Lipid digestion, Ca, Fe and vitamin absorption Flashcards
How is fat emulsified so it can be absorbed?
Mouth - chewing
Stomach - gastric churning and squirting through the narrow pylorus - mixing with digestive enzymes from stomach and mouth
Small intestine - segmentation and peristalsis mix the luminal content with pancreatic and biliary secretions
What is the benefit of the emulsified fat droplets?
increase the surface area to volume ratio
larger surface for lipases and other esterases to digest
What is the structure of a the droplets?
Multilamellar vesicles - a hydrophilic coat with - products of lipid digestion, cholesterol, biliary phospholipids, bile salts (when the droplets have progressively been reduced to unilamellar and mixed micelles)
Where do lipases work?
On fat at the water-lipid interface
What occurs in the gastric phase of fat absorption?
gastric lipase (and lingual lipase in saliva) Hydrolyse the triglycerol to give a diacyl glycerol and free fatty acid this phase is particularly important in pancreatic insufficiency
What are the properties of gastric lipase?
- has a pH optimum of 4 - resistant to pepsin
- inactive in duodenum due to high pH
- hydrolyses TAGs at the 3 position
What occurs in the intestinal phase of fat metabolism?
pancreatic TAG lipase, secreted by acinar cells in response to CCK which also stimulates bile flow, mainly hydolyses TAGs at the 1 & 3 positions.
onverts TAGs to 2-monoacylglycerol and 2 free fatty acids
Additional lipases in the duodenum include carboxyl ester hydrolase and phospholipase A2
What is the role of bile salts in fat metabolism?
help emulsify the large lipid droplets to small droplets - increase SA for pancreatic lipase but block the access to the TAGs
- colipase binds to bile salts and lipase allowing access to the TAGs & DAGs
What does a failure to release bile salts results in?
lipid malabsorption - steatorrhoea (fat in faeces)
secondary vitamin deficiency due to failure to absorb fat soluble vitamins (A,D, E and K)
Where does colipase come from?
an amphipathic polypeptide secreted with lipase from the pancreas
secreted as inactive procolipase which is activated by trypsin
How is the size of the lipid droplet decreased to a mixed micelle?
TAGs towards the surface of the emulsion droplets are hydrolysed, they are replaced by TAGs within the core, decreasing droplet size
How are free fatty acids and monoacylglycerols absorbed?
passive diffusion and/or membrane fatty-acid translocases, fatty-acid binding protein and fatty-acid transport proteins
short and medium chains diffuse through ans exit at the basolateral membrane entering the villus capillaries
long chains are resynthesized to TAGs in the endoplasmic reticulum and are subsequently incorporated into chylomicrons
How is cholesterol absorbed?
transport by endocytosis in clatherin coated pits by Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1) protein
What is the effect of ezetimide (a second line drug for hypercholesterolaemia)?
binds to NPC1L1 preventing internalisation of the cholesterol
How is Ca2+ absorbed in the small intestine?
both passive (paracellular - all the way along the small intestine) and active (transcellular - duodenum and upper jejunum) transport mechanisms In chyme the absorption is mainly active as there is a very small concentration of Ca