Digestion & Absorption Flashcards

1
Q

General characteristics of digestion and absorption

A
  • blood ==> villi via arteriole ==> capillaries beneath epithelial cells
    • villus also has venule and lacteal (lymphatic vessel)
  • nutrients ==> venule
  • fat products ==> lacteal
  • huge SA of intenstinal epithelium aids in absorptions
    • plicae circulares
    • villi
    • microvilli
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2
Q

Enzymatic role in digestion (general)

A
  • proteolytic enzymes/other pancreatic enzymes are secreted as zymogens or pro-enzymes
    • @ stomach: pepsinogen ==> pepsin via stomach acid
    • @ duodenum:
      • trypsinogen ==> trypsin via brush border enteropeptidase
      • other pro-enzymes ==> active form via trypsin
  • enzymes @ saliva, stomach, upper small intestine ==> convert nutrients to small polymers
  • enzymes @ brush border ==> convert polymers to monomers
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3
Q

Mechanism of carbohydrate digestion

A
  • plant starch = glucose polymer w/a-1,4 and a-1,6 linkages
    • amylase hydrolyzes a-1.4 links==> maltose and a-Dextrins
    • free glucose is never product of amylase digestion
    • brush border enzymes convert polysaccharides to monomers
      • SI (sucrase-isomaltase)
      • MGA (maltase-glucoamylase)
  • cellulose = b-1,4 linked polymer
    • cannot be digested
      *
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4
Q

Carbohydrate substrate/Brush-border enzyme/Product

A
  1. a-Limit dextrin ==Sucrase-isomaltase (SI) breaks 1,6 linkages==> Glucose
  2. Maltotriose ==Maltase-Glucoamylase (MGA)==> Glucose
  3. Lactose==Lactase==>Glucose
  4. Sucrose==Sucrase==> Glucose
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5
Q

Absorption of carbohydrates

A
  • Na+-dependent glucose transporter (SGLT1)
    • located @ brush border
    • transports glucose and galactose (w/Na+) from lumen ==> cytosol [apical]
  • Na+-independent fructose transporter (GLUT5)
    • facilitative glucose transporter
    • fructose from lumen ==> cytosol [apical]
  • Na+-independent fructose transporter (GLUT2)
    • transports all three monosaccharides from cytosol ==> blood [basolateral}
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6
Q

Characteristics of lactose intolerance

A
  • caused by absence of brush border enzyme lactase
  • unabsorbes lactose ==> water into intestinal lumen ==> osmotic diarrhea
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7
Q

Mechanism of protein digestion (general)

A
  • protein breakdown occurs between stomach and small intestine via:
    • gastric, pancreatic, enterocyte brush-border and cytoplasmic peptidases
  • categories of enzymes: endopeptidases, exopeptidases, brush-border proteases
    • also: gastric vs. pancreatic proteases
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8
Q

Mechanism of protein digestion @ stomach

A
  1. chief cells secrete pepsinogen
  2. @ pH 1 - 3: pepsinogen ==> pepsin
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9
Q

Mechanism of protein digestion @ small intestine

A
  1. trypsinogen ==> trypsin via brush border protease enterokinase
  2. Activation of all other precursors by trypsin
  3. Trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase, carboxypeptidase A & B all hydrolyze protein to amino acids and small polypeptides
  4. The brush border proteases hydrolyze oligopeptides to amino acids
  5. Pancreatic proteases digest themselves and each other
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10
Q

Endopeptidases vs. Exopeptidases

A
  • endopeptidase = hydrolyze inner peptide bonds
    • Pepsin - aromatic amino acids
    • Trypsin - arginine (R) and lysine (K)
    • Chymotrypsin - aromatic amino acids
    • Elastase - neutral aliphatic amino acids
  • exopeptidase = hydrolyze single amino acids from C-terminus
    • Carboxypeptidases A
    • Carboxypeptidases B
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11
Q

