Lipid Digestion and the absorption of Ca and other ions Flashcards

1
Q

What are ingested lipids made up of?

A

Fats / Oils – triacylglycerols (TAG) – 90 % of total – typically long chain fatty acyl esters of glycerol. Fatty acids may be saturated, or unsaturated – ratio is high in animal fats, low in plant fats
Phospholipids (mostly glycerophospholipids e.g. phosphatidylcholine, or lecithin)
Cholesterol and cholesterol esters
Fatty acids

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2
Q

What are the two ways that ingested lipids could be?

A
either insoluble (e.g. cholesterol esters)
or poorly soluble, in water causing special problems for digestion and absorption – only triacylglycerols and cholesterol are considered here

Lumen of the GI tract is an aqueous environment – lipids do not like aqueous environment

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3
Q

Describe the process of digestion?

A

Mouth - lingual phase – chewing
Stomach – gastric phase – contents mixed with digestive enzymes from mouth to stomach
Small intestine –
emulsification by bile synthesised by the liver
Pancreatic lipase, hydrolyses TAGs to monoglyceride and free fatty acids

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4
Q

Where does the first major step of fat digestion occur? What mediates it?

A

stomach – mediated by a lingual lipase and gastric lipase

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5
Q

Describe digestion of triacylgylcerols in the stomach?

A

Heat and movements in stomach mix food with gastric lipase which begins digestion and forms an emulsion

  • Hydrolysis initially slow due to largely separate aqueous/lipid interface
  • As hydrolysis proceeds, rate increases due to fatty acids produced acting as surfactants breaking down lipid globules aiding emulsification
  • Emulsified fats ejected from stomach to duodenum

Gastric lipase is secreted in response to gastrin hormone (from chief cells), and is resistant to pepsin, it also has a pH of 4

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6
Q

Describe digestion in the duodenum?

A

Pancreatic lipase - main lipid digestive enzyme
Aided by bile salts from gall bladder
HCO3- in pancreatic juice neutralises stomach acid - provides suitable pH for optimal enzyme action

Pancreatic insufficiency – absence of pancreatic enzymes
The duodenum is neutral so gastric lipase is inactivated by the time it reaches the duodenum

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7
Q

Describe the mechanism of bile salts?

A

Bile salts secreted in bile from the gall bladder in response to CCK (during meals)
Once it reaches the duodenum it acts as a detergent and helps to emulsify the large lipid droplets to small droplets
Negative charges repel each other so they create a greater droplet

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8
Q

Describe bile salts?

A

amphipathic
Failure to secrete bile salts results in:
Lipid malabsorption - steatorrhoea (fat in faeces)
Secondary vitamin deficiency due to failure to absorb lipid vitamins

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9
Q

How to bile salts effect triclyglycerols? (TAG)

A

Bile salts increase surface area for attack by pancreatic lipase, but block access of the enzyme to the TAG
Problem solved by colipase, an amphipathic polypeptide secreted with lipase by the pancreas – binds to bile salts and lipase allowing access by the latter to tri- and di-acglycerides

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10
Q

Describe colipase?

A

Colipase is secreated as inactive procolipase which is activated by trypsin

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11
Q

Describe the digestion by Pancreatic Lipase that produces 2-Monoglyceride and Free Fatty Acids

A

This occurs in the duodenum – intestinal phase by pancreatic TAG lipase (main lipid digestive enzyme in adults)
Pancreatic lipase secreted from acinar cells of the pancreas in response to CCK which also stimulates bile flow
Full activity requires: colipase co-factor, Ca, alkaline pH, bile salts, fatty acids

Attacks the TAG bonds at the 1 and 3 position

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12
Q

Where are the final products of Lipid Digestion stored in, and released from?

A

Mixed Micelles
The TAGs towards the surface of the emulsion droplets are hydrolysed, they are replaced by TAGs within the core, decreasing droplet size until a mixed micelle results

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13
Q

Describe lipid absorption?

A
  • PASSIVE DIFFUSION
    Transfer between mixed micelles and the apical membrane of enterocytes entering by the cell by passive diffusion and membrane fatty-acid translocases, fatty acid binding protein and fatty acid transport proteins
  • Short chain (i.e. 6 carbon) and medium (i.e. 8-12 carbon ) fatty acids diffuse through the enterocyte, exit through the basolateral membrane and enter the villus capillaries
  • Long chain fatty (i.e. 12 carbon) fatty acids and monoglycerides are resynthesized to triglycerides in the endoplasmic reticulum and are subsequently incorporated into chylomicrons
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14
Q

How are chylomicrons processed?

A

Chylomicron enters systemic circulation into the subclavian vein via the thoracic duct and distributed to tissues
Chylomicron triglyceride metabolised in capillaries (particularly muscle and adipose tissue) by lipoprotein lipase present on endothelial cells
Free fatty acids and glycerol released initially bind to albumen and are subsequently taken up by tissues
Remainder of chylomicron is a chylomicron remnant, enriched in phospholipids and cholesterol
Chylomicron remnant undergoes endocytosis by hepatocytes – cholesterol released to:
be stored
secreted unaltered in bile
oxidised to bile salts

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15
Q

Describe cholesterol absorption?

A

mainly due to transport by endocytosis in clatherin coated pits by Niemann-Pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1) protein
- binding of cholesterol to a protein (NPC1L1) present at the plasma membrane

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16
Q

What drug is used for hypercholesterolaemia?

A

Ezetimibe
- binds to NPC1L1, prevents internalization, and thus cholesterol absorption. Used in conjunction with statins in hypercholesterolaemia

17
Q

Describe the absorption of Ca?

A

Occurs by passive (i.e. paracellular; whole length of small intestine) and active (i.e. transcellular; mainly duodenum and upper jejunum) transport mechanisms

With [Ca2+] in chyme 5 mM absorption is mainly active

Active Ca2+ absorption is regulated by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (calcitriol) and parathyroid hormone (increases 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 synthesis)

18
Q

How is iron absorped into the cell and out of the cell?

A

In: Divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1, aka SLC11A2) – coupled to H+ transport
Out: Ferroportin (aka SLC40)

19
Q

Describe the absorption of Vitamin B12 - cobalamin?

A

Vitamin B12 ingested in food
Salivary glands secrete haptocorin
Stomach acid releases vitamin B12 from food
Haptocorin binds vitamin B12 released in stomach
Stomach parietal cells release intrinsic factor
Pancreatic proteases digest haptocorin in small intestine, vitamin B12 released
Vitamin B12 binds to intrinsic factor in small intestine
Vitamin B12-intrinsic factor complex absorbed in terminal ileum by endocytosis

20
Q

How are fat soluble vitamins absorped?

A

Incorporated into mixed micelles
Usually passively transported into enterocytes
Incorporated into chylomicrons, or VLDLs
Distributed by intestinal lymphatics

21
Q

How are water soluble vitamins absorbed?

A

Transport processes in the apical membrane (similar to those described for monosaccharides, amino acids and di- and tri-peptides)