Nutrient Digestion and Absorption 2 Flashcards Preview

GI > Nutrient Digestion and Absorption 2 > Flashcards

Flashcards in Nutrient Digestion and Absorption 2 Deck (33)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

What form does most of the digested fat take?

A

Triacylgycerol

2
Q

What is responsible for fat digestion?

A

•All fat digestion in small intestine by pancreatic lipase

3
Q

What is the effect of lipase on triacylglycerol?

A
4
Q

Desribe the solubility of triacylglycerol and lipase

A
  • Triacylglycerols present as large lipid droplets which are insoluble in water
  • Lipase = water-soluble enzyme
  • digestion can only take place at surface of droplet - very slow
5
Q

What is meant by emulsification?

A

dividing large lipid droplets into smaller droplets (~1 mm diameter) - increased surface area and accessibility to lipase action.

6
Q

What are the two requirements for emulsification?

A

Mechanical disruption and an emulsifying agent

7
Q

What is responsible for the mechanical disruption?

(The process of changing large lipid droplets into small droplets)

A
  • smooth muscle contraction grinds and mixes lumenal contents. (muscle within muscularis externa)
8
Q

What is the function of an emulsifying agent?

A

•prevents small droplets reforming into large droplets.

9
Q

What are the emulsifying agents?

A

Bile salts and phospholipids

10
Q

What type of molecule are phospholipids?

A

Amphiphatic

11
Q

What portion of the phopholipid is exposed to the water?

A

The polar portion

12
Q

How do these exposed polar portions prevent the reforming of large lipid droplets?

A

Polar portions repel other small lipid droplets

13
Q

What is the funciton of micelles?

A

Enhance absorption of lipase digestion products

14
Q

What is the difference between micelles and emulsion droplets?

A

•Micelles similar to emulsion droplets but much smaller (4-7 µm diameter)

15
Q

What are the components of a micelle?

A

•bile salt + monoglycerides + fatty acids + phospholipids

16
Q

What composes the micelle core?

A

Non-polar portions

17
Q

What happens when micelles breakdown?

A

Release of small amounts of free fatty acids (FFA) and monoglycerides into solution - diffusion across plasma membrane of absorbing cells.

Fatty acids and monoglycerides are in dynamic equilibrium between micelles and solution. The digestion products are held in solution whilst being replenished as they are being absorbed.

18
Q

Look

A
19
Q

What happens to the fatty acids and monoglycerides after they are absorbed by the epithelial cells?

A

They enter the smooth endoplasmic reticulum where they are reformed into triacylglycerols by enzymes located within the SER.

20
Q

What happens to the triacylglycerol formed by the SER?

A

Coated with amphiphatic protein (emulsification) and then transported through the cell in vesicles formed from the sER membrane, they are processed through the golgi apparatus and exocytosed into the extracellular fluid at serosal membrane

21
Q

What is the name given to extracellular fat droplets?

A

Chylomicrons

22
Q

What do Chylomicrons contain?

A

phospholipids, cholesterol & fat-soluble vitamins

and of course triacyglycerol

23
Q

What is larger chylomicrons or micelles?

A

Micells are 4-7 µm diameter

Chylomicrons are ~1 µm diameter

24
Q

What is the movement of chylomicrons?

A

They pass into the lacteal between endothelial cells (they cannot pass through the capillary basement membrane - tight junctions).

25
Q

Summary

A
26
Q

What is the absorptive pathway for fat soluble vitamins?

A

•Follow same absorptive path as fat

(ADEK)

27
Q

What are the water soluble vitamins?

A

B group, C and folic acid

28
Q

How is B12 absorbed?

A

•Binds to intrinsic factor in stomach to form complex which is absorbed via specific transport mechanism in distal ileum.

29
Q

What does B12 deficiency result in?

A

Pernicious anaemia

30
Q

What is the name of the iron carrier protein?

A

DMT1 - divalent metal transporter 1

31
Q

What happens to the iron that passes the brush border membrane?

A

90% gets bound to ferritin (intracellular iron store that gets shed with the enterocyte epithelium every 5 days)

10% passes across the serosal membrane into the blood and binds to transferrin

32
Q

What changes in accordance with the body’s need for iron?

A

Ferritin expression

33
Q
A