Year 10 - 1.3 Digestion and the digestive system in humans

Beschreibung

GCSE Biology Karteikarten am Year 10 - 1.3 Digestion and the digestive system in humans, erstellt von Mrs Z Rourke am 26/02/2018.
Mrs Z Rourke
Karteikarten von Mrs Z Rourke, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Mrs Z Rourke
Erstellt von Mrs Z Rourke vor mehr als 6 Jahre
826
0

Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
Why is digestion needed? To breakdown large molecules into smaller molecules so they can be absorbed for use by body cells
What enzyme breaks down fats? Lipase
What are fats broken down into? Fatty acids and glycerol
What enzyme breaks down proteins? Protease
What are proteins broken down into? Amino acids
What enzyme breaks down carbohydrates? Carbohydrase
What are carbohydrates broken down into? Simple sugars
What enzyme breaks down starch? Amylase
What is starch broken down into? Glucose
How would you test for the presence of starch? Use iodine - it would turn from a brown to blue/black colour
How would you test for the presence of glucose? Benedict's reagent and heat - it would turn from a blue colour to brick red
How would you test for the presence of protein? Biuret solution - will change from blue to violet
Label the parts of the digestive system. 1. Mouth 2. Oesophagus 3. Stomach 4.Small intestine 5. Pancreas 6. Large intestine 7. Anus 8. Liver 9. Gall bladder
What is the role of the mouth? Digestion starts here - teeth break down food into smaller pieces. This increases surface area for amylase to start breaking down starch. Saliva contains amylase and lubricates the food bolus.
What is the role of the stomach? Contains protease to break down proteins. Also contains hydrochloric acid to aid digestion and kill microbes.
What is the role of the pancreas? Secretes lipase, proteases and carbohydrases into the small intestine
What is the role of the small intestine? Digests carbohydrates, proteins and fats. The digested molecules are absorbed across the villi of the small intestine.
What is the role of the large intestine? Water is absorbed out of the remaining food to leave behind faeces.
What is the role of the liver? Secretes bile (which is stored in the gall bladder and secreted into the small intestine when required)
Why is bile required? 1. Bile emulsifies fat into smaller fat droplets. This increases the surface area for lipase to digest the fat. 2. Bile increases the pH in the small intestine to the optimum pH for enzyme acitivity.
How is food moved along the alimentary canal (through the digestive system)? Peristalsis - muscles contract above the food bolus to push the food along
How is the small intestine adapted to absorb soluble subtances into the blood stream? 1. Villi increase the surface area 2. Rich blood supply - maintains a concentration gradient
How does the body use fatty acids and glycerol? For energy
How does the body use glucose? For energy
How does the body use amino acids? To build proteins in the body
Why is iron needed in the body? For the production of haemoglobin
Why is vitamin C needed in the body? To maintain healthy tissue
Why is fibre needed in the body? Provides bulk in the digestive system (help to push food through)
What will happen if energy from food is taken in excess? It will be stored as fat in the body and could lead to obesity
What happens if you have too much sugar? Type 2 diabetes obesity Tooth decay
What happens if you have too much fat? Obesity Heart disease Circulatory disease
What happens if you have too much salt? High blood pressure
Zusammenfassung anzeigen Zusammenfassung ausblenden

ähnlicher Inhalt

Biology AQA 3.1.3 Cells
evie.daines
Biology AQA 3.2.5 Mitosis
evie.daines
Biology AQA 3.1.3 Osmosis and Diffusion
evie.daines
Biology- Genes, Chromosomes and DNA
Laura Perry
Biology- Genes and Variation
Laura Perry
Enzymes and Respiration
I Turner
GCSE AQA Biology - Unit 2
James Jolliffe
GCSE AQA Biology 1 Quiz
Lilac Potato
Using GoConqr to study science
Sarah Egan
Cells and the Immune System
Eleanor H
GCSE Biology AQA
isabellabeaumont