Inorganic nutrients

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A number of inorganic elements (minerals) are essential for the growth of living things. Boron, for example, has been demonstrated to be required for the growth of many—perhaps all—higher plants but has not been implicated as an essential element in the nutrition of either microorganisms or animals. Trace amounts of fluorine (as fluoride) are certainly beneficial, and perhaps essential, for proper tooth formation in higher animals. Similarly, iodine (as iodide) is required in animals for formation of thyroxine, the active component of an important regulatory hormone. Silicon (as silicate) is a prominent component of the outer skeletons of diatomaceous protozoans and similar organisms and is required in them for normal growth. In higher animals the requirement for silicon is much smaller. A less obvious example of a specialized mineral requirement is provided by calcium, which is required by higher animals in comparatively large amounts because it is a major component of bone and eggshells (in birds); for other organisms, calcium is an essential nutrient but only as a trace element. Mineral elements in wide variety are present in trace amounts in almost all foodstuffs. It cannot be assumed that the nonessential mineral elements play no useful role in metabolism.

Important antagonistic relationships between certain mineral nutrients also are known. A large excess of rubidium, for example, interferes with the utilization of potassium in some lactic-acid bacteria; zinc can interfere with manganese utilization in the same organism. In animal nutrition, excessive molybdenum or zinc (both of which are essential minerals) interferes with the utilization of copper, another essential mineral, and, in higher plants, excessive zinc can lead to a disorder that is known as iron chlorosis. Proper nutrient growth media for microorganisms and plants or diets for animals, therefore, require not only that the essential mineral elements be provided in sufficient amounts but also that they be used in the proper ratios to each other.

Organic nutrients

The organic nutrients are the necessary building blocks of various cell components that certain organisms cannot synthesize and therefore must obtain preformed. These compounds include carbohydrates, protein, and lipids. Other organic nutrients include the vitamins, which are required in small amounts, because of either the catalytic role or the regulatory role they play in metabolism.

Carbohydrates

Quantitatively, the most important of nutrients are the carbohydrates synthesized by plants, since they provide most of the energy utilized by the animal kingdom. Mature fruit is rich in sugars that attract birds and other small animals. The seed coats in the fruit survive their rapid passage through the gut of these animals, who thus scatter widely the still viable seeds of the plant. Sucrose, in particular, also accumulates in the stems of sugarcane and in the roots of sugar beet, serving as an energy reserve for each plant; both are used for the industrial production of table sugar.

Dietary sugars include monosaccharides, which contain one sugar (glucose) unit, and disaccharides, which are made up of two sugar units linked together. In order to be utilized by an organism, all complex carbohydrates must be broken down into simple sugars, which, in most cases, are rapidly digested and absorbed. For example, even the freely soluble disaccharide sucrose must first be hydrolyzed to glucose and fructose by a specific enzyme, sucrase. Newborn piglets do not secrete this enzyme and therefore cannot make use of sucrose. Conversely, the disaccharide lactose is rapidly hydrolyzed by newborn animals, but most species—even some humans—stop secreting the enzyme lactase after weaning. This is understandable since lactose occurs naturally only in milk, which an animal usually will not encounter again after its suckling period.

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plant: General features of plant nutrition

The major storage carbohydrate in plant seeds, starch is a polysaccharide, formed from the condensation of several glucose units, primarily through linkages that are rapidly broken down by digestive enzymes in microorganisms as well as in higher animals. However, different plant starches vary in the cross-linkages between these basic chains, and this variation can result in more compact molecules that are resistant to digestion. One of the major effects of cooking is that starch granules swell with absorbed water and become more easily digestible. Surprisingly, even members of the cat family, which would not encounter starch in their natural carnivorous diet, can utilize it quite efficiently when it is finely ground. Commercial dry cat foods may contain 20 percent or more starch.

Plant cell walls are constructed principally from cellulose. Cellulose is like starch in that it is made from condensed glucose units, but a different type of linkage between these units allows the chains to lie in flat planes, and vertebrates have no enzymes to digest these linkages. However, herbivorous species have gastrointestinal systems that allow for the bacterial fermentation of cellulose either in a fore-stomach (rumen) or hindgut, which enables the animals to benefit from the metabolites of cellulose, principally short-chain fatty acids. Other polysaccharides in plant cell walls include pectins and hemicelluloses, which give a mixture of sugars, such as xylose and arabinose, upon hydrolysis. These sugars also are fermented by bacteria but are not broken down and digested by animal enzymes. Rigid plant structures contain lignin, a phenolic polymer that is impervious to digestion by both animals and bacteria. Considered together, these materials make up what is called dietary fibre.