Lecture 30: Absorption Flashcards

1
Q

What is process of absorption?

What are the key concepts about absorption

A

= Passage of substances form the lumen across the lining of the intestine not the interstitial fluid and then into the blood or lymph —-> unidirectional

  • the intestine has excess capacity for absorption
  • the intestinal epithelium serves as a selective barrier for absorption
  • water absorption is dependent on nutrient and Na+ absorption
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2
Q

What are the sites of absorption?

- Describe each site

A
  1. Mouth,oesophagus and stomach = minimal absorption
  2. Small intestine = main site of absorption due to massive SA
    - 90% water and sodium
    - All nutrients
  3. Large intestine
    - 9% of water and sodium
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3
Q

What factors affect absorption?

A
  1. Motility
  2. Available surface area
    - rate of absorption is proportional to SA
  3. Passage of molecules across available surface area
    - Paracellular: Btw cells
    - Cellular: Across cell membranes
  4. Removal of substance from the interstitial space
    - maintain gradient by removing substances from space to ensure unidirectional movement
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4
Q

There are two pathways in which molecules can cross the intestinal epithelium and arrive in the interstitial space.
What is the paracellular pathway?

A
  • Does not require solutes to cross membrane, rather they pass between cells
  • Small molecules
  • Cross through tight junctions
  • Relatively non selective: if you are small enough you can cross through
  • Is PASSIVE requires a gradient
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5
Q

What is the cellular pathway?

A
  • Solutes must cross two cell membranes
  • Cell membranes are lipid bilayers = substances which are not lipid soluble require transport proteins
  • tranport proteins = ACTIVE selective transport
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6
Q

How is water absorbed across the intestinal epithelium ?

A

OSMOSIS
- passive moment of water form the lumen into the blood
- osmotic gradient set up by the absorption of salts and nutrients
= nutrient coupled sodium absorption

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7
Q

How is sodium absorbed?

What are the 3 mechanisms for active absorption of Na+?

A
Passive = via paracellular pathway
Active = requires transporters to cross the cell membrane ---> there are 3 transport mechanisms
1. Na+ transport alone
2. Na+ absorption coupled to glucose
3. Na+ absorption coupled to amino acids
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8
Q

How does Na+ absorption coupled to glucose enable absorption of carbohydrates?

A

Active transport = co-transport with Na+ = enters epithelium
Passive transport = down conc gradient = leaves epithelium
Monosaccharides: glucose, galactose, fructose

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9
Q

How does Na+ absorption coupled to amino acids enable absorption of proteins?

A
Active = Co-transport with Na+
Passive = diffused down conc gradient via paracellular pathway
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10
Q

How are products of fat digestion absorbed?

A

Products of fat are lipid soluble can diffuse through the membrane —> micelles deliver lipids to brush border for diffusion
After diffusion monoglycerides are re-synthesised back into TACs. They are then packaged into chylomicrons which exist the cells via exocytosis and enter bloodstream through lymph channel

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