Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides are the three types of carbohydrates. Lipids and carbohydrates are both used for long-term and short-term energy storage in humans. Lipids are stored in adipose tissue and provide more energy per gram but can only be used aerobically, while glycogen is stored in the liver and muscles for short-term storage and can be used anaerobically or aerobically. The small intestine breaks down nutrients through peristalsis and the actions of enzymes from the pancreas and bile from the liver, absorbing the breakdown products into the bloodstream through villi and microvilli to increase absorption surface area.
Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides are the three types of carbohydrates. Lipids and carbohydrates are both used for long-term and short-term energy storage in humans. Lipids are stored in adipose tissue and provide more energy per gram but can only be used aerobically, while glycogen is stored in the liver and muscles for short-term storage and can be used anaerobically or aerobically. The small intestine breaks down nutrients through peristalsis and the actions of enzymes from the pancreas and bile from the liver, absorbing the breakdown products into the bloodstream through villi and microvilli to increase absorption surface area.
Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides are the three types of carbohydrates. Lipids and carbohydrates are both used for long-term and short-term energy storage in humans. Lipids are stored in adipose tissue and provide more energy per gram but can only be used aerobically, while glycogen is stored in the liver and muscles for short-term storage and can be used anaerobically or aerobically. The small intestine breaks down nutrients through peristalsis and the actions of enzymes from the pancreas and bile from the liver, absorbing the breakdown products into the bloodstream through villi and microvilli to increase absorption surface area.
Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides are the three types of carbohydrates. Lipids and carbohydrates are both used for long-term and short-term energy storage in humans. Lipids are stored in adipose tissue and provide more energy per gram but can only be used aerobically, while glycogen is stored in the liver and muscles for short-term storage and can be used anaerobically or aerobically. The small intestine breaks down nutrients through peristalsis and the actions of enzymes from the pancreas and bile from the liver, absorbing the breakdown products into the bloodstream through villi and microvilli to increase absorption surface area.
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Biology Chapter 6.1 Test Revision (+chapter 2.
3)
Monosaccharides are single sugar units
Disaccharides consist of 2 monosaccharides linked together. (e.g. maltose is made by linking 2 glucose molecules togethere.g.2 sucrose is made by linking a glucose and a fructose) Polysaccharides consist of many monosaccharides linked together (e.g. starch, glycogen and cellulose- all made by linking together glucose molecules
Lipids and carbohydrates are both used for energy
storage in humans Lipids usually used for long term energy storage Lipids that are used as fats are stored in specialised groups of cells called adipose tissue (located beneath the skin and also around some organs e.g. the kidneys)
Amount of energy released in cell respiration per gram
of lipids is double the amount released from a gram of carbohydrate Stored lipids have some secondary roles that could not be performed as well by carbohydrates Because lipids are poor conductors of heat- can be used as heat insulators Fat is liquid at room temperature- can also act as a shock absorber- reason for adipose tissue around the kidneys and some other organs Glycogen is the carbohydrate that is used for energy storage- in liver + some other muscles Glycogen is used for short term storage Because glycogen can be broken down to glucose rapidly and then transported easily by the blood to where it is needed. Glucose can be used in either anaerobic or aerobic respiration Whereas fats and fatty acids can only be used in aerobic respiration
Health risks of fats
Positive correlation between saturated fatty acids intake and rates of CHD (coronary heart disease) However, finding a correlation doesnt prove that saturated fats cause the disease Populations that dont fit the correlation
Kenya has a diet that is rich in meat, fat, blood &
milk Therefore high consumption in of saturated fats yet CHD is almost unknown among the Maasai High fats leads to obesity
Mouth
Chewing- saliva moistens food to
make a bolus for swallowing salivary amylase begins chemical digestion for starch
Salivary glands
Secrete saliva, includes amylase to
being digestion of starch
Oesophagus
A wave of muscle contractions
pushes the bolus into the stomach
Stomach
Muscular contractions continue
mechanical digestion- acid kills bacteria-pepsin begins digestion of protein
Liver
Secretion of surfactants in bile to
break up liquid droplets
Gall bladder Pancreas
Storage and regulated release of bile
Secretion (taking from outside to inside) of lipase, amylase and protease Bile from the liver and gall bladder neutralises acid and emulsifies fatspancreatic amylase and lipase digest carbohydrates and fats- trypsin digests polypeptides to amino acids
Small intestine (duodenum)
Small intestine (ileum)
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 faecesstored in rectum
Rectum Anus
Stores faeces temporarily
Faeces- containing undigested food, dead cells + other waste- is forced out of anus
Need for digestion of large food molecules- to break down
the diverse mixture of large carbon compounds in food to yield ions and smaller compounds that can be absorbed Need for enzymes in digestion- digestion requires surfactants to break up lipid droplets and enzymes to catalyse reactions
The contraction of circular and longitudinal muscle of
the small intestine mixes the food with enzymes and moves it along the gut Food is moved by peristalsis (wave of contractions moving food along the digestive system, especially the intestine) Smooth- not striated muscle-short cells. It exerts force most of the time-moderate force mostly-occasionally high level of force when required to move food-it is divided into longitudinal and circular muscles. In small intestine to churnin (movement here is very slow) allowing digestion to take place- best by mixing substrate and enzyme Amylase digest starch Lipases to digest triglycerides and phospholipids Proteases to digest proteins and peptide Digestion in the small intestine Enzymes digest most macromolecules in food into monomers in the small intestine Enzymes secreted by the pancreas into the lumen of the small intestine carry out these hydrolysis reactions -Starch is digested to maltose by amylase -Triglycerides are digested to fatty acids and glycerol or fatty acids and monoglycerides by lipase -Phospholipids are digested to fatty acids, glycerol and phosphate by phospholipase
-Proteins and polypeptides are digested to shorter
peptides by protease Because of the great length of the small intestine, food takes hours to pass through, allowing time for digestion of most macromolecules to be completed Some substances remain largely undigested- because humans cant synthesise the necessary enzymes Cellulose for example is not digested and passes on to the large intestine as one of the main components of dietary fibre The process of taking substances into cells and the blood is called absorption In the human digestive system nutrients are absorbed principally in the small intestine The rate of absorption depends on the surface area of the epithelium that carries out the process The small intestine in adults is approx 7m long and 25-30mm wide and has lots of folds on its inner surface giving a large surface area Villi and micro-villi increase the surface area Villi are small projections of the mucosa on the inside of the intestine wall A villus is between 0.5mm and 1.5mm long and there can be as many as 40 of them per square mm of small intestine wall. They increase the surface area by a factor of about 10 Glucose cant pass through the plasma membrane by simple diffusion because its polar and therefore hydrophilic Sodium-potassium pumps in the inwards-facing part of the plasma membrane pump sodium ions by active transport from the cytoplasm to the interstitial spaces inside the villus and potassium ions in the opposite direction To have balance concentration This creates a low concentration of sodium ions inside the villus epithelium cells Sodium-glucose co-transporter proteins in the microvilli transfer a sodium ion and a glucose molecule together from the intestinal lumen to the cytoplasm of the epithelium cells This type of facilitated diffusion is passive but it depends on the concentration gradient of sodium ions created by active transport Glucose channels allow the glucose to move by facilitated diffusion from the cytoplasm to the interstitial
spaces inside the villus and on into blood capillaries in the
villus
Villi finger like extensions that increase the surface
area of the ileum Lacteal used to transport and absorbs dietary fats in the villi-it is part of the lymph system that eventually joins up to the capillaries Circular muscle to longitudinal muscle