19 Nutrition of Carbohydrates, Proteins, and Lipids (2) Flashcards
1
Q
Protein Digestion and Absorption
- although an adult may ingest about 100 g of protein per day, the quantity digested and absorbed/
- Desquamation of mucosal cells contributes/
- the enzymes in the digestive juices contribute/
- The nitrogen remaining in daily fecal material is equivalent to/
- protein digested and absorbed each day
A
- In terms of the quantity of protein digested by the gastrointestinal tract each day, although an adult may ingest about 100 g of protein per day, the quantity digested and absorbed is much greater.
- Desquamation of mucosal cells contributes 35 g
- the enzymes in the digestive juices contribute a further 35 g per day.
- The nitrogen remaining in daily fecal material is equivalent to about 10 g,
- therefore, 160 g of protein are digested and absorbed each day.
2
Q
Protein Digestion and Absorption:
Stomach (p.39)
- Protein digestion first begins in/
- In order to initiate protein digestion, first it must be/
- Exposure to an acidic environment will/
- The stomach therefore provides/
- The gastric chief cells secrete/
- the parietal cells secrete/
- The bicarbonate buffered mucus secretions of the stomach surface cells become a necessity to/
A
-
Protein digestion first begins in the stomach.
- The stomach employs a complementary system of digestion.
- In order to initiate protein digestion, first it must be denatured.
- Exposure to an acidic environment will uncoil 4o and 3o structure.
-
The stomach therefore provides
- the acidic compartment
- a peptidase, pepsin, that is enzymatically active at an acidic pH.
- The gastric chief cells secrete the inactive proenzyme pepsinogen,
- the parietal cells secrete HCl.
- The bicarbonate buffered mucus secretions of the stomach surface cells become a necessity to prevent self-digestion.
3
Q
Protein Digestion and Absorption:
Pancreas (p.40)
- Pancreatic proenzymes are emptied into/
- Pancreatic proenzymes are emptied into/
- Trypsin then activates/
- Pancreatic secretions contain
- Endopeptidases
- Trypsin
- Chymotrypsin
- Elastase
- Exopeptidases
- Carboxypeptidases A and B
- Carboxypeptidase A
- Carboxypeptidase B
- Endopeptidases
A
-
Pancreatic proenzymes are emptied into the duodenum.
- They must encounter enterokinase, an intestinal brush border enzyme that cleaves trypsinogen.
- Trypsin then activates the remainder of the pancreatic enzymes, as well as the brush border enzymes.
-
Pancreatic secretions contain
-
Endopeptidases
- Trypsin: cleaves peptide bonds on the carboxyl side of basic amino acids (lysine and arginine)
- Chymotrypsin: cleaves peptide bonds on the carboxyl side of aromatic amino acids (tryosine, phenylalanine and tryptophan)
- Elastase: cleaves peptide bonds on the carboxyl side of aliphatic amino acids (alanine, leucin, glycine, valine, isoleucine)
-
Exopeptidases
- Carboxypeptidases A and B: zinc-containing metallo-enzymes that remove single amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal ends of proteins and peptides.
- Carboxypeptidase A: polypeptides with free carboxyl groups are cleaved to lower peptides and aromatic amino acids
- Carboxypeptidase B: polypeptides with free carboxyl groups are cleaved to lower peptides and dibasic amino acids
-
Endopeptidases
4
Q
Protein Digestion and Absorption: Small Intestine (p.41-44)
- Peptidases within the enterocyte brush-border glycocalyx/
- About 20 peptidases have been identified, acting as/
- Also present in the lateral edges of the microvilli are/
- Imported di- and tri-peptides are digested in/
- Ninety percent of absorbed amino acids are/
- The remaining 10% are used for/
- Protein digestion and absorption in the small intestine/
A
- Peptidases within the enterocyte brush-border glycocalyx hydrolyze the oligo peptides generated by intraluminal digestion into free amino acid and di- and tri-peptides.
- About 20 peptidases have been identified, acting as endopeptidases, exopeptidases, aminopeptidases and carboxypeptidase.
- Also present in the lateral edges of the microvilli are the transport proteins for amino acid assimilation, often coupled with Na+ import.
-
Imported di- and tri-peptides are digested in lysosomes and exported as single amino acids.
- Ninety percent of absorbed amino acids are released into the portal blood.
- The remaining 10% are used for local protein synthesis and as the major respiratory fuels for the small intestine (especially glutamine, glutamate and aspartate).
