Examples of extracellular digestion in the following topics:
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- Invertebrates can be classified as those that use intracellular digestion and those with extracellular digestion.
- The alimentary canal is a more advanced digestive system than a gastrovascular cavity and carries out extracellular digestion.
- Because the food has been broken down exterior to the cells, this type of digestion is called extracellular digestion.
- Most invertebrates use some form of extracellular digestion to break down their food.
- Their food is broken down in their digestive tract (extracellular digestion), rather than inside their individual cells (intracellular digestion).
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- Cnidarians are diploblastic, have organized tissue, undergo extracellular digestion, and use cnidocytes for protection and to capture prey.
- Polyp forms are sessile as adults, with a single opening to the digestive system (the mouth) facing up with tentacles surrounding it.
- Despite the simplicity of the nervous system, it coordinates the movement of tentacles, the drawing of captured prey to the mouth, the digestion of food, and the expulsion of waste.
- The cnidarians perform extracellular digestion in which the food is taken into the gastrovascular cavity, enzymes are secreted into the cavity, and the cells lining the cavity absorb nutrients.
- The gastrovascular cavity has only one opening that serves as both a mouth and an anus; this is termed an incomplete digestive system.
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- Individuals benefit from aggregation as it allows accumulation of extracellular enzymes which are used to digest food that increases feeding efficiency.
- This behavior facilitates predatory feeding, as the concentration of extracellular digestive enzymes secreted by the bacteria increases.
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- The flatworms are acoelomates: their bodies are solid between the outer surface and the cavity of the digestive system.
- Most flatworms have a gastrovascular cavity rather than a complete digestive system; in such animals, the "mouth" is also used to expel waste materials from the digestive system.
- Digestion is extracellular, with digested materials taken in to the cells of the gut lining by phagocytosis.
- One group, the cestodes, lacks a digestive system.
- The worms may produce enzymes that digest the host tissues or simply graze on surface mucus and skin particles.
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- Individuals benefit from aggregation as it allows accumulation of extracellular enzymes which are used to digest food.
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- These adherent cells are frequently embedded within a self-produced matrix of extracellular polymeric substance (EPS).
- Biofilm EPS, which is also referred to as slime, is a polymeric conglomeration generally composed of extracellular DNA, proteins, and polysaccharides.
- Bacteria usually overcome physical barriers by secreting enzymes that digest the barrier in the manner of a type II secretion system.
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- As multicellular organisms, animals differ from plants and fungi because their cells don't have cell walls; their cells may be embedded in an extracellular matrix (such as bone, skin, or connective tissue); and their cells have unique structures for intercellular communication (such as gap junctions).
- This connective tissue constitutes the extracellular surroundings of cells and is made up of organic and inorganic materials.
- Epithelial tissues cover, line, protect, and secrete; these tissues include the epidermis of the integument: the lining of the digestive tract and trachea.
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- Several common classes of enzymes digest these polymers.
- These digestive enzymes include proteases that digest proteins into amino acids, as well as glycoside hydrolases that digest polysaccharides into monosaccharides.
- Microbes secrete digestive enzymes into their surroundings, while animals only secrete these enzymes from specialized cells in their guts.
- The amino acids or sugars released by these extracellular enzymes are then pumped into cells by specific active transport proteins.
- Carbohydrates are usually taken into cells once they have been digested into monosaccharides.
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- Most animal cells release materials into the extracellular space.
- Collectively, these materials are called the extracellular matrix .
- Cells have protein receptors on the extracellular surfaces of their plasma membranes.
- An example of the role of the extracellular matrix in cell communication can be seen in blood clotting.
- The extracellular matrix consists of a network of proteins and carbohydrates.
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- There are peripheral proteins on the exterior of the membrane that bind elements of the extracellular matrix.
- These carbohydrate complexes help the cell bind substances that the cell needs in the extracellular fluid.
- Substances such as the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K readily pass through the plasma membranes in the digestive tract and other tissues.