31. GI Absorption Flashcards

1
Q

How does secondary active transport work?

A

Requires a cotransporter protein to carry the substance across the membrane

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2
Q

What is the key to intestinal absorption?

A

Na+/K+ ATPase on the basolateral membrane

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3
Q

Why is the Na+/K+ ATPase necessary?

A

To move Na+ against its electrochemical gradient (out of cell)

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4
Q

How are carbohydrates absorbed?

Which types are absorbed?

A

Through secondary active transport and facilitated diffusion

Only monosaccharides are absorbed

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5
Q

Which carbohydrates are absorbed fasted?

Which are absorbed the slowest?

A

Galactose
Fructose
Glucose in the middle

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6
Q

What must occur before protein absorption can occur?

A

They must be converted into oligopeptides, which occurs in the stomach and intestine

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7
Q

How are proteins absorbed into the intestinal epithelia?

How are they transported into the blood?

A

Secondary active transport of AAs and di/tripeptides across apical surface
Active transport across basolateral membrane into blood

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8
Q

How are lipids absorbed?

A

Facilitated diffusion

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9
Q

How are lipids transported into lymph?

A

Form into chylomicrons in the intestinal epithelial cells and are transported into the lymph vessels through the basolateral membrane

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10
Q

How are chylomicrons transported into the blood?

A

Lose fatty acids by lipoprotein lipase and become a chylomicron remnant

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11
Q

How are fat soluble vitamins absorbed?

A

By binding to micelles. Require fats

Facilitated diffusion

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12
Q

What vitamins are fat soluble?

A

Vitamin D
Vitamin E
Vitamin K
Vitamin A

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13
Q

How does vitamin D deficiency affect calcium absorption?

A

Decreases by more than 75%

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14
Q

How is Ca2+ absorbed when dietary levels are high?

A

Paracellular, regulated by vitamin D receptor

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15
Q

How is Ca2+ absorbed when dietary levels are low?

A

Absorption facilitated by vitamin D

Facilitated diffusion, vesicular transport

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16
Q

How is B12 absorbed?

A

Requires binding with intrinsic factor which allows for primary active transport into enterocytes

17
Q

What is the function of transcobalmin II?

A

Delivers IF-Cbl complex to non intestinal cells

18
Q

How is glucose transported into the enterocyte?

Why must this occur?

A

By cotransport with Na+

Glucose is polar, cannot cross membrane via diffusion

19
Q

How is glucose transported out of the enterocyte?

A

Via a GLUT-2 transport protein into the capillaries

20
Q

How are water and Cl- absorbed?

A

Paraceullar transport

21
Q

How are phosphates absorbed?

A

Require a Na+ cotransporter