-
Protein digestion and absorption in the small intestine
- brush-border membrane peptidases
- brush-border membrane amino acid transporters
- brush-border membrane di- and tripeptide transporters
- intracellular peptidases
- 5.basolateral-membrane amino acid carriers
- basolateral membrane di- and tripeptide carriers
5
Q
Protein Digestion and Absorption:
Portal Vein and Liver (p.45-46)
- Assimilated amino acids are carried away by/
- Amino acids are absorbed first by/
- The liver synthesizes/
- The liver also deaminates amino acids to form/
A
- Assimilated amino acids are carried away by veins that coalesce to become the hepatic portal vein.
- Amino acids are absorbed first by liver transporters.
- The liver synthesizes all the major plasma proteins (albumin, prealbumin, transferrin, apoproteins, fibrinogen, prothrombin and alpha & beta globulins).
- The liver also deaminates amino acids to form ammonia (NH3), which it then combines with glutamine and converts to the less toxic form, urea.
6
Q
Utilization of Protein as an Energy Source (p.47)
- If all the components of the body are considered strictly for their caloric value, in the average 70 kg man, the break down would be:
- the first to be mobilized
- However, after simply an overnight fast, these/
- In mild starvation, liver carbohydrate reserves/
- This limits energy supplies to/
- In the early post absorptive period, 8-16 hours after eating, glucagon levels/
- Although fatty acids are the highest caloric yield per weight, they cannot/
- This means that those organs dependant on glucose metabolism: the brain, red blood cells, peripheral nerves and the renal medulla, must rely on/
- As there are no true reserve stores of protein, only half of the potential caloric value/
- Depletion of total body protein below 50%/
- The first organs to manifest inadequate protein/
- the most common cause of death in an epidemic of starvation is typically/
- A nutritional evaluation for protein status will include/
A
-
If all the components of the body are considered strictly for their caloric value, in the average 70 kg man, the break down would be:
- Triglycerides (adipose) 135,000 Calories
- Protein (viscera & muscles) 54,000 Calories
- Carbohydrate (liver & muscle) 1,200 Calories
-
the first to be mobilized are the glycogen stores of the liver.
- However, after simply an overnight fast, these are nearing depletion.
-
In mild starvation, liver carbohydrate reserves are totally oxidized within three days.
- This limits energy supplies to fats and proteins.
- In the early post absorptive period, 8-16 hours after eating, glucagon levels begin to rise and increase lipolysis for energy, thus sparing proteins.
-
Although fatty acids are the highest caloric yield per weight, they cannot be converted to glucose.
- This means that those organs dependant on glucose metabolism: the brain, red blood cells, peripheral nerves and the renal medulla_, must rely on_ glucose produced via amino acid conversion through gluconeogenesis.
-
As there are no true reserve stores of protein, only half of the potential caloric value can be extracted.
- Depletion of total body protein below 50% is incompatible with life.
- The first organs to manifest inadequate protein are the liver and the immune system.
- the most common cause of death in an epidemic of starvation is typically simple bacterial pneumonia.
- A nutritional evaluation for protein status will include assessments of liver proteins, immune function and lean body mass.
7
Q
Assessment of Protein Nutrition:
Liver (p.48)
- Albumin
- accounts for/
- contributes/
- half-life
- Transferrin
- half-life
- is increased during/
- Prealbumin
- half-life
- can be used to/
- has been more accurately renamed/
A
-
Albumin
- accounts for 50% of the proteins synthesized in the liver, totaling 20 g of albumin per day.
- contributes essential functions as a carrier protein and as the major contribution to plasma oncotic pressure.
- has a relatively long half-life of 20 days in circulation, and does not reflect recent alterations in nutritional status, but rather long-term shifts.
-
Transferrin
- has a half-life of 8.8 days,
- is increased during iron deficiency, which may accompany a decrease in protein intake.
-
Prealbumin
- has a half-life of only 24-48 hours,
- can be used to reflect changes in nutritional status over the short-term as patients receive therapeutic nutritional support.
- has been more accurately renamed transthyretin to reflect its unique functions in the plasma transport of thyroxin and retinol-binding protein.
8
Q
Assessment of Protein Nutrition:
Immune Function and Lean Body Mass (p.49-50)
- Immune function:
- Inadequate protein/
- Absolute lymphocyte counts/
- hypersensitivity reactions using skin test allergens/
- Routine skin allergens tested are chosen based on/
- caution must be added for those individuals with/
- Lean Body Mass:
- The status of lean body mass can be assessed by measuring/
- Creatinine production is directly proportional to/
A
-
Immune function:
- Inadequate protein impairs the immune system.
- Absolute lymphocyte counts decrease significantly,
- hypersensitivity reactions using skin test allergens are delayed.
