials enter digestive tract via
the mouth - Mechanical processing
- crushing and shearing
- makes materials easier to propel along digestive
tract
66 Functions of the Digestive System
- Digestion
- is the chemical breakdown of food into small
organic fragments for absorption by digestive
epithelium - Secretion
- is the release of water, acids, enzymes, buffers,
and salts - by epithelium of digestive tract
- by glandular organs
76 Functions of the Digestive System
- Absorption
- movement of organic substrates, electrolytes,
vitamins, and water across digestive epithelium
into interstitial fluid of digestive tract - Excretion
- removal of waste products from body fluids
8Smooth Muscle
- Along digestive tract
- has rhythmic cycles of activity
- controlled by pacesetter cells
- Cells undergo spontaneous depolarization
- triggering wave of contraction through entire
muscular sheet
9Peristalsis
Figure 244
10Peristalsis
- Consists of waves of muscular contractions
- Circular and longitudinal
- Moves a bolus along the length of the digestive
tract
11Peristaltic Motion
- Circular muscles contract behind bolus
- while circular muscles ahead of bolus relax
- Longitudinal muscles ahead of bolus contract
- shortening adjacent segments
- Wave of contraction in circular muscles
- forces bolus forward
12Segmentation
- Cycles of contraction
- Churn and fragment bolus
- mix contents with intestinal secretions
- Does not follow a set pattern
- does not push materials in any 1 direction
13The Regulation of Digestive Activities
Figure 245
14Neural Mechanisms
- Control
- movement of materials along digestive tract
- secretory functions
- Motor neurons
- control smooth muscle contraction and glandular
secretion - located in myenteric plexus
15Digestive Hormones
- At least 18 hormones that affect most aspects of
digestive function - Are produced by enteroendocrine cells in
digestive tract - Reach target organs after distribution in
bloodstream
16The Oral Cavity
Figure 246
174 Functions of the Oral Cavity
- Sensory analysis
- of material before swallowing
- Mechanical processing
- through actions of teeth, tongue, and palatal
surfaces - Lubrication
- mixing with mucus and salivary gland secretions
- Limited (chemical) digestion
- of carbohydrates and lipids
18The Epithelial Lining
- Of cheeks, lips, and inferior surface of tongue
is nonkeratinized, and delicate - Mucosa under tongue and inside cheeks is thin and
vascular enough to rapidly absorb lipid-soluble
drugs
19Lingual Papillae
- Fine projections on superior surface (dorsum) of
tongue - Covered in thick epithelium
- Assists in moving materials
20Lingual Glands
- Small glands extend into underlying lamina
propria - Secretions flush tongues epithelium
- Contain water, mucins, and enzyme lingual lipase
21Salivary Glands
- 3 pairs secrete products into oral cavity
- Each pair has distinctive cellular organization
and produces saliva with different properties - Produce 1.01.5 liters of saliva each day
22Saliva
- 99.4 water
- 0.6 includes
- electrolytes (Na, Cl, and HCO3)
- buffers
- glycoproteins (mucins)
- antibodies
- Enzymes (salivary amylase)
- waste products
23Control of Salivary Secretions
- By autonomic nervous system
- parasympathetic and sympathetic innervation
- _______________ stimulation accelerates secretion
by all salivary glands
24The Swallowing Process
Figure 2411
25Swallowing
- Also called deglutition (2,400 X a day)
- Can be initiated voluntarily
- Proceeds automatically
- Is divided in 3 phases
- buccal phase
- pharyngeal phase
- esophageal phase
26Primary Peristaltic Waves
- Movements coordinated by afferent and efferent
fibers in glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves - Controlled by swallowing center of medulla
oblongata
27The Stomach Lining
Figure 2413
284 Functions of the Stomach
- Storage of ingested food
- Mechanical breakdown of ingested food
- (Preliminary) Disruption of chemical bonds in
food material - by acids and enzymes
- Production of intrinsic factor
- glycoprotein required for absorption of vitamin
B12 in small intestine
29Gastric Pits
- Are shallow depressions that open onto the
gastric surface - Mucous cells
- at base, or neck, of each gastric pit
- actively divide, replacing superficial cells
30Gastric Glands
- In fundus and body of stomach
- extend deep into underlying lamina propria
- Each gastric pit leads to several gastric glands
- 2 main types of cells found in gastric glands
- parietal cells
- chief cells
31Parietal and Chief Cells
- Parietal cells
- Secrete hydrochloric acid (HCl)
- Chief cells
- Are most abundant near base of gastric gland
(secrete pepsinogen) - Pepsinogen is converted by HCl in the gastric
lumen to pepsin
32Enteroendocrine Cells ofPyloric Glands
