Transporters in the GI System - Drewes Flashcards

1
Q

What is the general control of the four basic processes in the GI System (digestion, absorption, secretion, motility)?

A
  • Digestion, Absorption – not directly controlled processes
  • Secretion, Motility – under neural and hormonal control
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2
Q

What are the fundamental mechanisms of membrane transport?

A
  • Passive Transport
    • Simple diffuse
      • e.g. alcohol
    • Facilitative diffusion
      • Pores
      • Gated Channels
      • Carrier
  • Active transport
    • Carrier (uses ATP)
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3
Q

How many GLUT transporters are there? What ones are important in the GI system?

A
  • 14 total
  • Important for GI:
    • GLUT2
    • GLUT5
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4
Q

How many transmembrane segments does a membrane transporter typically have?

A

12

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5
Q

What are the specific mechanisms used to absorb nutrients in the GI system (mainly small intestine)?

A
  • Specific, transport of nutrients and water occurs primarily in the jejunum
  • Active (secondary) transport-apical side
  • Carrier-mediated-basolateral side
  • Active (ABC-type)-both sides
  • Significant excess in capacity
    • abundance of transporters
  • Ileum can be called on for absorption
  • Transverse colon reclamation of fluids, electrolytes, and bile acids
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6
Q

What are the two distinct processes that establish an osmotic gradient that pulls water into the lumen of the intestine?

A
    1. Increases in luminal osmotic pressure result from influx and digestion of foodstuffs.
    1. Crypt cells actively secrete electrolytes, leading to water secretion.
      * CFTR and cholera and chloride efflux and diarrhea
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7
Q

What is the single most important process that takes place in the small gut to make absorption possible?

A

establishment of an electrochemical gradient of sodium across the epithelial cell boundary of the lumen

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8
Q

What specific lactate transporter is responsible for transport of butyrate to colonocytes and has been identified as a cancer suppressor gene in the colon?

A

MCT1-monocarboxylic acid transporter-1

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9
Q

What kind of transporters are involved in drug adsorption in the intestinal epithelia?

A
  • Effluxers
    • P-gp = P-glycoprotein
    • MRP = Multidrug resistance associated protein
    • BCRP - Breast cancer related protein
  • Transporters
    • MCT1
    • OATs
    • many others
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10
Q

What additional ways is drug uptake regulated by other than specific transporters?

A
  • Regulatory elements (promoter) controlling protein levels
  • Genetic polymorphisms affecting activity
  • Presence/co-administration of transport inhibitors
    • Drug or diet (grapefruit juice)
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11
Q

What are three different modalities of intestinal nutrient sensing?

A
  • (A) A taste receptor signals in EECs to affect incretin release, which, in turn, affects the expression or membrane availability of transporters in ECs.
    • brain signals to the gut
  • (B) Possible modes of nutrient-coupled electrogenic transport in EECs or ECs.
  • (C) Possible mechanisms by which nutrient binding to metabolic transceptors leads to incretin release (EECs) or changes in gene expression in ECs.
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