Fat Digestion Flashcards

1
Q

What are the classes of lipid (x5)

A
Fatty Acid
Triacylglycerol
Phospholipid
Glycolipid
Steroids
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2
Q

In what form is the majority of fat we injest

A

Triacylglycerol

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3
Q

Where does fat digestion take place

A

Small intestine

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4
Q

What enzyme is responsible for fat breakdown

A

Pancreatic Lipase

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5
Q

Are triacylglycerols water soluble?

A

No

They are water insoluble (hydrophobic)

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6
Q

Is lipase water soluble

A

Yes (hydrophilic)

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7
Q

What are the essential FA and how are they obtained

A
Linoleic 
Linoleic acid (derives Omega 3) 

In plants, fish and seeds

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8
Q

What is the breakdown product after lipase

A

Monoacyl glycerol and 2x FA

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9
Q

What does bile do

A

Its an emulsifying agent that breaks down large fat droplets into multiple smaller ones

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10
Q

What is a micelle

A

Fat dropets are surrounded by bile salts. They have a hydrophobic centre and a hydrophilic surface

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11
Q

What happens after micelle formation

A

The lipase can breakdown the monoacylglycerol and FA into Glycerol and free FA

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12
Q

How does the acidic microclimate of the gut wall help with FA transport

A

??

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13
Q

What happens to the glycerol and FA when in the Enterocytes

A

They are reformed into Triaylglycerols in the smooth ER and processed in the golgi apparatus for exocytosis into the lymphatic system

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14
Q

What happens to the triacylglycerols before they can be exocytosed into lymph

A

They are packaged with APOB-48 into chylomicrons

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15
Q

What are the constituents of a chylomicron

A

Phospholipid (9%)
Cholesterol (3%)
ApoB (1%)

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16
Q

How does a chylomicron pass into the lacteal

A

Between endothelial cells

It cannot pass through the capillary basement membrane)

17
Q

How are Fat soluble Vitamins absorbed

A

Same absorpitve pathway as fat

18
Q

How are water soluble vitamins absorbed

A

By passive diffusion or carrier mediated transport

19
Q

What are the water soluble vitamins

A

B
C
Folic acid

20
Q

How is Vitamin B12 absorbed

A

Binds to intrinsic factor in the stomach to create complex which is absorbed in the ilem

21
Q

What happens if you dont have intrinsic factor

A

Pernicious (sickle cell) anaemia

22
Q

How long does it take for symptoms of pernicious anemia to proliferate after body stops making intrinsic factor

A

3 years

Liver has a 3 years storage of intrinsic factor

23
Q

How much of digested Iron is absorbed

A

10% daily intake

24
Q

How does Iron enter enterocyte

A

DMT1 receptor on duodenal enterocytes

25
What happens once iron is in the enterocyte,
Some of it is incorporated into ferratin | The rest enters the blood
26
What happens to iron in the blood
It is bound to Transferrin
27
Why is iron bound to transferrin
It is extremely reactive so it prevents the formation of free oxygen radicals
28
What happens to Ferratin levels in Hyperaemia
Increased
29
What happens to Ferratin levels in Anaemia
Decreased (more iron is released to blood)
30
What is the life span of a enterocyte
5 days
31
What happens to the Ferratin contents when an epithelial cell dies
Its contents gets released into the blood.