digestion + absorption Flashcards

1
Q

what does the salivary glands produce

A

amylase

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2
Q

what is the ilium

A

small intestine

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3
Q

where is amylase produced

A

salivary glands or pancreas

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4
Q

where does the pancreas secrete amylase

A

small intestine

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5
Q

what is the role of amylase

A

hydrolyses starch (carb) / polysaccharide into maltose which is a disaccharide

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6
Q

where are membrane-bound disaccharides found

A

they are present in the membrane of the small intestine

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7
Q

what is the role of membrane-bound disaccharidases

A

to hydrolyse disaccharides eg maltose into monosaccharides eg glucose

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8
Q

examples of membrane-bound

A

maltase, sucrase, lipase

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9
Q

role of lipase

A

hydrolyse lipids to monoglycerides and fatty acids

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10
Q

where is lipase present

A

in the small intestine

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11
Q

adaptations of lipase

A

bile salts - made by liver - emulsify lipids, giving them a large SA, so they’re easily hydrolysed by lipases

produces can remain associated with bile salts to form micelles

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12
Q

micelles travel

A

to ileum and are broken down when in contact with epithelium, products can then diffuse straight into epithelium

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13
Q

proteases role

A

hydrolyse proteins (polypeptides) into amino acids

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14
Q

three types of protease

A

endopeptidase, exopeptidase, and membrane-bound dipeptidases

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15
Q

endopeptidases

A

eg trypsin, chymotrypsin and pepsin

hydrolyse peptide bonds in the middle region of the polypeptide chain

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16
Q

exopeptidases

A

hydrolyse peptide bonds on terminal amino acids

17
Q

membrane-bound dipeptidases

A

hydrolyse dipeptides (2 amino acids condensed together) into 2 amino acids

18
Q

how are amino acids and monosaccharides absorbed into the blood

A

co-transport
there is a high concentration of glucose inside the epithelial cell than in the lumen
there is a lower concentration of Na+ inside the epithelial cell than in the lumen
the co-transport/carrier protein has two binding sites, one for glucose and one for Na+
when both glucose and Na+ bind to the carrier protein, the protein changes its tertiary structure to transport them into the cell

19
Q

what happens to food during digestion and why

A

the large biological molecules are too big to cross cell membranes - cannot be absorbed from the gut into blood

during digestion - large molecules broken down into smaller molecules which can be easily absorbed

polymers -> monomers by hydrolysis

20
Q

what are carbohydrates broken down into to

A

carbohydrates are broken down into disaccharides then monosaccharides

21
Q

what are fats broken down into

A

fatty acids and monoglycerides

22
Q

what are proteins broken down into

A

amino acids

23
Q

what does amylase do

A

convert starch (polysaccharide) into a smaller sugar maltose (disaccharide)

hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds in starch

24
Q

where is amylase produced

A

in the salivary glands and in the pancreas

25
Q

what do lipase do

A

lipase enzymes catalyse the breakdown of lipids into monoglycerides and fatty acids

hydrolysis of ester bonds

26
Q

where is lipase made

A

pancreas

27
Q

what are membrane-bound disaccharides

A

enzymes that are attached to the cell membranes of epithelial cells lining the ileum

help break down disaccharides (maltose, sucrose and lactose) into monosaccharides (glucose, fructose and galactose)

maltase, sucrase, lactase

28
Q

what do bile salts do and where are they made

A

produced by the liver, emulsify lipids - cause the lipids to form small droplets

29
Q

why are bile salts important

A

several small lipid droplets have a bigger surface area than a single large droplet, so increases the surface area that’s available for lipases to work on

once the lipid has been broken down - monoglycerides and fatty acids stick with the bile salts to form micelles

30
Q

what is endopeptidases

A

act the hydrolyse peptide bonds within a protein

trypsin and chymotrypsin are two examples
- synthesised in pancreas and secrete to small intestine

pepsin - released into the stomach by cells in the stomach lining - only works in acidic conditions

31
Q

what are exopeptidases

A

act to hydrolyse peptide bonds at the ends of the protein molecules - remove single amino acids from proteins

dipeptidases are example - work specifically on dipeptides to separate the amino acids that make up a dipeptide by hydrolysing the peptide bond between them
- located in the cell-surface membrane on epithelial cells

32
Q

how are monosaccharides absorbed

A

glucose is absorbed by active transport with sodium ions via a co-transporter protein

galactose is absorbed in the same way using the same co-transporter protein

fructose is absorbed via facilitated diffusion through a different transporter protein

33
Q

how are monoglycerides and fatty acids absorbed

A

micelles help to move monoglycerides and fatty acids towards the epithelium

micelles constantly break up and reform - they can ‘release’ monoglycerides and fatty acids allowing them to be absorbed

whole micelles cannot be taken up across the epithelium
monoglycerides and fatty acids are lipid-soluble so can diffuse directly across

34
Q

how are amino acids absorbed

A

via co-transport, in a similar way to glucose and galactose

sodium ions are actively transported out of the ileum epithelial cells into the blood

creates a sodium ion concentration gradient

sodium ions can then diffuse from the lumen of the ileum into the epithelial cells through sodium-dependent transporter proteins, carrying the amino acids with them