chemical digestion
Physiology
Biology
(noun)
The process of enzymes breaking down food into small molecules the body can use.
Examples of chemical digestion in the following topics:
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Chemical Digestion of Carbohydrates, Proteins, Lipids, and Nucleic Acids
- Chemical breakdown of macromolecules contained in food is completed by various enzymes produced in the digestive system.
- The digestive enzymes, however, are secreted mainly as their inactive precursors, the zymogens.
- Sucrose digestion yields the sugars fructose and glucose, which are readily absorbed by the small intestine.
- Digestion of certain fats begins in the mouth, where lingual lipase breaks down short chain lipids into diglycerides.
- Complete digestion of one molecule of fat (a triglyceride) results in three fatty acid molecules and one glycerol molecule.
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Processes and Functions of the Digestive System
- Digestion is necessary for absorbing nutrients from food, and occurs through two processes: mechanical and chemical digestion.
- This mechanical and chemical breakdown encompasses the process of digestion.
- (1) Mechanical Digestion: larger pieces of food get broken down into smaller pieces while being prepared for chemical digestion, this process starts in the mouth and continues into the stomach.
- (2) Chemical Digestion: starts in the mouth and continues into the intestines.
- There are at least five major digestive hormones in the gut of mammals that help process food through chemical digestion.
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Mechanisms of Chemical Digestion
- Chemical digestion is the process of breakdown of large macronutrients into smaller molecules by enzyme-mediated hydrolysis.
- Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond .
- Stomach pepsin digests about 20% of the proteins, the rest is digested by pancreatic and small intestine enzymes.
- Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond.
- Differentiate among the methods used to chemically break down food molecules
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Digestion and Absorption
- In order for nutrients (carbohydrates, lipids, vitamins) to be absorbed for energy, food must undergo chemical and mechanical digestion.
- Digestion is the mechanical and chemical break down of food into small organic fragments.
- In chemical digestion, enzymes break down food into the small molecules the body can use.
- Digestive enzymes are found in the digestive tracts of animals.
- Mechanical and chemical digestion of food takes place in many steps, beginning in the mouth and ending in the rectum.
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Digestive Processes of the Small Intestine
- The small intestine uses different enzymes and processes to digest proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates.
- The small intestine is where most chemical digestion takes place.
- The three major classes of nutrients that undergo digestion are proteins, lipids (fats), and carbohydrates.
- Chemical breakdown begins in the stomach and continues through the large intestine.
- Other carbohydrates pass undigested into the large intestine, where they are digested by intestinal bacteria.
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Digestive System: Mouth and Stomach
- The extensive chemical process of digestion begins in the mouth.
- A large part of digestion occurs in the stomach .
- This highly-acidic environment is required for the chemical breakdown of food and the extraction of nutrients.
- Chemical digestion is facilitated by the churning action of the stomach.
- Digestion of food begins in the (a) oral cavity.
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Vertebrate Digestive Systems
- Humans and many animals have a monogastric digestive system .
- The enzymes present in saliva also begin to chemically break down food.
- Most of the chemical digestion and absorption happens in the intestine, while the waste is excreted through the cloaca.
- The digestive enzymes of these animals cannot break down cellulose, but microorganisms present in the digestive system can.
- This is the site where the roughage is fermented and digested.
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Digestion in the Mouth, Pharynx, and Esophagus
- Digestion is the mechanical and chemical breakdown of food into smaller components that are more readily absorbed into the bloodstream.
- Digestion is the mechanical and chemical breakdown of food into smaller components so that it can be more readily absorbed into the bloodstream.
- When food enters the mouth, digestion begins with the action of mastication, a form of mechanical digestion, and with the contact of saliva.
- It cleans the oral cavity, moistens the food, and contains digestive enzymes.
- It lies cranial, or superior, to the esophagus and forms part of the digestive and respiratory systems.
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Digestive Systems
- During digestion, food particles are broken down to smaller components which will later be absorbed by the body.
- The digestive system is one of the largest organ systems in the human body.
- The cells of the human body all require a wide array of chemicals to support their metabolic activities, from organic nutrients used as fuel to the water that sustains life at the cellular level.
- The digestive system not only effectively chemically reduces the compounds in food into their fundamental building blocks, but also acts to retain water and excrete undigested materials.
- The functions of the digestive system can be summarized as follows: ingestion (eat food), digestion (breakdown of food), absorption (extraction of nutrients from the food), and defecation (removal of waste products).
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Hormonal Responses to Food
- The system is made of a series of glands that produce chemicals called hormones.
- These hormones are chemical mediators released from endocrine tissue into the bloodstream where they travel to target tissue and generate a response.
- In the duodenum, digestive secretions from the liver, pancreas, and gallbladder play an important role in digesting chyme during the intestinal phase.
- Foods high in lipids (fatty foods) take a long time to digest.
- Hormones, such as secretin and cholecystokinin, play important roles in digestive processes.