Topic 59 - Electrolyte cycle of intestinal canal, water transport, iron absorption Flashcards
1
Q
Words to include in electrolyte cycle of intestinal canal
A
- Reabsorption
- Digestive secretum
- ECF
- Homeostasis
- Small intestines
- Large intestines
- Osmotically
- Glucocorticoids
- Aldosterone
- Na+/K+ pump
- Na+
- Lumen
- Enterocyte
- Na+/K+ pump
- Na+-Cl- co-transport
- Aldosterone
- K+
- Mucosa cells
- Interstitial lumen
- Electromechanical gradient
- Ca2+
- Duodenum
- Proteins
- Amino acids (lysine / arginine)
- Citrate
- 1,25-OH-D-hormone
- Fatty acids
- Absorption
- Mg2+
- Reabsorption
- MgSO4
- Hyperosmosis
- Diarrhea
- Proteins
- Calcium complex
- Cl-
- Passive diffusion
- Absoprtion
- Na+/Cl- cotransporter
- HCO3-
- Pancreatic juice
- Intestinal secretion
- Saliva (ru)
- Buffer
- Absorption
- H+
- Carbonic acid
- Water
- CO2
- Lipid soluble
2
Q
Words to include in water transport
A
- GI secretion
- Small intestines
- Osmosis
- Absorption
- Reabsorption
- Lumen
- Hyperosmotic
3
Q
Words to include in iron absorption
A
- water-nonsoluble complex
- pH
- HCl secretion
- Fe3+
- Fe2+
- Absorbed
- Transferrin
- Enterocyte
- Duodenum
- Jejunum
- Fe transport
- Transferrin-iron complex
- Tf-Fe receptor
- Endocytosis
- Ferritin
- Absorption
- Enterocytes
- Irreversible
- Apoferritin
4
Q
Topics to include in the essay
A
- Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
- General
- Na+
- K+
- Ca2+
- Mg2+
- Cl-
- HCO3-
- Water transport
- Iron absorption
- Transferrin
- Ferritin
5
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
Reabsorption
A
- Reabsorption of digestive secretion delivered into the proximal part of the intestines is a critical function of the GI-tract
- Reabsorption:
- Starts in the distal section of the small intestines
- Ends in the first part of the large intestines
-
Glucocorticoids (small and large intestines) and aldosterone (only colon) regulates the Na+ level by increasing its reabsorption
- When Na+ is absorbed, K+ secretion increases
6
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
Na+
A
- Na+ in lumen almost entirely reabsorbed
- Low IC Na+ concentration maintained by Na+/K+ pumps on the basolateral side of the enterocytes
- Na+ uptake on the luminal side of the enterocytes, facilitated by aldosterone:
- Na+-Cl- co-transport
- Co-transport of Na+ with organic substances
- Na+ absorbed on its own
7
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
K+
A
- Moves either:
- Into mucosa cells
- Out towards the blood
- Into the interstitial lumen
- Based on its electrochemical gradient
8
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
Ca2+
A
- Absorption in duodenum
- Influenced by:
- Proteins
- Amino acids (lysine/arginine)
- Citrate
- 1,25-OH-D-hormone
- Fatty acids inhibit Ca2+ absorption → form calcium complexes
9
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
Mg2+
A
- Low Mg2+ reabsorption in the upper region of the small intestines
- But absorption occurs here
- Proteins facilitates its transport
10
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
Cl-
A
- Absorbed by passive diffusion in the initial region of the small intestines
- Absorption of Cl- follows Na+ movement (Na+/Cl- cotransporter)
11
Q
Electrolyte cycle of the intestinal canal
HCO3-
A
- Source of HCO3-:
- Pancreatic juices
- Intestinal secretion
- Saliva (Ru)
- Role: buffers intestinal fluid
-
Absorption of HCO3- is an indirect process:
- H+ binds to HCO3- in lumen
- Forming carbonic acid
-
Carbonic acid decays into water and CO2
- CO2 is lipid-soluble and absorbed by enterocytes and into blood
12
Q
Water transport
A
- Water will follow the transport of the osmotically bound active substances
- Enters with the food and GI secretion
- The small intestine water transport is mainly regulated by osmosis
- By absorption of digested luminal contents (chyme), contents in the lumen become hyperosmotic
- Water reabsorption occurs
- This diffusion is so rapid, that practically there is no difference in the osmotic conditions in the lumen, it is usually isosmotic
13
Q
Iron absorption
General
A
- Iron transported to the animal by food is generally in water-nonsoluble complexes
- These complexes dissociate at low pH, with the help of gastric HCl secretion
-
Fe3+ reduced to Fe<strong>2+</strong>
- More easily absorbed
-
Fe transporters:
- Transferrin
- Ferritin
14
Q
Iron absorption
Transferrin
A
- Produced by enterocytes of duodenum and jejunum
- Role: Fe transport
- Binds 2 Fe atoms to form transferrin-iron complex
- Receptors on the surface of the brush border (Tf-Fe receptors) bind the transferrin-iron complex
- Cell can take them up by endocytosis
15
Q
Iron absorption
Ferritin
A
- Role: protects against excessive Fe absorption
- Produced in enterocytes
-
Irreversible binds the iron transported into the cell
- If iron can not get out of the cell it will leave the body in the feces, since the enterocytes will detach from the mucosa
-
Apoferrition: ferritin without iron
- Stimulated by iron
- Increased iron → increased apoferritin