Digestion and Absorption in the GI tract Flashcards

1
Q

Where does carbohydrate digestion begin?

A

in the mouth - ptyalin, an alpha amylase

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2
Q

How much carbohydrate digestion is done by ptyalin?

A

<5% in the mouth, but it will continue to work in the stomach –> leading to 30-40% of starch digestion to maltose

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3
Q

How is carbohydrate digested in the stomach?

A

The action of pytalin continues for about an hour, before it’s inhibits by the gastric acid

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4
Q

Where/how is the majority of the carbohydrate digested?

A

In the duodenum, by pancreatic enzymes
- pancreatic alpha amylase is very similar to the salivary one, but much more powerful
- will digest all the starch

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5
Q

How is carbohydrate absorbed?

A

After digestion by pancreatic amylase, the intestinal epithelial enzymes @ the brush border will break it down disaccharides and small glucose to monosaccharides

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6
Q

What are the breakdown products of lactose, sucrose, and maltose?

A

Lactose = galactose + glucose
Sucrose = fructose + glucose
Maltose = glucose

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7
Q

Where does protein digestion begin?

A

It begins in the stomach.

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8
Q

What happens in the stomach re: protein digestion?

A

Pepsin –> breaks down the collagen fibers, so proteolytic enzymes can penetrate

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9
Q

Where is the majority of the protein digested?

A

Duodenum, for pancreatic proteolytic enzymes

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10
Q

What are the actions of pancreatic proteolytic enzymes?

A

Breaks protein down to di- , tri- peptides and some larger peptides

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11
Q

Where does the majority of the protein gets broken down into amino acids?

A

At the brush border, this is done by peptidases in the enterocytes that line the villi

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12
Q

What are some pancreatic proteolytic enzymes and their actions?

A
  • trypsin & chymotrypsin: split in to small polypeptides
  • carboxypeptidases: cleaves amino acids at the carboxyl tail of polypeptides
  • proelastase: elastase, digests elastin fibers that hold meat together
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13
Q

What happens to protein at the enterocytes?

A
  • brush border: aminopolypeptidase and dipeptidases –> split protein into tri-, di-peptides and some amino acids –> then transported into the enterocytes
  • inside the enterocytes: amino acid linkage specific enzymes breakdown protein into amino acid, then it enters blood
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14
Q

Where is fat digested?

A

in the duodenum - needs emulsification by bile acid and lecithin

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15
Q

What’s emulsification?

A

Process which fat globules are broken into smaller pieces by detergent (bile acids, esp lecithin) –> increases the total surface area
- lipases = water soluble, can only attack fat at their surface

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16
Q

How is triglycerides digested?

A

triglyceride is digested by pancreatic lipase
- can be digested into free fatty acids within minutes after emulsification

17
Q

What’s the role of micelle in fat digestion?

A

Formation of micelle from bile acids accelerates fatty acid digestion.
- hydrolysis of triglycerides = highly reversible, so if there is free fatty acids in the proximity, the reaction will stop
- so micelle packs the fatty acids and monoglycerides to the brush borders of enterocytes

18
Q

How does the absorptive surface of the small intestine increase?

A
  • fold of kerckring (x3)
  • villi (x10)
  • microvilli (x100)
19
Q

How is water absorbed in the intestines?

A
  • by osmosis
  • Na+ in the paracellular space creates osmotic pool –> water absorbed in the tight junctions in the apical borders, then into circulating blood of the villi
20
Q

How is Na+ absorbed?

A

It is actively transported (Na+/K+ pump) from inside the enterocyte to the paracellular space in the basolateral membranes
- this provides a steep electrochemical gradient for Na+ from chyme to move through the brush border into the epithelial cell cytoplasm

21
Q

How does aldosterone influence water absorption?

A

Aldosterone (stimulated by dehydration, secreted by the adrenal gland) enhances water absorption, along with other ions such as Cl-
- most prominent at the colon

22
Q

What happens in diarrhea?

A

In the large intestines, toxins from cholera and other bacteria can stimulate secretion of large amounts of NaCl and water

23
Q

How is calcium absorbed?

A

It’s actively absorbed in the intestine, with the aid of vitamin D
- parathyroid hormone will activate vitamin D at the kidneys; activated vitamin D enhances Ca2+ absorption

24
Q

How is carbohydrate absorbed?

A

once it’s broken down into monosaccharides –> most abundant = glucose
- glucose: active co-transport with Na+ via the SGLT1 from lumen into the enterocyte, then it’s facilitated diffusion via GLUT2 from inside the cell through the basolateral membranes
- galactose is absorbed the same way as glucsoe
- fructose has it’s own facilitated diffusion via GLUT5 from lumen into the cell, but also uses GLUT2 to exit into the paracellular space
- some fructose is converted to glucose in the cytoplasm

25
Q

How is protein absorbed?

A

Protein, once is broken down to di- , tri-peptide and free amino acids, uses the same mechanism as glucose transport
- Na+ co-transport
- a few amino acids has their own special membrane transport similar to fructose

26
Q

How is fat absorbed into the enterocyte?

A

Fats = soluble in the enterocyte border
- some are recombined into triglycerides in cytoplasm
- a few are further digested into glycerol and fatty acids
- triglycerides cannot freely pass through the enterocytes

27
Q

How is fat absorbed into the body?

A

Triglycerides will enter the Golgi apparatus –> aggregates as globules (cholesterol and phospholipids)
- re-package themselves so the fatty heads are in the middle with the polar tails on the surface –> makes the globules miscible with water
- then globules released from the Golgi apparatus and exocytosed into the basolateral membrane
- enter the lymphatic system via central lacteal of villi
- once in the lymphatics, it’s call a chylomicron
- drains into the thoracic duct