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Boundless Anatomy and Physiology
Digestive System
Chemical Digestion
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology Digestive System Chemical Digestion
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology Digestive System
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology
Physiology Textbooks
Physiology
Concept Version 14
Created by Boundless

Mechanisms of Chemical Digestion

Chemical digestion is the process of breakdown of large macronutrients into smaller molecules by enzyme-mediated hydrolysis.

Learning Objective

  • Differentiate among the methods used to chemically break down food molecules


Key Points

    • Carbohydrates are mainly taken in the form of amylose and glycogen. Amylases hydrolyze long carbohydrate chains. This breaks amylose down into disaccharides, and glycogen into polysaccharides. Enzymes in the small intestine break these down to monosaccharides.
    • Proteins are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond. Peptidases are secreted in an inactive form, to prevent auto-digestion. Endopeptidases cleave the polypeptide at the interior peptide bonds, the exopeptidases cleave the terminal amino acid.
    • Fats are digested by lipases which hydrolyze the glycerol-fatty acid bonds. Bile salts emulsify the fats allowing for their solution as micelles in chyme and increasing the surface area on which the pancreatic lipases can operate.
    • RNA and DNA are hydrolized by pancreatic enzymes (ribonucleases, deoxyribonucleases) into nucleic acids, which are further broken down to purine and pyrimidine bases and pentoses by enzymes in the intestinal mucosa (nucleases).
    • Once the voluntary signal to defecate is sent back from the brain, the final phase begins.

Terms

  • peptidase

    Any enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of peptides into amino acids; a protease.

  • hydrolysis

    The degradation of certain biopolymers (proteins, complex sugars) by the chemical process that results in smaller polymers or monomers (such as amino acids or monosaccharides)

  • amylase

    Any of a class of digestive enzymes, present in saliva, that break down complex carbohydrates such as starch into simpler sugars such as glucose.


Example

    • Because amylase turns some of potato or rice starch into sugar, these foods taste slightly sweet.

Full Text

Digestion is a form of catabolism: a breakdown of large food molecules (i.e., polysaccharides, proteins, fats, nucleic acids) to smaller ones (i.e., monosaccharides, amino acids, fatty acids, nucleotides) .

Catabolism

A simplified outline of the catabolism of proteins, carbohydrates and fats

Carbohydrates are taken in mainly in the form of plant carbohydrate (amylose) and animal carbohydrate (glycogen) together with some sugars, mainly disaccharides. In the western diet about 80% is in the form of amylose. Amylose is not highly branched and consists mainly of long chains of glucose linked by α1:4 linkages. Cellulose, the most abundant starch in nature, is formed of β1:4 linkages and cannot be digested in humans, although bacterial action in the colon does breakdown a minute amount. Glycogen is a multi-branched starch with linkages at the 1:4 and 1:6 position. This gives very large granules of multi-branched starch. Both the parotid and pancreatic amylases hydrolyse the 1:4 link, but not the terminal 1:4 links or the 1:6 links. This breaks amylose down into mainly disaccharides, and glycogen with its 1:6 linkages into polysaccharides . The net result of these actions are numerous disaccharides and polysaccharides. Enzymes attached to the enterocycytes of the small intestine break these down to monosaccharides.

Hydrolysis by amylase

Both the parotid and pancreatic amylases hydrolyse the 1:4 link, but not the terminal 1:4 links or the 1:6 links.

Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond . The proteolytic enzymes are all secreted in an inactive form, to prevent auto-digestion, and are activated in the lumen of the gut: by HCl in the case of the stomach pepsinogen; by enteropeptidase and trypsin in the case of the pancreatic enzymes. Final digestion takes place by small intestine enzymes embedded in the brush border of the small intestine. The enzymes are divided into endo- and exo-peptidases. The endopeptidases cleave the polypeptide at the interior peptide bonds, while the exopeptidases cleave the terminal amino acid. Exopeptidases are further subclassified into aminopeptidases - which cleave off the terminal amino acid at the amine end of the chain, and carboxypeptidases which cleave off the terminal amino acid at the carboxyl end of the chain. Stomach pepsin cleaves interior bonds of the amino acids, and is particularly important for its ability to digest collagen. This is a major constituent of connective tissue of meat. In the absence of stomach pepsin, digestion in the small intestine proceeds with difficulty. Stomach pepsin digests about 20% of the proteins, the rest is digested by pancreatic and small intestine enzymes.

Hydrolysis of peptide bond

Proteins and polypeptides are digested by hydrolysis of the C-N bond.

Fats are digested by lipases which hydrolyze the glycerol-fatty acid bonds. Of particular importance in fat digestion and absorption are bile salts which emulsify the fats allowing for their solution as micelles in chyme, and increasing the surface area on which the pancreatic lipases can operate. Lipases are found in the mouth, the stomach, and the pancreas. Because the lingual lipase was inactivated by stomach acid, it was formally believed to be mainly present for oral hygiene and for its anti-bacterial effect in the mouth. However, it can continue to operate on food stored in the fundus of the stomach, and as much as 30% of the fats can be digested by this lipase. Gastric lipase is of little importance in humans. Pancreatic lipase accounts for the majority of fat digestion and operates in conjuction with the bile salts.

RNA and DNA are hydrolized by pancreatic enzymes (ribonucleases, deoxyribonucleases) into nucleic acids, which are further broken down to purine and pyrimidine bases and pentoses by enzymes in the intestinal mucosa (nucleases).

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