2. Introduction to Lipids and Lipoprotein Metabolism (Part I) Flashcards
What is the endogenous source of body cholesterol? Which cells are capable of making cholesterol?
- De novo synthesis from Acetyl-CoA
- All cells in the body are capable of making cholesterol
What are exogenous sources of cholesterol?
- Diet
- Dietary sources are really “excess” cholesterol, as all cells can make cholesterol
What justifies that there is an important need for cholesterol?
- Cholesterol is a very energetically expensive molecule
- But, it cannot be oxidized (can’t get ATP back)
What are statins?
Class of drugs that are competitive inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase
What metabolites does the synthesis of cholesterol produce?
- Various
- They are not solely dedicated to the synthesis of cholesterol
What happens in liver cells after HMG-CoA reductase makes cholesterol?
Cholesterol is released into the blood by hepatocytes
How do statin drugs work?
- Inhibit HMG-CoA reductase by competing with its natural substrate (HMG-CoA)
- Cholesterol synthesis is blocked, lowering levels of cholesterol
How do statins vary?
They look very different, but they are all capable of inhibiting the activity of HMG-CoA reductase
What did this study discover: “Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks of clusters of risk”?
- Child and maternal malnutrition and dietary risks are among the highest risk factors for metabolic disorders
- Cardiovascular diseases, neoplasms, diabetes
- Ample evidence for causation, but people still abuse of certain foods
What transports TG through the bloodstream?
Chylomicrons
Where are certain fatty acids used?
Muscles, liver, heart
What happens when the liver receives TG?
- Repackages it
- TG are transported through the bloodstream via VLDL
What are the two functions of bile acids?
- Emulsification of fats and fat-soluble nutrients
- Activator of bile-salt activated lipase
Where are bile acids found? Where are lipases found?
- Bile acids: small and large intestines
- Lipases: small intestine
What is the function of lipases? Be specific.
Digestion of lipids acquired from the diet (cholesteryl esters, acylglycerols, phospholipids)
What are the four steps to the conversion of cholesterol to bile acids?
- Hydroxylation of the steroid nucleus
- Epimerization of the 3-Beta hydroxyl group
- Saturation of the steroid nucleus
- Side chain cleavage
What happens overall when cholesterol is converted to bile acids?
- Converts the shape of cholesterol from chair-type to a more flat configuration, rendering it POLAR
- Bile acids are amphipathic
- Charged functional groups are on one face of the molecule, uncharged are unable to act with water
Describe the fate of diet-derived lipids in the lumen, when they are absorbed, and they are resynthesized in enterocytes.
- TG –>FA + MG –> TG
- CE –> CH + FA –> CE
- PC –> LysoPC + FA –> PC
- They will bind to transporters for absorption, and will be reassembled in the enterocytes
What is the function of phospholipases?
Breaking down a phospholipid to give you a lysophopholipid and a fatty acid
What transporter brings in free cholesterol?
NPC1L1
What transporters bring in free fatty acids?
- FATP4
- CD36
What transporter is thought to bring in free phospholipids?
MFSD2A
Why are we selective concerning absorption of nutrients?
Because absorption of dietary lipids requires SPECIFIC membrane-bound transporters that are on the surface of enterocytes
Where does the ER process lipids?
- In a specialized compartment in the cell because it is hydrophobic
- In the lumen of ER