- Are scattered among mucus-secreting cells of
pylorus - G cells
- Produce gastrin (hormone that stimulates both the
Chief and Parietal cells) - D cells
- Release somatostatin (hormone that inhibits
release of gastrin)
33The Phases of Gastric Secretion
Figure 2415
34The Cephalic Phase
- Begins when you see, smell, taste, or think of
food - directed by CNS
- prepares stomach to receive food
35The Gastric Phase
- Begins with arrival of food in stomach
- builds on stimulation from cephalic phase
- lasts 3-4 hours
36The Intestinal Phase
- Begins when chyme first enters small intestine
- After several hours of mixing contractions
- when waves of contraction sweep down length of
stomach
37Digestion in the Stomach
- Stomach performs preliminary digestion of
proteins by pepsin - some digestion of carbohydrates (by salivary
amylase) - lipids (by lingual lipase)
- Chyme
- become more fluid
- pH approaches 2.0
- pepsin activity increases (proteins)
38Absorption in the Stomach
- Although some digestion occurs in the stomach,
nutrients are not absorbed there - Only small lipid-soluble particles can cross
stomach lining - Alcohol
- Drugs (aspirin)
39The Small Intestine
- Plays key role in digestion and absorption of
nutrients - 90 of nutrient absorption (lipids, proteins,
carbohydrates) occurs in the small intestine
40The Intestinal Wall
Figure 2417
41The Duodenum
- The segment of small intestine closest to stomach
- 25 cm (10 in.) long
- Mixing bowl that receives
- chyme from stomach
- digestive secretions from pancreas and liver
42The Jejunum
- Is the middle segment of small intestine
- 2.5 meters (8.2 ft) long
- Is the location of most
- chemical digestion
- nutrient absorption
43The Ileum
- The final segment of small intestine
- 3.5 meters (11.48 ft) long
44Brush Border Enzymes
- Integral membrane proteins
- On surfaces of intestinal microvilli
- Break down materials in contact with brush border
- Ex Enterokinase
- A brush border enzyme
- Activates pancreatic proenzyme Trypsinogen
45Enteroendocrine Cells
- In intestinal glands
- Produce intestinal hormones
- Gastrin
- Cholecystokinin (CCK)
- Secretin
46Functions of the Duodenum
- Has few plicae and Small villi
- receives chyme from stomach
- neutralizes acids before they can damage the
absorptive surfaces of the small intestine
47Intestinal Secretions
- Watery intestinal juice
- 1.8 liters per day enter intestinal lumen
- Moistens chyme
- Assists in buffering acids
- Keeps digestive enzymes and products of digestion
in solution
48Intestinal Movements
- Chyme arrives in duodenum
- Weak peristaltic contractions move it slowly
toward jejunum - Segmentation will periodically mix everything up
49The Gastric Reflexes
- The Gastroenteric Reflex
- Stimulates motility and secretion along entire
small intestines - The Gastroileal Reflex
- Triggers relaxation of ileocecal valve
- Allows materials to pass from small intestine
into large intestines
50Functions of the Pancreas
- Endocrine cells
- of pancreatic islets
- secrete insulin and glucagon into bloodstream
- Exocrine cells
- acinar cells
- Produce pancreatic juice (alkaline mixture of
digestive enzymes, water, ions)
51Pancreatic Secretions
- 1000 ml (1 L) pancreatic juice per day
- Controlled by hormones from duodenum
- Contain pancreatic enzymes
52Pancreatic Enzymes
- Pancreatic alpha-amylase
- a carbohydrase
- breaks down starches
- similar to salivary amylase
- Pancreatic lipase
- breaks down complex lipids
- releases products (e.g., fatty acids) that are
easily absorbed
53Pancreatic Enzymes
- Nucleases
- break down nucleic acids
- Proteolytic enzymes
- break certain proteins apart
- proteases break large protein complexes
- peptidases break small peptides into amino acids
54Trypsin
- An active protease
- Enterokinase in duodenum
- converts trypsinogen to trypsin
55Hepatic Blood Supply
- 1/3 of blood supply
- arterial blood from __________________
- 2/3 venous blood from _________________,
originating at - esophagus
- stomach
- small intestine
- most of large intestine
56Liver Histology
Figure 2420
57Liver Lobules
- The basic functional units of the liver
- Each lobe is divided
- by connective tissue
- into about 100,000 liver lobules
- about 1 mm diameter each
58Hepatocytes
- liver cells
- Adjust circulating levels of nutrients
- through selective absorption and secretion
- form a series of irregular plates arranged like
wheel spokes - Many Kupffer Cells (immune system macrophages)
are located in sinusoidal lining
59A Portal Area
- Contains 3 structures
- branch of hepatic portal vein
- branch of hepatic artery proper
- small branch of bile duct
60Hepatocyte Function
- As blood flows through sinusoids
- hepatocytes absorb solutes from plasma
- and secrete materials such as plasma proteins
