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ANIMAL NUTRITION

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Page 1: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

ANIMAL NUTRITION

Page 2: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD

• Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles• Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source• Fluid Feeders: suck nutrient rich fluids• Bulk Feeders: eat large pieces of food (most

animals)

Page 3: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

MACRO-MOLECULES

• Macro = large• Molecules = 2 or more atoms covalently

bonded• Usually referred to as polymers

• Like a chain• Made from several repeating subunits

• The repeated subunits are called monomers• Like links in a chain

• 3 of the 4 macromolecules are polymers of monomers

Page 4: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

TYPES OF MACROMOLECULES

There are four of them.1. Carbohydrates2. Lipids3. Proteins4. Nucleic acids

Page 5: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

FUNCTION OF CARBOHYDRATES

1. Sugars, the smallest carbohydrates, serve as fuel and carbon sources

2. Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have storage and structural roles

Page 6: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

STRUCTURE OF CARBOHYDRATES

• Monosaccharides generally have molecular formulas containing C,H and O in a 1:2:1 ratio.• For example, glucose has the formula C6H12O6.

• Most names for sugars end in -ose.

• Monosaccharides are also classified by the number of carbons in the backbone.

Page 7: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Monosaccharides, particularly glucose, are a major fuel for cellular work.

• They are also building blocks for of other monomers, including those of amino acids (protein) and fatty acids (lipids).

• While often drawn as a linear skeleton, in aqueous solutions monosaccharides form rings.

Page 8: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

2. Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have storage and structural roles

• Polysaccharides are polymers of hundreds to thousands of monosaccharides joined together (What is a polymer?)

• One function of polysaccharides is energy storage – it is hydrolyzed as needed.

• Other polysaccharides serve as building materials for the cell or whole organism.

Page 9: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Starch is a storage polysaccharide composed entirely of glucose monomers• Great big chain of glucose molecules

Page 10: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:
Page 11: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:
Page 12: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Oh cats, cats, cats

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6S57powgxA

Page 13: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

LIPIDS

• Lipids are an exception among macromolecules because they do not have polymers.– Though lipid structure is easily recognized

• Lipids all have little or no affinity for water.• Lipids are highly diverse in form and function.

Page 14: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

Fats store large amounts of energy• Although fats are not strictly polymers,

they are large molecules assembled from smaller molecules by dehydration reactions.

• A fat is constructed from two kinds of smaller molecules, glycerol and fatty acids.

Page 15: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Glycerol consists of a three carbon skeleton with a hydroxyl group attached to each.

• • A fatty acid consists of a carboxyl group attached to a long carbon skeleton, often 16 to 18 carbons long.

Page 16: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• The many nonpolar C-H bonds in the long hydrocarbon skeleton make fats hydrophobic.

• In a fat, three fatty acids are joined to glycerol by an ester linkage, creating a triacylglycerol.

Page 17: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• The three fatty acids in a fat can be the same or different.

• Fatty acids may vary in length (number of carbons) and in the number and locations of double bonds.

• If there are no carbon-carbon double bonds, then the molecule is a saturated fatty acid - a hydrogen at every possible position. Saturated fatty acids are straight chains

Page 18: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• If there are one or more carbon-carbon double bonds, then the molecule is an unsaturated fatty acid - formed by the removal of hydrogen atoms from the carbon skeleton.

• Unsaturated fatty acids have a kink wherever there is a double bond

Page 19: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

Saturated vs Unsaturated

• Fats with saturated fatty acids are saturated fats.– Most animal fats– solid at room temperature.

• Straight chains allow many hydrogen bonds

– A diet rich in saturated fats may contribute to cardiovascular disease (atherosclerosis) through plaque deposits.

• Fats with unsaturated fatty acids are unsaturated fats.– Plant and fish fats, known as oils– Liquid are room temperature.

• The kinks provided by the double bonds prevent the molecules from packing tightly together.

Page 20: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

Steroids include cholesterol and certain hormones

• Steroids are lipids with a carbon skeleton consisting of four fused carbon rings.– Different steroids are created by varying functional groups

attached to the rings.

Page 21: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

YUMMY

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMQDPXDtLh8

Page 22: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

PROTEINS

• Proteins are instrumental in about everything that an organism does.• structural support,• storage• transport of other substances• intercellular signaling• movement• defense against foreign substances• Proteins are the main enzymes in a cell and regulate

metabolism by selectively accelerating chemical reactions.

• Humans have tens of thousands of different proteins, each with their own structure and function.

Page 23: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Proteins are the most structurally complex molecules known.• Each type of protein has a complex three-dimensional

shape or conformation.• All protein polymers are constructed from the

same set of 20 monomers, called amino acids.• Polymers of proteins are called polypeptides.• A protein consists of one or more polypeptides

folded and coiled into a specific conformation

Page 24: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

A POLYPEPTIDE IS A POLYMER OF AMINO ACIDS CONNECTED IN A SPECIFIC SEQUENCE

• Amino acids consist of four components attached to a central carbon, the alpha carbon.

• These components include a hydrogen atom, a carboxyl group, an amino group, and a side chain.

• Polypeptides are made of amino acids • Amino acids CONTAIN NITROGEN (N)

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.

Page 26: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• The repeated sequence (N-C-C) is the polypeptide backbone.

• Attached to the backbone are the various R groups.

• Polypeptides range in size from a few monomers to thousands.

Page 27: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

NUCLEIC ACIDS

• Contain genetic information• Provides instructions for making polypeptides

• Each monomer is a nucleotide• Nucleotides are composed of

1. 5 carbon sugar Deoxyribose ribose

2. Phosphate group3. Nitrogenous base

Adenine (A) Thymine (T) in DNA, Uracil (U) in RNA Guanine (G) cytosine

Page 28: ANIMAL NUTRITION. MECHANISMS TO INGEST FOOD Suspension Feeders: sift small food particles Substrate Feeders: live on or in their food source Fluid Feeders:

• Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)• Sugar is deoxyribose• Shape is a double helix

• Ribonucleic acid (RNA)• Sugar is ribose• Uses a different nitrogenous base

• Uracil (U) instead of thymine (T)

• Shape may be a single or double helix