Characteristics of brush border proteases

A
  • Aminopeptidase is an exoprotease that removes one amino acid at a time from the N(amino)-terminus
  • Dipeptidyl aminopeptidase removes dipeptides from the N-terminus
  • Dipeptidase converts dipeptides to amino acids.
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12
Q

Major pancreatic proteases

A
  • **secreted as precursors
  • Trypsinogen
  • Chymotrypsinogen
  • Pro-elastase
  • Pro-carboxypeptldase A
  • Pro-carboxypeptidase B
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13
Q

Mechanism of protein absorption

A
  • apical transport via Na+-dependent co-transporter
  • di- and tri-peptides absorbed intact
  • amino acid carriers =
    • neutral
    • basic
    • acidic
    • proline/glycine transporter
  • w/in enterocytes, peptides hydrolyzed to amino acid by cytoplasmic peptidases
  • amino acids ==> blood via facilitated diffusion @ basolateral membrane
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14
Q

Mechanism of fat digestion

A
  • major dietary lipid = triglyceride
    • insoluble in water; cannot be efficiently absorbed
  1. fat droplets emulsified by bile salts and lecithin to form smaller particles ==>
  2. increased SA for digestion by lipase and colipase (colipase helps ancor lipase to drops)
    1. triglycerides ==> monoglycerides + fatty acids
  3. after lipase digestion; products are solubilized in bile-salt micelles
    1. w/hydrophillic groups contacting outside and hydrophobic groups contacting inside
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15
Q

Mechanism of fat absorption

A
  1. Micelles move towards enterocytes/brush border
  2. lipids eventually contact cell membrane ==> diffuse passively into cell
  3. @ cytoplasm: triglycerides resynthesized
  4. triglycerides repackaged into lipoprotein particles = “chylomicrons”
    1. also contain phospholipids, cholesterol, and apolipoproteins
  5. chylomicrons packaged into secretory vesicles @ golgi ==> exit via exocytosis ==> lacteals
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16
Q

Characteristics of steatorrhea

A
  • steatorrhea = excess fat loss in stool
    • due to inadequate triglyceride digestion
  • w/fat malaborption comes fat-soluble vitamin malabsorption
    • ==> deficiency @ vit A, D, E, K
17
Q

Mechanism of absorption of water/electrolytes @ upper small intestine

A
  • H2O flows readily across intestinal epithelium and is absorbed isotonically (follows solute absorption)
  • Na+ absorbed via co-transport w/nutrients
    • Cl- follows [electrical drive] via paracellular pathway
    • H2O follows [osmotic drive] via paracellular pathway
18
Q

Mechanism of absorption of water/electrolytes @ ileum

A
  • ileum performs special absorption tasks (bile salts and vitamin B12) and continues to absorb H2O
  • Cl- absorbed via transcellular pathway
    • via Cl-/HCO3- exchange @ apical membrane
19
Q

Mechanism of absorption of water/electrolytes @ colon

A
  • no sugars/amino acids absorbed
  • Na absorption via apical Na+ channels (epithelial sodium channel, ENaC)
    • Aldosterone ==> increased Na+ absorption (+ increased K+ secretion) ==> increased H2Oabsorption
20
Q

Mechanism of absorption of water-soluble vitamins

A
  • absorbed either by co-transport with Na+, or by passive diffusion
  • absorption is virtually complete in the upper small intestine
  • exception = vitamin B12
    • absorbed @ distal ileum in a complex with intrinsic factor
    • brush border membrane of ileal enterocytes contains a specific receptor for the B12-IF complex.
    • Impaired absorption of B12 ==> pernicious anemia
21
Q

Water soluble vitamins vs. fat soluble vitamins

A
  • Water soluble vitamins
    • B vitamins (B12 + IF)
    • vitamin C
    • niacin
    • folic acid
    • pantothenic acid
    • biotin
  • Fat soluble vitamins
    • A
    • D
    • E
    • K