► Composition of Bile Juice
► Composition of Liver Bile
► Types of Bile Salts
Bile salts are of two types:
(a) Inorganic Salts: Bile juice contains NaCl, Na2CO3, NaHCO3 etc. in it. Inorganic salts neutralize the acidity of the food and make the medium basic. It is necessary for the medium to become basic because the pancreatic-juices enzymes can act only in the basic-medium.
(b) Organic Salts: Organic salts like Na-glycocholate and Na-taurocholate are found in Bile juice. The main function of these salts is the emulsification of fats. Because pancreatic lipase can act only on emulsified fats.
Bile salts also help in the absorption of fats and fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K). Bile salts combine with fats, cholesterol, phospholipid (lecithin) and these vitamins to form compounds called Micelles which are absorbed rapidly. In the form of micelles, cholesterol and phospholipid (lecithin) remain soluble.
► Functions of Bile Juice
Neutralization of HCl: Its sodium neutralizes HCl of chyme (semifluid food found in the stomach).
Emulsification: Sodium glycocholate and sodium taurocholate are bile salts that break the large fat droplets into smaller ones.
Absorption of Fat and Fat-soluble Vitamins: Its salts help in the absorption of fat (fatty acids and glycerol) and fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E and K).
Excretion: Bile pigments (bilirubin and biliverdin) are excretory products.
Prevention of Decomposition: Bile is alkaline hence it prevents the decomposition of food preventing the growth of bacteria on it.
Stimulation of Peristalsis: Bile increases the peristalsis of the intestine.
Activation of Lipase: Bile contains no enzyme but activates the enzyme lipase.
Bile-pigments, cholesterol and Lecithin are the excretory substances found in Bile juice.
Gall Stone: Sometimes the passage inside the bile-duct gets blocked or becomes narrow, so the cholesterol gets deposited or precipitated in the gall-bladder. This is termed as the Gall-stone (cholelithiasis).
Obstructive Jaundice: If the passage of bile is blocked then the amount of bilirubin increases in the blood. So the yellowish colouration of the body like skin, cornea and nails appear yellow. Urine also becomes yellow.
The pancreatic juice is secreted by the exocrine cells of the pancreas.
Pancreatic juice is a highly odoriferous, colourless basic fluid which contains enzymes and salts.Role of Pancreatic Enzymes
► Composition of Pancreatic Juice
The action of enzymes present in the pancreatic juice is as follows:
An Overview of the Action of Major Enzymes in Human
Enzyme | Site of Action | Substrate | Products of Action | |
Salivary Juice (Salivary Gland) | ||||
Salivary amylase or Ptyalin | Mouth and Stomach | Starch | Disaccharides (few) | |
|
| Buccal cavity |
|
|
Gastric Juice (Stomach) | ||||
a) | Pepsinogen: pepsin | Stomach | Proteins | large peptides |
Pancreatic Juice (Pancreas) | ||||
a) | Pancreatic a-amylase ( Duodenum) | Small, intestine | Starch | Disaccharides |
b) | Trypsinogen: trypsin | Small, intestine | Proteins | large peptides |
| Chymotrypsin | Small, intestine | Proteins | large peptides |
d) | Elastase | Small, intestine | Elastin | Oligopeptides |
e) | Carboxypeptidases | Small, intestine | large peptides | Amino-acid |
f) | Aminopeptidase | Small, intestine | large peptides | Oligopeptides |
g) | lipase | Small, intestine | Triglycerides, fatty acids, glycerol | Monoglycerides |
h) | Nucleases | Small, intestine | Nucleic acids | Nucleotides |
Intestinal Juice (Small Intestine) | ||||
a | Enteropeptidase or enterokinase | Duodenum | Trypsinogen | Trypsin |
b | Peptidase | Duodenum | Oligopeptides | Amino acids |
c | Disaecharidases | Duodenum | Disaccharides | Monosaccharides |
d | Nucleotidase | Duodenum | Nucleotides phosphoric: acid | Nucleosidases |
e) | Nucleosidases | Duodenum | Nucleosides pyrimidines | Sugars, purines |
Role of some major Gastrointestinal Peptide Hormones in Digestion:
In herbivores, the symbiotic bacteria and protozoans present in the caecum help in the digestion of cellulose into glucose. So the digestion of cellulose takes place in the caecum by the process of decomposition.
This decomposition process is very slow. So very less amount of cellulose is digested at a time in the caecum.
In the last part of the large intestine, faeces is temporarily stored.
Note:
- Maximum digestion of food – Duodenum
- While digestion of food completes in – Jejunum
- Maximum absorption of food in – Jejunum
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