Digestion and Nutrition in Humans
Subjects / Additional Science / Edexcel GCSE Additional Science
Humans consume a wide variety of food and drink. This title explains how the digestive system is organised, the roles of the different parts, and how they help the process of digestion. We'll look at how the particles of digested food pass from the intestine into the blood. Chemical reactions involving enzymes break the different foods down into molecules that can be absorbed. We'll find out how the enzymes work, the conditions they need in order to function, and which food groups they act upon. Some enzymes break molecules down, and others build them up. We'll discuss how they do this. Understanding how the digestive system works also means understanding how the breakdown products that aren't needed are dealt with. We'll explain the excretory system, including the urinary system.
| Author: | Dr Eliot Attridge | Publisher: | GCSEPod® |
| Narrator: | Pauline Addis | ISBN: | 978-1-84906-280-0 |
| Video ISBN: | 978-1-84906-780-5 |
Chapters
- Functions of Digestive Organs
- Breakdown and Absorption of Food Molecules
- Bile
- Digestive Enzymes
- Excretion
- Use of Enzymes in Industry and the Home
Exam Board Relevance
- Edxcel
- AQA
- CEA
- IGCSE (EdExcel)
- OCR
- SQA
- WJEC
- IGCSE (CiE)
Includes original GCSEPod image art. Additional pictorial images created by Damon Smith
Curriculum and Exam Board Information
Key Issues
Titles
Chapters
- Absorption of soluble products of digestion
- Amylase
- ANIMAL NUTRITION
- Bile
- Bile neutralises the acid that was added to food in the stomach. This provides alkaline conditions in which enzymes in the small intestine work most effectively
- Breakdown of large insoluble food molecules into small molecules and absorption into the blood
- describe the action of amylase, lipase and protease in saliva, gastric, pancreatic and intestinal juice
- Digestive Enzymes
- Enzymes in Industry
- Enzymes in the Home
- Function of mouth, oesophagus (gullet), stomach, small and large intestines, pancreas, liver and gall bladder
- Functions of enzymes and bile in digestion
- Functions of the salivary glands, oesophagus (gullet), stomach, gall bladder, pancreas and intestines
- Hydrochloric Acid
- identify parts of the human alimentary canal, in relation to absorption
- identify parts of the human alimentary canal, in relation to assimilation
- identify parts of the human alimentary canal, in relation to digestion and egestion
- identify parts of the human alimentary canal, in relation to ingestion
- In industry carbohydrates are used to convert starch into sugar syrup
- In industry isomerase is used to convert glucose syrup into fructose syrup, which is much sweeter and therefore can be used in smaller quantities in slimming foods
- In industry proteases are used to 'pre-digest' the protein in some baby foods
- In the home, biological detergents may contain protein-digesting and fat-digesting enzymes (proteases and lipases)
- know excretion as the elimination of metabolic waste products and toxic materials taken in from the environment
- know that excess amino acids break down to urea in the liver
- know the basic function of the digestive system - where large molecules are broken down to simple soluble molecules which are absorbed into and transported by the blood
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including anus
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including buccal cavity
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including large intestine (colon)
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including oesophagus
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including rectum
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including small intestine (ileum)
- know the structure and functions of the component parts of the digestive system in humans, including stomach
- Lipase
- Lipase enzymes are produced by the pancreas and small intestine
- Lipase enzymes catalyse the breakdown of lipids (fats and oils) into fatty acids and glycerol in the small intestine
- Peristalsis
- Protease
- Protease enzymes are produced by the stomach, the pancreas and the small intestine
- Protease enzymes catalyse the breakdown of proteins into amino acids in the stomach and the small intestine
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include bladder
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include kidney
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include renal artery
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include sphincter muscle
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include ureter
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include urethra
- recall the structure of the human urinary system to include vein
- Role of bile
- Role of digestive enzymes (amylase, proteases, lipase)
- Sensitivity of enzymes to temperature and pH
- Some enzymes work outside the body cells
- the absorption of water in the colon
- The digestive enzymes are produced by specialised cells in glands and in the lining of the gut
- The effects of temperature and pH on enzyme action
- The enzyme amylase catalyses the breakdown of starch into sugars in the mouth and small intestine
- The enzyme amylase is produced in the salivary glands, the pancreas and the small intestine
- The enzymes then pass out of the cells into the gut where they come into contact with food molecules. They catalyse the breakdown of large molecules into smaller molecules
- The liver produces bile which is stored in the gall bladder before being released into the small intestine
- The principle of substrate specificity
- the role of the liver in the assimilation of glucose
- the significance of a large surface area for absorption; folds and villi
- the source and action of bile
- The stomach also produces hydrochloric acid. The enzymes in the stomach work most effectively in these acid conditions
- understand the role of enzymes as biological catalysts in cellular activity involving both breaking down and building up of molecules (illustrated by reference to starch metabolism)
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