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Learn Introductory Ichthyology with Rahul

Mechanism of digestion

a) Digestion of proteins

  • Proteins are complex organic compounds of high molecular weight.
  • They are composed of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and Sulphur elements. For the digestion of protein following enzymes are required in the fishes as:

– Pepsin

– Trypsin

– Chymotrypsin

– Erypsin

  • The fishes which possess stomach are generally carnivorous and secrete pepsin enzyme from gastric mucosa.
  • The pepsin enzyme breaks down complex form of protein to simpler form or insoluble state.
  • The optimum activity carried out at low pH 2 to4, so Hcl required for making low pH.
  • At 100C the gastric secretion increases to three to four folds.
  • The trypsin enzymes are present in the extract of pancreas of some elasmobranchs. The enterokinase enzyme is exclusively secreted by intestine of fishes.
  • In the cyprinids, stomach less fish pepsin compensation is supplemented by some intestinal enzyme, erypsin.

 

b) Digestion of carbohydrate:

  • The enzymes which break down the carbohydrate in the gut of fishes are as

follows:

– Amylase

– Lactase

– Sucrose

– Cellulose

– Maltase

  • The most important enzymes is amylase which acts as starch and which breakdown to maltose and then to glucose by the process of digestion.
  • The amylase is secreted from the pancreas in carnivorous fishes, but in herbivorous fishes, the presence of this enzyme is reported from the whole gastrointestinal tracts as well as pancreas.
  • Starch Amylase → Maltose Maltase→ Glucose
  • Sucrose Sucrase → Glucose + Fructose

 

c) Fat digestion:

  • The main enzyme which acts on this lipid is lipase.
  • The pancreas is also primary site of lipase production.
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