1 / 14

Topic 6: Human health & physiology

Topic 6: Human health & physiology. 6.1 Digestion. On your human body outline, sketch in and name the organs of the digestive system. 6.1.1 Explain why digestion of large food molecules is essential. Large food molecules need to be digested before the nutrients can be absorbed .

waylon
Download Presentation

Topic 6: Human health & physiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Topic 6: Human health & physiology 6.1 Digestion

  2. On your human body outline, sketch in and name the organs of the digestive system.

  3. 6.1.1 Explain why digestion of large food molecules is essential Large food molecules need to be digested before the nutrients can be absorbed. • Large molecules are: • usually insoluble • too large to diffuse across membranes and into the blood • Products of digestion are: • usually soluble • small enough for absorption into the bloodstream and assimilation into the tissues * Remember! Hydrolysis is the reaction used to break down large organic molecules. Enzymes are needed in these reactions.

  4. Revision of how enzymes work

  5. 6.1.2 Explain the need for enzymes in digestion

  6. 6.1.3 State the source, substrate, products and optimum pH conditions for one amylase, one protease and one lipase Question: Where would an enzyme with an optimum pH of 2 be found?

  7. 6.1.4 Draw and label a diagram of the digestive system mouth & salivary glands oesophagus liver stomach pancreas gall bladder small intestine duodenum large intestine ileum rectum anus nb This is NOT to scale

  8. 6.1.5 Outline the function of the stomach, small intestine and large intestine • Stomach • muscular contractions continue mechanical digestion. • acid kills bacteria. • pepsin begins digestion of proteins. • Duodenum (small intestine) • bile from the liver and gall bladder neutralises acid and emulsifies fats. • pancreatic amylase and lipase digest carbohydrates and fats. • trypsin digests polypeptides to amino acids. • Ileum (small intestine) • lower half of small intestine. • absorbs nutrients into the blood via the villi. • Large intestine • water is reclaimed and returned to the blood, leaving semi-solid faeces which are stored in the rectum.

  9. Mouth • ingestion • chewing begins mechanical digestion. • saliva moistens food to make a bolus for swallowing. • salivary amylase begins chemical digestion of starch. • Egestion • faeces (containing undigested food, dead cells and other wastes) is moved out of the anus.

  10. The stomach

  11. The small intestine

  12. The large intestine

  13. 6.1.6 Distinguish between absorption and assimilation

  14. 6.1.7 Explain how the structure of the villus is related to its role • The villi (singular is villus) are finger-like projections in the small intestine which absorb the products of digestion. • The large number of these villi creates a huge surface area for the absorption of digested food molecules. • Epithelial (surface) cells have microvilli – tiny finger-like hairs to increase the surface area even more (only label these on a diagram if you can see them). • Each villus has a thin epithelium, only one cell thick, to make diffusion fast and more efficient. • A rich blood supply maintains a concentration gradient down which nutrients can diffuse across the membranes. • Lymph vessels (lacteals) close to the surface allow lipids to be easily absorbed.

More Related