name the secertion of stomach and their functoins in their digestion of food
Answers
Answer:
The stomach produces and secretes several important substances to control the digestion of food. Each of these substances is produced by exocrine or endocrine cells found in the mucosa.
The main exocrine product of the stomach is gastric juice — a mixture of mucus, hydrochloric acid, and digestive enzymes. Gastric juice is mixed with food in the stomach to promote digestion.
Specialized exocrine cells of the mucosa known as mucous cells secrete mucus into the lumen of the stomach and into the gastric pits. This mucus spreads across the surface of the mucosa to coat the lining of the stomach with a thick, acid- and enzyme-resistant barrier. Stomach mucus is also rich in bicarbonate ions, which neutralize the pH of stomach acid.
Parietal cells found in the gastric pits of the stomach produce 2 important secretions: intrinsic factor and hydrochloric acid. Intrinsic factor is a glycoprotein that binds to the vitamin B12 in the stomach and allows the vitamin to be absorbed in the small intestine. Vitamin B12 is an essential nutrient for the formation of red blood cells. Hydrochloric acid protects the body by killing pathogenic bacteria naturally found in food. Hydrochloric acid also helps to digest proteins by denaturing them into an unfolded shape that is easier for enzymes to digest. The protein digesting enzyme pepsin is activated by exposure to hydrochloric acid inside the stomach.
Chief cells, also found within the gastric pits of the stomach, produce two digestive enzymes: pepsinogen and gastric lipase. Pepsinogen is the precursor molecule of the very potent protein-digesting enzyme pepsin. Because pepsin would destroy the chief cells that produce it, it is secreted in its inactive pepsinogen form. When pepsinogen reaches the acidic pH found in the stomach thanks to hydrochloric acid, it changes shape and becomes the active enzyme pepsin. Pepsin then breaks dietary proteins into their amino acid building blocks. Gastric lipase is an enzyme that digests fats by removing a fatty acid from a triglyceride molecule.
G cells are endocrine cells found at the bottom of the gastric pits. G cells release the hormone gastrin into the bloodstream in response to many stimuli, such as signals from the vagus nerve; the presence of amino acids in the stomach from digested proteins; and the stretching of the stomach wall during a meal. Gastrin travels through the blood to various receptor cells throughout the stomach where it stimulates the glands and muscles of the stomach. Glandular stimulation by gastrin leads to increased secretion of gastric juice to increase digestion. Stimulation of smooth muscles by gastrin leads to stronger contractions of the stomach and the opening of the pyloric sphincter to move food into the duodenum. Gastrin also binds to receptor cells in the pancreas and gallbladder where it increases the secretion of pancreatic juice and bile.
Explanation:
Stomach Secretion
Gastric secretions facilitate the digestion of protein which commences in the stomach by acid denaturation and hydrolysis by gastric proteases or pepsins.
Digestion Of Food
Digestion involves the mixing of food, its movement through the digestive tract, and the chemical breakdown of the large molecules of food into smaller molecules. Digestion begins in the mouth, when we chew and swallow, and is completed in the small intestine. The chemical process varies somewhat for different kinds of food.
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