Food enters the body through the mouth, or %%buccal cavity%%. %%Physical and chemical digestion%% takes place in the mouth. In the mouth:
(a) %%Teeth%% start to break the food into smaller pieces. This makes food easier to swallow and also increases the %%surface area to volume ratio%% of the food for the %%digestive enzymes%% to work on more efficiently.
(b)%%Salivary glands%% secrete %%saliva%% which moistens the food and makes it easier to swallow. Saliva also contains salivary amylase, an enzyme which breaks down %%starch%% into %%maltose%%. The %%optimum pH%% of %%salivary amylase%% is 7.
(c) The tongue rolls the food into a %%bolus%%, which is then swallowed.
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The %%small intestine%% is divided into three parts: the %%duodenum%%, %%jejunum%% and %%ileum%%.
Food is moved through the small intestine by peristalsis.
In the duodenum, chyme from the stomach mixes with digestive juices from the %%pancreas, liver, gall bladder and intestinal glands.%%
The pancreas produces %%pancreatic juice%%, which is an %%alkaline solution%% containing %%trypsinogen%%, %%pancreatic amylase%% and %%pancreatic lipase%%. Pancreatic juice enters the duodenum through the %%pancreatic duct%%.
%%Intestinal juice contains%% %%intestinal lipase, enterokinase, erepsin, maltase, lactase, sucrase and several other enzymes.%%
All enzymes in the small intestine have an optimum pH under alkaline conditions.
%%Bile%%, an alkaline greenish-yellow fluid, is %%produced by the liver%% and %%stored in the gall bladder%%. It passes into the small intestine through the bile duct. Bile breaks up large fat droplets into smaller fat droplets in a process called %%emulsification%%. This increases the %%surface area to volume ratio%% of the fats for %%lipases%% on work on and speeds up fat digestion.
Action of enzymes involved in %%carbohydrate digestion%% in the small intestine:
Action of enzymes involved in %%fat digestion%% in the small intestine:
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Action of enzymes involved in %%protein digestion%% in the small intestine:
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Note: %%Enterokinase%% converts the inactive form of %%trypsin%%, %%trypsinogen%%, into %%trypsin.%%
Food is completely digested in the small intestine. The jejunum and ileum function mainly to absorb nutrients and water.
Nutrients have to be absorbed into the body from the lumen of the small intestine. The small intestine is adapted for this role by having:
(a) An inner wall with large circular folds
(b) %%Finger-like projections%% on the inner wall called %%villi%%
(c) Each %%epithelial cell%% on the villi has smaller projections called %%microvilli%%.
These adaptations increase the surface area of the small intestine, resulting in a larger surface for %%absorption%%.
The villi have thin walls (one-cell thick) so that food molecules diffuse over a shorter distance.
Within each villus is a network of capillaries and a small vessel called a %%lacteal%%.
Nutrients are absorbed across the wall of the small intestine and into the capillaries or lacteal. The lacteal transports fats away from the small intestine while the capillaries transport sugars and amino acids.
The transport of food away from the small intestine sets up a concentration gradient for diffusion.
Glucose and amino acids are absorbed by diffusion or active transport depending on the concentration gradient.
Fatty acids and glycerol are absorbed by the epithelial cells of the villi and recombined within those cells to form fats, which are transported into a lacteal.
%%Water%% is absorbed by %%passive diffusion%% throughout the length of the small intestine and mineral salts are absorbed in the ileum.
The food eventually leaves the small intestine and enters the large intestine.
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