Nutrient Absorption Flashcards

1
Q

Absorption

A

Small intesine - 4m

Folds of Kerckring - 3x (controlled by muscularis mucosa)

Villi - 10x (network of arteries and veins)

Microvilli - 20x (brush border!!! bb enzymes finsish digestion)

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2
Q

Pathway of Nutrients

A

a nutrient must cross 8 barriers to be absorbed!

  1. unstirred layer
  2. glycocalyx
  3. apical cell membrane
  4. cytoplasm of enterocyte
  5. basolateral cell membrane
  6. intercellular space
  7. basement membrane
  8. wall of capillary/lymph vessel
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3
Q

Carb Digestion

A

begins in mouth - amylase breaks down starches to maltose –> Brush border enzymes furhter break down maltose, lactose and sucrose into glucose, galactose and fructose

dietary CHO - 40-60% starch, 30-40% suc/lac, 5-10% glu/fruc

nondigestable polymers = fiber (lignins, pectins, cellulose)

SGLT1 - Na+ and G or G bind (HAS to be a hexose/pyranose in D formation –> F will NOT bind)

  • secondary active transport

GLUT5 - fructose receptor (facilitated diffusion via gradient)

SGLT2 - all sugars can exit!!! (Na exits via Na/K ATPase)

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4
Q

Protein Digestion

A
  • gastric and pancreatic peptidases break down into AAs to be absorbed
  • Pepsin = Proteins to proteoses/peptones/polypeptides
  • Trypsin/Chymotrypsin/Carboxypeptidase/Proteolase = proteoses to polypeptides + AAs
  • Peptidases = polypeptides + AAs to AAs

(Enteropeptidases are ALWAYS there but only active when trypsin comes in and cleaves)

  1. Endopeptidase - trypsin (basic aa), chymotrypsin (aromatic aa), elastase (neutral aa)
  2. Exopeptidase - carboxypeptidase A (aromatic/neutral/aliphatic AA), carboxypeptidase B (basic aa)
  3. INACTIVE FORMS? Add “pro” or “ogen”

gly/arg = basic

trp/try = aromatic

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5
Q

Abnormal Protein Assimilation

A
  1. Pancreatic Insufficiency

pancreatitis or cystic fibrosis (nitrogen in stool malabsorption)

  1. Congenital Absensce of Trypsin

babies can uptake whole protein because they don’t have trypsin/proteolytic enzymes! Phagocytosis due to underdevelopment

  1. Hartnup Disease

cannot absorb NEUTRAL AAs! –> can still be absorbed as di-/tri-peptides but requires oliogpeptide cotransporte

(CANT absorb phenylalanine)

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6
Q

Lipid Digestion

A

FA + glycerol to digest!

(most dietary fat = neutral fat or TGL)

  1. Emulsification
  2. Enzymatic Digestion (to get monoglyc + FA)
  3. Reconstitution of triglyceride and chylomicron formation

Pancreatic Lipase: TGL to monoglyceride + FA

Cholesterolester Hydrolase: FA + glycerol

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7
Q

Chylomicrons

A

Chylomicron = apoprotein + TGL

  1. formed in enterocyte and packaged by golgi
  2. secreted by exocytosis into interstitial space
  3. enter central lacteal of villi and transported to venous system via thoracic duct
  4. lipoprotein lipase works with apolipoprotein C to degrade TGL to FFA + glycerol within chylomicron
  5. Chylomicron remnant is phagocytized in hepatocytes
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8
Q

Intrinsic Factor + B12

A

B12 = cyanocobalamin (released by pepsin from food)

B12 deficiency –> pernicious anemia!

  • Stomach - dietary B12 bound by B12 binding proteins in gastric juice
  • Duodenum - pancreatic proteases digest binding protein, which releases B12 to bind to intrinsic factor (released by parietal cells)
  • Ileum - intrinsic factor + vitamin B12 complex absorbed by endocytosis
  • *** ONLY indispensible substance in gastric juice!
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9
Q

Sodium Absorption

A

Aldosterone increases Na+ reabsorption and K+ secretion in SI and colon!

  • Nutrients? jejunum
  • Alkaline lumen? jejunum (some duod)
  • Electroneutral/electrogenic NaCl? Ileum, Colon
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10
Q

Chloride Absorption

A
  • passive Cl- from lumen (-)? Jejunum & Colon
  • Cl-/Bicarb echange? Proximal colon
  • Electroneutral NaCL? Ileum & Colon
  • Cl- secretion in crypts? duo/je/il/colon
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11
Q

Crypt Cell

A

secretion?

  • cAMP activates Cl- channels
  • Na+ follows electrical gradient
  • H2O moves along osmotic gradient
  • Cholera toxin increases cAMP levels IRREVERSIBLY

RESULT? increased cAMP! (Cl- leaves cell)

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12
Q

Diarrhea

A

4 types

  1. Secretory (cholera toxin)
  2. Osmotic (pancreatic disease, celiac, lactose intolerance, short bowel synd)
  3. Motility related (vagotomy, diabetic neuropathy)
  4. Inflammatory (infections, autoimmune - crohns)

“SOMI”

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13
Q

Cholera

A

cholera toxin stimulates secretion of water and electrolytes from crypt cells.

  • untreated - 50% DIE! treated only 1%
  • treatment = oral rehydration solutions (glucose and electrolytes)
  • Cholera Toxin increases cAMP
  • Rehydration??? Na, K, Cl, Citrate + Glucose
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14
Q

Cystic Fibrosis

A

autosomal recessive disease caused by mutation of chloride transporter (CFTR channel)

  • cholera toxin cannot disrupt mutated CFTR channel
  • However –> cholera toxin causes irreversible opening of CFTR channel and patients DIE from excessive fluid loss
  • SO, cystic fibrosis heterozygotes could be protected from severe cholera
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