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General Biology I: From Mouth to Molecule: Digestion

General Biology I
From Mouth to Molecule: Digestion
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. 1. Reference Information
    1. Presenting Data
    2. Using credible sources
    3. Citing your sources
    4. Writing for Science
  7. The Process of Science
    1. The Nature of Science
    2. Scientific Inquiry
    3. Hypothesis Testing
    4. Types of Data
    5. Basic and Applied Science
    6. Reporting Scientific Work
  8. Themes and Concepts of Biology
    1. Properties of Life
    2. Levels of Organization of Living Things
    3. The Diversity of Life
    4. Phylogenetic Trees
  9. Cell Structure and Function
    1. How Cells Are Studied
    2. Comparing Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells
    3. The Plasma Membrane and The Cytoplasm
    4. Ribosomes
    5. The Cytoskeleton
    6. Flagella and Cilia
    7. The Endomembrane System
    8. The Nucleus
    9. The Endoplasmic Reticulum
    10. The Golgi Apparatus
    11. Vesicles and Vacuoles, Lysosomes, and Peroxisomes
    12. Mitochondria and Chloroplasts
    13. The Cell Wall
    14. Extracellular matrix and intercellular junctions
    15. Animal vs Plant cells
    16. The Production of a Protein
    17. Chapter Quiz
    18. Summary Table of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells and Functions
  10. Membranes and movement of molecules
    1. The Plasma Membrane
    2. Transport Across Membranes
    3. Passive Transport: Diffusion
    4. Passive Transport: Osmosis
    5. Active Transport
  11. Enzyme-catalyzed reactions
    1. Metabolic Pathways
    2. Energy
    3. Enzymes
    4. Changes in Enzyme Activity
    5. Feedback Inhibition in Metabolic Pathways
  12. How cells obtain energy
    1. Energy in Living Systems
    2. From Mouth to Molecule: Digestion
    3. Metabolism
    4. An overview of Cellular Respiration
    5. Aerobic Respiration: Glycolysis
    6. Aerobic Respiration: The Citric Acid Cycle
    7. Aerobic Respiration: Oxidative Phosphorylation
    8. Fermentation: an anaerobic process
    9. Metabolism of molecules other than glucose
    10. Anaerobic Cellular Respiration
  13. Photosynthesis
    1. Putting Photosynthesis into Context
    2. Light and Pigments
    3. Light Dependent Reactions
    4. The Calvin Cycle
    5. Photosynthesis in Prokaryotes

44

From Mouth to Molecule: Digestion

While plants can produce their own energy using the process of photosynthesis, animals (and other organisms that can’t do photosynthesis) must eat to get energy from food molecules. Just like energy can be stored in the chemical bond between the second and third phosphate of an ATP molecule, energy can also be stored in the chemical bonds that make up food molecules. Most of the energy that we use comes from molecules of glucose, a simple sugar.

Food energy is chemical energy that animals (including humans) derive from their food and molecular oxygen through the process of cellular respiration. Cellular respiration involves either the process of joining oxygen from air with the molecules of food (aerobic respiration) or the process of reorganizing the atoms within the molecules (anaerobic respiration).

Humans and other animals need a minimum intake of food energy to sustain their metabolism and to drive their muscles. Foods are composed chiefly of carbohydrates, fats, proteins, water, vitamins, and minerals. Carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water represent virtually all the weight of food (90% of the dry weight of foods), with vitamins and minerals making up only a small percentage of the weight. Organisms derive food energy from carbohydrates, fats and proteins as well as from other molecules present in the diet. Some diet components that provide little or no food energy, such as water, minerals, vitamins, cholesterol, and fiber, may still be necessary to health and survival for other reasons. Water, minerals, vitamins, and cholesterol are not broken down (they are used by the body in the form in which they are absorbed) and so cannot be used for energy. Fiber, a type of carbohydrate, cannot be completely digested by the human body.

After you put food into your mouth, you begin to break it down mechanically using your teeth. Enzymes in your saliva begin breaking the food molecules down as well. After you swallow your food, it is further broken down by additional enzymes in the stomach, followed by the small intestine. In the small intestine, the fully broken-down food is absorbed into the blood. The majority of the nutrients (about 95%) are absorbed in the small intestine. Water is reabsorbed from the remaining material in the colon. Then the residual waste is eliminated during defecation.

digestive-system-for-kids
The human digestive system. (Credit: Leysi24, from Wikimedia. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported)

Once in the bloodstream, nutrients enter individual cells. Glucose is too large to diffuse through the cell membrane and is typically transported inside cells by proteins. After molecules enter a cell, the breakdown process to produce energy in the form of ATP can be completed.

References

Wikipedia. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.

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Copyright © 2016 by Lisa Bartee and Christine Anderson. Mt Hood Community College Biology 101 by Lisa Bartee and Christine Anderson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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