- Routine skin allergens tested are chosen based on the wide spread exposure to common antigens that could therefore be expected to elicit a skin reaction (tuberculin PPD, mumps, Candida albicans).
- caution must be added for those individuals with disease states that alter the ability of the immune system to respond, such as Hodgkin’s disease or HIV.
-
Lean Body Mass:
- The status of lean body mass can be assessed by measuring urinary creatinine excretion over 24 hours.
- Creatinine production is directly proportional to skeletal muscle mass, provided there is no rapid turnover due to severe sepsis or trauma and verifying appropriate kidney function.
9
Q
Lipids (p.51-53)
- Lipids
- ?
- In a typical Western diet, an average adult consumes/
- These consist primarily of/
- Lipids serve many functions :
- The challenge in the assimilation of lipids
- Absorption
- subsequent distribution of absorbed lipids throughout the body/
A
-
Lipids
- hydrophobic molecules that are more soluble in organic solvents than in water.
- In a typical Western diet, an average adult consumes 120-150 g of lipid a day.
- These consist primarily of triglycerides (with fatty acids of at least 12 carbons) , and lesser amounts of phospholipids, plant sterols and cholesterol.
-
Lipids serve many functions :
- Denser in caloric value than carbohydrates or protein (9 Kcal/g vs 4 Kcal/g) and serve as an important storage form of energy
- Vitamins A,D, E, K are lipids
- Biological membranes are built of lipids
- Signaling molecules are derived from arachadonic acid ( a long-chain fatty acid)
- Volatile lipids make food palatable and tasty
-
The challenge in the assimilation of lipids, is how water–soluble lipolytic enzymes access these hydrophobic molecules for digestion.
- Absorption becomes less of a challenge because the small products of lipolysis readily diffuse across plasma membranes.
- However, subsequent distribution of absorbed lipids throughout the body occurs via a different mechanism than carbohydrates and proteins.
10
Q
Lipid Digestion: Gastric Digestion (p.54-55)
- Digestion of dietary lipids begins/
- Shearing action, especially of the antrum, produces/
- This increased surface area is then/
- Gastric lipase
- functions at/
- is resistant to/
- functions independent of/
- cleaves/
- At the acidic stomach pH, however, the free fatty acids/
- Thus, gastric digestion of lipids/
- In an adult, gastric digestion of lipids/
- In neonates, however, pancreatic maturity/
- Steatorrhea
A
- Digestion of dietary lipids begins in the stomach with the powerful tituration of the gastric musculature.
-
Shearing action, especially of the antrum, produces a fine emulsion of small lipid droplets.
- This increased surface area is then attacked by gastric lipase, a secretion of chief cells in the body/fundus of the stomach.
-
Gastric lipase
- functions at a low pH of 4.0-5.5
- is resistant to proteolytic cleaveage by pepsin (also released by the chief cells).
- functions independent of any cofactors
- cleaves triglycerides at the C1 of the glycerol backbone to produce a free fatty acid and a 2,3-diglyceride.
- At the acidic stomach pH, however, the free fatty acids become protonated and migrate into the center of oil droplets.
- Thus, gastric digestion of lipids is incomplete, and shields the very products that could diffuse through a plasma membrane.
-
In an adult, gastric digestion of lipids is not essential; pancreatic enzymes alone can accomplish lipid digestion.
- In neonates, however, pancreatic maturity is often delayed and there is a much greater dependence on gastric lipase for lipid breakdown.
- Steatorrhea (fat in the stools) is therefore common in newborns as well as in patients with pancreatic diseases.
11
Q
Lipid Digestion: Intestinal Digestion (p.56)
- Acidic chyme/
- Fatty acids now become/
- Fatty acids in the lumen of the duodenum are a potent stimulus for the release of cholecystokinin (CCK):
- Secreted in response to/
- Secondary stimulus for/
- Stimulates/
- Decreases/
- Relaxes/
- Diet can affect CCK release:
- Long-chain triglycerides/
- Medium-chain triglycerides/
- Oleic acid/
A
- Acidic chyme is slowly released into the duodenum where it is neutralized by bicarbonate secretions from the pancreas, biliary ducts and Brunner’s glands.
- Fatty acids now become ionized and shift to the outer surface of the oil droplet, with a few molecules dissociating and diffusing through the intestinal mucosa.
