Voiceover: The next accessory organ we're going to talk about in the GI tract is the liver. The liver, and that's this big fatty guy right here. Now, the liver has to be one of the coolest organs in the body. It's the only one that you can take a piece of, this small chunk right here, and transplant into a recipient that has cirrhosis or liver failure, and it can grow to become a much larger organ that can sustain the patient. How wild is that? And so to better understand the liver, we'll start by discussing the main functions it's responsible for. The first thing we need to think about is that it's responsible for metabolism, metabolism, and that involves the breakdown of nutrients or catabolism, and I'll just write cat right here, catabolism, as well as the buildup of larger macromolecules, and that's through anabolism. So, catabolism and anabolism are achieved in the liver. The other function the liver is responsible for is storage of these nutrients. \When we're not breaking them down or building them up, we need to have a place for them to hang out, and so, they're responsible for the storage of our carbohydrates, so I'll just write carbs right here, and also mainly our fats, so these two guys, and they're stored in three different ways. First, carbs or fats can be stored as glycogen. Glycogen is just a polysaccharide, so a linkage of a whole bunch of monosaccharides or simple sugars. The other thing that we can store our carbs or our fats as are lipoproteins, lipo meaning fatty and proteins meaning, well, protein, and then lastly, we can also store these guys as triglycerides, triglycerides, which is one of the forms of fat that we ingest in our food. Now, these are two of the major macromolecules we use for energy. The other major macromolecule class that the liver sees are proteins, but these aren't really stored in the liver. Instead, they're processed into molecules like albumin and then cast off into the bloodstream, where they'll float around and carry out other functions, until they need to be retrieved by the liver to be broken down or used for other molecules. The other major process the liver is responsible for is called detoxification, detoxification, and this is one of those awesome scientific terms where the function is in the name. This is where we take toxins and modify them so they can't harm our body. This is achieved mainly by cytochrome P450 enzymes, cytochrome P450, and these are kind of funky enzymes, because unlike the other ones you've probably heard about before, these don't bind a specific single substrate or molecule. If you remember an enzyme like phenylalanine hydroxylase, that's something that will add a hydroxyl group to phenylalanine and only phenylalanine, but cytochrome P450's will take a whole bunch of different substrates and react with them. That's something that's pretty unique to this class of enzymes. Now, because of these cytochrome P450 enzymes, we have a problem when we take medications. In fact, we have a decrease in drug efficacy because of this detoxification process, and what we mean by drug efficacy is the amount of an effect a drug is able to have, and so, if the liver or these enzymes perceive medications that we ingest to be foreign or like toxins, they're going to try and break them down so they don't cause an effect to our body. So, doctors knows this, and because of that, a specific dose must be given to account for the amount of a drug that's going to be detoxified by the liver. And finally, as we'll talk about in a separate video in better detail, the last thing that the liver is responsible for is bile production, bile production, and as you might recall from our discussion on small bowel, bile is needed for the absorption of fats from our food. Okay, so now that we understand what are the main functions of the liver, how does it get all the nutrients that we ingest and absorb from our intestinal tract to be metabolized or stored or detoxified in the liver? Well, let's take a look at the blood supply to the liver. So, one of the things that makes the liver so unique is that it has two separate blood supplies. The first, that comes in from the intestinal tract, is from the portal vein. The portal venous system is another term for it, and the portal vein supplies the liver with nutrient-rich blood, nutrient-rich. So, where do these nutrients come from? Well, food that's absorbed in the intestinal tract will then go through the circulation and end up in the portal vein, to be delivered to the liver for metabolism, and so we consider this blood to be nutrient-rich, but where does the liver get its oxygen from? Well, that's a separate blood source, and that's actually through what's called the proper hepatic artery, the proper hepatic artery, and as the name suggests, this is arterial blood that will be supplying oxygen-rich red blood cells. So great, these are the two different sources of blood that go to the liver. Well, what about blood that leaves the liver? There's one main vessel that carries blood out of the liver, and that's called the hepatic vein. The hepatic vein is the exact opposite as the two other types of vessels we just talked about. It's nutrient- and oxygen-poor. Blood that leaves through the hepatic vein from the liver will circulate back to the heart to receive oxygen, flow past the intestines to receive nutrients, and then return to the liver, either through the portal vein or through the proper hepatic artery. The other output of the liver, that I guess I should mention right now, we'll talk about in more detail in a separate video, is bile, and bile mainly leaves the liver through what's called the common hepatic duct, the common hepatic duct, common hepatic duct that will take bile.