61Pressures in Hepatic Portal System
- Are usually low (average 10 mm Hg or less)
- Can increase markedly
- if blood flow is restricted by blood clot or
damage - Portal hypertension
- an abnormal rise in portal pressure
- can be a symptom of liver cirrhosis
- can cause esophageal varices
62Liver functions
- Metabolic regulation
- Hematological regulation
- Bile production
631. Metabolic Regulation
- Removal and storage of carbohydrates, lipids,
amino acids - Mobilizing or synthesizing energy reserves
- Vitamin and mineral storage
- detoxification
642. Hematological Regulation
- Phagocytosis and antigen presentation
- Synthesis of plasma proteins
- Removal of circulating hormones
- Removal of antibodies
- Removal of RBC
653. Bile production
- Synthesis and secretion of bile
- Dietary lipids are not water soluble
- Mechanical processing in stomach creates drops
containing lipids - Pancreatic lipase is not lipid soluble
- interacts only at surface of lipid droplet
- Bile needed for emulsification
- Helps pancreatic lipase do its job
66The Gallbladder and Bile Ducts
Figure 2421
67The Gallbladder
- Is a pear-shaped, muscular sac
- Stores and concentrates bile prior to excretion
into small intestine - Releases bile into duodenum
- only under stimulation of hormone cholecystokinin
(CCK)
68Gallstones
- Are crystals of insoluble minerals and salts
- Form if bile is too concentrated
- Small stones may be flushed through bile duct and
excreted
69Activities of Major Digestive Tract Hormones
Figure 2422
70Hormones of Enteroendocrine Cells
- Coordinate digestive functions
- Secretin
- cholecystokinin (CCK)
- gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)
- vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)
- gastrin
- enterocrinin
71Secretin
- Is released when chyme arrives in duodenum
- Increases secretion of bile, buffers and enzymes
by pancreas and liver
72Cholecystokinin (CCK)
- Is secreted by the duodenum
- when chyme contains lipids and partially digested
proteins - Relaxes hepatopancreatic sphincter and
gallbladder - ejects bile and pancreatic juice into duodenum
73Gastric Inhibitory Peptide (GIP)
- Is secreted when fats and carbohydrates enter
small intestine - Causes pancreas to release insulin
- Inhibits Gastrin
74Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide (VIP)
- Dilates capillaries of the villi
75Gastrin
- Is secreted by G cells in duodenum
- when exposed to incompletely digested proteins
- Promotes increased stomach motility
- Stimulates acids and enzyme production in the
stomach
76Enterocrinin
- Is released when chyme enters small intestine
- Stimulates mucin production by submucosal glands
of duodenum
77Intestinal Absorption
- It takes about 5 hours for materials to pass
- from duodenum to end of ileum
- Movements of the mucosa increases absorptive
effectiveness - stir and mix intestinal contents
- constantly change environment around epithelial
cells
78Splenic vein
Aorta
Hepatic portal vein
Superior mesenteric artery
Superior mesenteric vein
Inferior mesenteric vein
Right colic (hepatic) flexure
Inferior vena cava
Left colic (splenic) flexure
Greater omentum (cut)
TRANSVERSE COLON
DESCENDING COLON
Left colic vein
Middle colic artery and vein
Inferior mesenteric artery
Right colic artery and vein
Left colic artery
ASCENDING COLON
Haustra
Fatty appendices
Intestinal arteries and veins
Rectal artery
Ileocecal valve
Ileum
Sigmoid arteries and veins
Cecum
Taenia coli
Appendix
Sigmoid flexure
SIGMOID COLON
Rectum
Rectum
Ileocecal valve
Anal canal
Cecum (cut open)
Anal columns
Internal anal sphincter
External anal sphincter
Appendix
Anus
Cecum and appendix
Rectum, sectioned
79Functions of the Large Intestine
- Reabsorption of water
- Compaction of intestinal contents into feces
- Absorption of important vitamins released by
bacteria - Storage of fecal material prior to defecation
80The Large Intestine
- Also called large bowel
- Is about 1.5 meters (4.9 ft) long and 7.5 cm (3
in) wide - Three regions
- Cecum
- Colon
- Rectum
81The Rectum
- Forms last 15 cm of digestive tract
- Is an expandable organ for temporary storage of
feces - Movement of fecal material into rectum triggers
urge to defecate
82Anal Sphincters
- Internal anal sphincter
- circular muscle layer of muscularis externa
- has smooth muscle cells, not under voluntary
control - External anal sphincter
- encircles distal portion of anal canal
- a ring of skeletal muscle fibers, is under
voluntary control
83Characteristics of the Colon
- Lack villi
- Presence of distinctive intestinal glands
- Are deeper than glands of small intestine
- Are dominated by goblet cells
- Provides lubrication for fecal material
- Does not produce enzymes
84Physiology of the Large Intestine