-
Fatty acids in the lumen of the duodenum are a potent stimulus for the release of cholecystokinin (CCK):
- Secreted in response to fats (and polypeptides) in the duodenum
- Secondary stimulus for exocrine pancreas secretion of digestive enzymes (via CCK receptors on afferents nerves to acetylcholine released from the vagus)
- Stimulates gallbladder contraction, releasing bile into the small intestine
- Decreases stomach contractions (slows delivery)
- Relaxes sphincter of Oddi
-
Diet can affect CCK release:
- Long-chain triglycerides increases CCK
- Medium-chain triglycerides increases CCK
- Oleic acid (major FA in olive oil) most potent stimulus for CCK release
12
Q
Lipid Digestion:
Intestinal Digestion:
Pancreatic acinar cells produce two proteins necessary for fat digestion (p.57-58)
- Pancreatic lipase
- active at/
- cleaves/
- Of the pancreatic enzymes, lipase is most susceptible to/
- in a patient with pancreatic diseases/
- colonic bacteria can digest/
- Any reason for fat malabsorption in the small intestine results in/
- Both gastric and pancreatic lipases are inhibited by/
- sphincter of Oddi
- pancreatic colipase
A
-
Pancreatic lipase
- active at a neutral pH.
- cleaves triglycerides at both the 1 and 3 site of the glycerol base forming esterified fatty acids and a 2-monoglyceride.
- Of the pancreatic enzymes, lipase is most susceptible to degradation at an acidic pH.
- in a patient with pancreatic diseases, where delivery of bicarbonate is restricted and lipase becomes inactivated, the earliest clinical symptom is steatorrhea.
- colonic bacteria can digest any remaining carbohydrates, but the anaerobic nature of the colon prevents bacterial oxidation and digestion of fatty acids.
- Any reason for fat malabsorption in the small intestine results in steatorrhea.
-
Both gastric and pancreatic lipases are inhibited by bile salts.
- This is usually not an issue in the stomach, but pancreatic enzymes and bile share a common delivery system through the sphincter of Oddi.
- When bile salts coat the lipid droplet, lipase is displaced.
- The solution for this dilemma is pancreatic colipase.
- Colipase binds to both bile acids and to lipase, locking the digestive enzyme on to the lipid surface.
13
Q
Lipid Digestion:
Intestinal Digestion:
Two other lipolytic enzymes are synthesized by the pancreas (p.59-61)
- Like colipase (but not lipase), they are/
- Phospholipase A2/
- Cholesterol esterase
A
- Like colipase (but not lipase), they are secreted as pro-peptides that become activated within the duodenum.
- Phospholipase A2 cleaves the fatty acid from the 2-position of glycerol.
-
Cholesterol esterase
- a nonspecific enzyme capable of degrading esters of cholesterol, esters of vitamins A, D and E, as well as the total cleavage of all three fatty acids from triglycerides.
- requires the presence of bile salts to assemble into its active tetramer.
14
Q
Lipid Absorption: Bile Salts (p.58)
- Bile again plays an important role in/
- These lipids are truly in solution within/
- Bile mixed micelles
- on their outer face
- easily mix into/
- Critical micellar concentrations of bile are the rate limiting factor in/
A
- Bile again plays an important role in solubilizing the end products of lipid digestion.
- These lipids are truly in solution within the mixed micelles, not merely emulsified into smaller droplets, as was the case in the stomach.
-
Bile mixed micelles
- are hydrophilic on their outer face
- easily mix into the aqueous environment of the brush border, presenting high concentrations of lipid products for uptake.
- Critical micellar concentrations of bile are the rate limiting factor in assimilation of lipids and the fat-soluble vitamins, A, D, E and K.
15
Q
Lipid Absorption:
Enterocyte Absorption & Re-esterification (p.61-64)
- The products of lipid digestion diffuse/
- Fatty acids are re-esterified into/
- Short-chain fatty acids (< 10 C) diffuse/
- Cholesterol uptake is also facilitated by/
- The NPC1L1 is the target of/
- The bile salts remain/
A
- The products of lipid digestion diffuse across the apical membrane of the enterocytes.
-
Fatty acids are re-esterified into triglycerides and onto cholesterol.
- FA + CoA + ATP –> FA-CoA + AMP + PPi (fatty acyl CoA synthetase)
- FA-CoA + 2-monoglyceride –> TG (fatty acyl CoA transferase)
- FA-CoA + cholesterol –> cholesterol ester (ACAT)
- Short-chain fatty acids (< 10 C) diffuse directly into the portal blood and are carried by albumin.
- Cholesterol uptake is also facilitated by a specific carrier, the Niemann Pick C1 Like1 (NPC1L1) transporter.
- The NPC1L1 is the target of ezetimibe, a recently approved drug that blocks uptake of cholesterol from the small intestine.
- The bile salts remain behind in the intestinal lumen, until the terminal ileum, where a specific enterocyte receptor binds and transcytoses the bile