Control of Feeding - Anatomy & Physiology

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Introduction

Different hormones, neurotransmitters and reflexes are involved in the complicated process of feeding in animals. Secretions and motility of the gastrointestinal tract are stimulated and carefully regulated by numerous factors, including environmental stimuli and the presence of food in different parts of the gastrointestinal tract from the oral cavity right through to the intestines.

When a harmful substance is ingested the body acts to eliminate it in different ways to prevent the animal becoming ill, for example, through vomiting and diarrhoea.

If one or more of the pathways in controlling feeding is damaged or inhibited, then problems such as obesity occurs.

Feeding Methods

  • Absorption over body surface
  • Filter feeding
  • Mucous trapping
  • Fluid feeding
    • Piercing and sucking
    • Cutting and biting
  • Herbivores and grazing
    • Invertebrates
    • Vertebrates- bony plates or teeth

Functions of the GIT

The main function of the GIT is to efficently breakdown feed to the essential nutrients that can then be absorbed. The GIT then acts to propell the waste fed material out of the body. The following functions constitute this main function;

  • Secretion of enzymes and co-factors for digestion including water, ions and mucous
  • Motility for forward propulsion, mechanical breakdown, mixing of ingesta and sphincter tone
    • Migrating myoelectric complex to prevent debris accumulation
    • Peristalsis
    • Haustration
    • Segmental motility
  • Blood flow to muscles, submucosa and epithelial surfaces to sustain secretion, motility and the uptake of products of digestion
  • Growth and repair

Control of the GIT

  • Endocrine hormones released into the circulation by cells within the GIT or an accessory organ
  • Paracrine mediators released by cells within the tract and diffuse locally to act on neighbouring target cells
  • Neurotransmitters from nerves and other cells
  • Autonomic nervous system superimposed over the local control

Control of Motility

  • Intrinsic
    • Muscle pacemaker cells (Cajal cells)
    • Set a basic electric rhythm (BER) of 3-20 per minute
    • Passes through gap junctions
    • Action potential created producing a slow wave of contraction
    • Likelihood of an action potential is increased through the stretch of food in the lumen and chemical food stimulation
  • Endocrine, paracrine or neural enter the enteric nervous system via sensory neurones
  • Neurons interact with plexuses in the GIT wall
    • Myenteric plexus controls muscle movement
    • Submucosa plexus controls secretion and blood flow
    • 2 plexuses connected by interneurones to co-ordinate control
    • Autonomic nervous system superimposed
  • Excitatory neurotransmitters are parasympathomimetic
    • ACh (muscarinic M1 and M2)
    • Serotonin
    • Substance P
  • Inhibitory neurotransmitters are sympathomimetic
    • Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)
    • Nitric oxide (NO)
    • ATP
    • Enkephalins
  • Extrinsic - Autonomic nervous system (ANS)
    • Sympathetic via norepinephrine (A1 and B2)
      • Thoraco-lumbar innervation
    • Parasympathetic via ACh (M1 and M2)
      • Cranio-sacral innervation

Control of GIT Secretions

  • Presence of food in the GIT is detected by open chemoreceptors
  • Signals to the endocrine cells or via the ANS releases gastrointestinal peptide hormones
  • These hormones act to promote secretion, provide negative feedback or affect motility
  • Closed mechanoreceptors also act to alter secretions
  • Conditioned (associative) and unconditioned responses act via the ANS


Control Method Neural Endocrine
Saliva Yes No
Stomach Yes Yes
Small Intestine No Yes

Phases of Gastric Secretion

Cephalic

Cephalic phase of secretion - Copyright RVC 2008
  • Unconditioned reflex
  • Sight, smell, taste of food
  • Vagus nerve (CN X)
    • Parasympathetic fibres
    • Synapse in submucosal plexus
  • Gastrin secreted from endocrine cells in pyloric mucosa
  • Postganglionic fibres activate chief, parietal, mucous and G cells
  • Histamine secreted from paracrine action
  • Increase stomach motility by release of hydrochloric acid and pepsinogen
  • Short phase
  • Overlaps with gastric phase of secretion
  • Inhibited by stress, increased by aggression
Gastric control of secretion - Copyright RVC 2008

Gastric

  • Chemical and mechanical receptors in stomach respond to stretch and chemical stimulation
  • Increase in pH of gastric contents
  • Response to undigested materials, especially proteins
  • Negative feedback loop by sympathomimetic somatostatin released by paracrine method to inhibit gastrin secretion (when pH falls below 3)
  • Submucosal and myenteric plexuses activated in vagus reflex arcs
  • Postganglionic release of ACh at parietal cells
  • Neural response and presence of peptides in chyme stimulate gastrin release
  • Parietal and chief cells stimulate via gastrin acting in the bloodstream
  • Long response
Intestinal control of secretion - Copyright RVC 2008

Intestinal

  • Chyme in the duodenum inhibits acid secretion and motility by decreasing the stomach distension and increasing the stretch of the duodenum leading to the enterogastric reflex
  • A drop in pH below 4.5 causes release of secretin which inhibits parietal and chief cells and stimulate buffer release from the pancreas
  • Chyme causes release of secretin, GIP and CCK decreasing gastric sectreions and motility
Pancretic control of secretion - Copyright RVC 2008

Pancreatic

  • Parasympathetic stimulation during cephalic and gastric phases
  • Negative feedback from paracrine sympathomimetics (somatostatin and enkephalins)

Biliary

  • Secretin stimulates hydrogencarbonate ions from bile duct

Small Intestinal

  • Succus entericus
  • Vagal tone and parasympathomimetic reflex

Neuroendocrine Regulation of Feeding

Gut Peptides

Peptide Site of Release Effect on Feeding
CCK Duodenum Reduces food intake
Ghrelin Gastric fundus Increases food intake
GLP-2 Intestine Reduces food intake
Motilin Small intestine Indirectly inhibits food intake
Oxyntomodulin large intestine Inhibits food intake
Pancreatic Polypeptide Pancreas Inhibits food intake
PYY3-36 Intestine Inhibits food intake
Somatostatin Pancreas Inhibits food intake

Other Peptides

Peptide Site of Release Effect on Feeding
Leptin Adipocyte Reduces food intake
NPY Arcuate nucleus Increases food intake
Agrp Arcuate nucleus Increases food intake
MCH Lateral hypothalamus Increases food intake
Orexins Lateral hypothalamus Increases food intake
CART Arcuate nucleus Inhibits food intake
α MSH Arcuate nucleus Inhibits food intake
Bdnf Ventromedial nucleus Inhibits food intake
Serotonin Brainstem Inhibits food intake
Cannabinoids CNS Increases food intake

The Vomit Reflex

Species Differences

Equine

The anatomy of the equine stomach, the close proximity of the exiting duodenum and the entering oesophagus along with the well developed cardiac sphincter, make it difficult for the horse to vomit. However on rare occasions it does occur.