- Less than 10 of nutrient absorption occurs in
large intestine - Prepares fecal material for ejection from the
body
85Absorption in the Large Intestine
- Reabsorption of water
- Reabsorption of bile salts
- in the cecum
- transported in blood to liver
- Absorption of vitamins released by bacteria
86Vitamins
- Are organic molecules
- Important as cofactors or coenzymes in metabolism
- Normal bacteria in colon make 3 vitamins that
supplement diet - Vitamin K, Biotin, Pantothenic acid
87Organic Wastes
- Bacteria convert bilirubin to urobilinogens and
stercobilinogens - Bacteria break down peptides in feces and
generate - ammonia
- hydrogen sulfide
- Action on indigestible carbohydrates produce
flatus, or intestinal gas
88Movements of the Large Intestine (1 of 3)
- Gastroileal and gastroenteric reflexes
- move materials into cecum while you eat
- Peristaltic waves move material from cecum to
transverse colon - very slow allowing hours for water absorption
89Movements of the Large Intestine (2 of 3)
- Segmentation movements (haustral churning) mix
contents of adjacent haustra - Movement from transverse colon through rest of
large intestine results from powerful peristaltic
contractions (mass movements)
90Movements of the Large Intestine (3 of 3)
- Stimulus is distension of stomach and duodenum
relayed over intestinal nerve plexuses - Distension of the rectal wall triggers defecation
reflex - positive feedback loops triggered by stretch
receptors in rectum
91Essential Nutrients
- A typical meal contains
- Carbohydrates (complex carbohydrates)
- Proteins (polypeptides)
- Lipids (triglycerides)
- water
- Electrolytes (Na, K)
- Vitamins (A,B,C, D,E,K)
92Digestion and Absorption
- Digestive system handles each nutrient
differently - large organic molecules
- must be digested before absorption can occur
- water, electrolytes, and vitamins
- can be absorbed without processing
- may require special transport
93Digestive Enzymes
- secreted by salivary glands, tongue, stomach,
pancreas, (liver) - Break molecular bonds in large organic molecules
- carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic
acids - in a process called hydrolysis
94Salivary Amylase and Pancratic Alpha-Amylase
- From parotid and submandibular salivary glands
and pancreas - Breaks down starches (complex carbohydrates)
- Produces
- disaccharides (2 simple sugars)
- trisaccharides (3 simple sugars)
95Carbohydrates
- Fragment disaccharides and trisaccharides into
monosaccharides (simple sugars) - lactase splits lactose into glucose and galactose
96Absorption of Monosaccharides
- Intestinal epithelium absorbs monosaccharides
97Lipid Digestion
- Involves
- lingual lipase from glands of tongue
- pancreatic lipase from pancreas
- Bile salts improve chemical digestion by
emulsifying lipid drops into tiny droplets
98Triglycerides
- Are the most important and abundant dietary
lipids - Consist of 3 fatty acids attached to 1 molecule
glycerol
99Lipid Absorption
- Triglycerides and other absorbed molecules are
coated with proteins - creating chylomicrons
- Lacteals pick up chylomicrons and they later
enter left subclavian vein
100Protein Digestion (1 of 2)
- Is complex and time-consuming
- mechanical processing in oral cavity
(mastication) and chemical processing in stomach
acid (HCl) allows proteolytic enzymes to attack
proteins
101Protein Digestion (2 of 2)
- pepsin
- proteolytic enzyme
- works at pH 1.52.0
- breaks peptide bonds within polypeptide chain
- when chyme enters duodenum
- enterokinase from small intestine triggers
conversion of trypsinogen to trypsin - pH is adjusted to 78
- Other pancreatic proteases work through SI
102Digestive Secretion and Absorption
Figure 2427
103Water Absorption
- Cells cannot actively absorb or secrete water
- All movement of water across lining of digestive
tract - involves passive water flow down osmotic
gradients
104Vitamins
- Are organic compounds required in very small
quantities - Are divided in 2 major groups
- fat-soluble vitamins
- water-soluble vitamins
105Vitamin B12
- Cannot be absorbed by intestinal mucosa in normal
amounts - unless bound to intrinsic factor (glycoprotein
secreted by parietal cells of stomach)
1065 Effects of Aging on the Digestive System
- Division of epithelial stem cells declines
- digestive epithelium becomes more susceptible to
damage by abrasion, acids, or enzymes - Smooth muscle tone and general motility
decreases - peristaltic contractions become weaker
1075 Effects of Aging on the Digestive System
- Cumulative damage from toxins (alcohol, other
chemicals) to liver and pancreas - Rates of colon cancer and stomach cancer rise
- Decline in olfactory and gustatory sensitivities
- lead to dietary changes that affect entire body