Carbohydrates and Protein Digestion Flashcards

1
Q

what is digestion

A

enzymatic conversion of complex dietary substances to a from that can be absorbed

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2
Q

how do most digestive processes in the small intestine occur

A

luminal digestion

membrane digestion

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3
Q

how is luminal digestion mediated

A

by pancreatic enzymes secreted into duodenum

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4
Q

how is membrane digestion mediated

A

by enzymes situated at the brush border of epithelial cells (pepsin)

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5
Q

what is absorption

A

the processes by which the absorbable products of digestion are transferred across both apical and basolateral membranes of enterocytes

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6
Q

what are enterocytes

A

absorptive cells of intestinal epithelium

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7
Q

what is assimilation

A

overall process of digestion and absorption

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8
Q

digestion of carbohydrates

A

all dietary carbohydrates must be converted form polysaccharide to oligosaccharide and finally to monosaccharides for absorption

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9
Q

conversion of polysaccharide to oligosaccharide

A

intraluminal hydrolysis of polysaccharide to oligosaccharide

via alpha-amylase (salivary and pancreatic glands)

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10
Q

conversion of oligosaccharides to monosaccharides

A

membrane digestion (at brush border)

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11
Q

function of alpha-amylase

A

endoenzyme;
breaks down linear internal alpha-1,4 but not terminal α-1,4 linkages - no production of glucose
cannot cleave α-1,6 linkages at branch points (in amylopectin) or α-1,4 linkages adjacent to branch points

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12
Q

products of alpha-amylase

A

linear glucose oligomers (maltotriose, maltose)

α-limit dextrins

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13
Q

what are oligosaccharidases

A

integral membrane proteins with catalytic domain that faces the lumen of the GI tract
e.g. lactase, maltose

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14
Q

role of lastase

A

has one substrate - breaks down lactose to glucose and galactose

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15
Q

role of oligosaccharidases (exception of lactase)

A

cleave terminal alpha-1,4, linkages of maltose, maltotriose and alpha-limit dextrins (to yield glucose)
hydrolysis reactions performed by maltase, sucrose and isomaltase occur at a faster rate than subsequent transport of the released monomers, but for lactase the rate of hydrolysis is rate limiting in assimilation

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16
Q

special role of maltase

A

degrade the alpha-1,4 linkages in straight chain oligomers up to 9 monomers in length

17
Q

special role of sucrase

A

specifically responsible for hydrolysing sucrose to glucose and fructose

18
Q

special role of isomaltase

A

only enzyme that splits the branching alpha-1,6 linkages of alpha-limit dextrins

19
Q

final products of carbohydrate digesiton

A

monosaccharides;
glucose
galactose
fructose

20
Q

where are final products of carbohydrate digestion absorbed

A

duodenum and jejunum

21
Q

process of absorption of the final products of carbohydrate

A

2 steps;
entry and exit from enterocytes via apical and basolateral membranes, respectively
exit for all monosaccharides is mediated by facilitated diffusion by GLUT2

22
Q

how are glucose and galactose absorbed

A

via secondary active transport mediated by SGLT1;

sodium dependent

23
Q

how are fructose absorbed

A

via facilitated diffusion mediated by GLUT5

24
Q

how are oligopeptides transported across the apical membrane

A

via the H+/oligopeptide co-transporter, PepT1

25
where are oligopeptides hydrolysed
within cytoplasm
26
how are oligopeptides hydrolysed
hydrolysed to amino acids via peptidases within enterocyte
27
how do amino acids exit the enterocyte
via the basolateral membrane by sodium independent transporters