Lipid, Iron, Calcium and Vitamins Flashcards

1
Q

state the problems posed by digestion of fats

A

lipids are either insoluble or poorly soluble - causing special problems for digestion and absorption

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2
Q

how are the problems of digestion of fats overcome

A

emulsified into small oil droplets suspended in water;
via bile salts and pancreatic secretions
gastric churning through narrow pylorus

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3
Q

stabilisation of emulsion droplets

A

by addition of a coat of amphiphilic molecules that form a surface layer on the droplets

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4
Q

amphiphillic molecules on the surface of droplets

A

products of lipid digestion (fatty acids)
biliary phospholipids
cholesterol
bile salts

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5
Q

describe TAG lipase

A

pancreatic lipase is a main lipid digestive enzyme in adults (hydrolyses TAGs)
released in response to CCK, also stimulating bile flow

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6
Q

where is TAG secreted from

A

acinar cells of pancreas (exocrine)

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7
Q

how does pancreatic lipase hydrolyse TAGs

A

at 1 and 3 positions

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8
Q

release of bile salts

A

released into duodenum in bile from gallbladder in response to CCK
act as detergents to emulsify large lipid droplets to small droplets

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9
Q

describe bile salts

A

amphipathic;
hydrophillic - projects from surface of droplet
hydrophobic - adsorbs onto droplets

increased surface area for action of lipase but block access of enzyme to TAGs

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10
Q

failure of bile salt secretion

A

lipid malabsorption

secondary vitamin deficiency due to failure to absorb fat soluble vitamins

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11
Q

colipase

A

amphipathic polypeptide secreted with lipase by the pancreas

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12
Q

role of colipase

A

binds to bile salts and lipase allowing access by rrhe latter to tri- and di-acylglycerols

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13
Q

activation of colipase

A

secreted as inactive procolipase

activated by trypsin

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14
Q

formation of micelle

A

As 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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15
Q

absorption of free fatty acids and monoacylglycerols

A

Transfer between mixed micelles and the apical membrane of enterocytes entering by the cell by passive diffusion and/or membrane fatty-acid translocases, fatty-acid binding protein and fatty-acid transport proteins

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16
Q

absorption of short/medium chain fatty acids

A

diffuse through enterocyte

exit through basolateral membrane and enter villus capillaries

17
Q

absorption of long chain fatty acids and monoacylglycerols

A

resynthesized to triglycerides in the endoplasmic reticulum and are incorporated into chylomicrons (which are then carried in lymph vessels to systemic circulation via thoracic duct)

18
Q

absorption of cholesterol

A

transport by endocytosis in clatherin coated pits by NPC1L1 protein
Ezetimibe binds to NPC1L1, prevents internalization, and thus cholesterol absorption. Used in conjunction with statins in hypercholesterolaemia

19
Q

absorption of calcium

A

passive transport mechanisms - paracellular (whole small intestine)
active transport mechanisms - transcellular (duodenum and upper jejunum)

20
Q

active transport of calcium absorption;

regulation

A

[Ca2+] <5mM –> mainly active absorption

regulated by 1,25 - dihydroxyvitamin (calcitriol) and parathyroid hormone (increase 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 synthesis)

21
Q

daily loss of ion form the body

A

unregulated process:
iron balance within the body, long-term, depends upon tightly regulated absorption of iron across the duodenum which matches losses

22
Q

how is iron lost from the body on the daily

A

urine
sweat
desquamated enterocytes

23
Q

what is dietary ion

A
mainly in oxidised form
present in meat or vegetbales as;
inorganic iron
haem 
ferratin
24
Q

what does iron deficiency cause

A

microcytic anaemia

25
Q

effects of iron excess cause

A

toxic - accumulation in liver, pancreas and heart and molecularly the production of hydroxyl radicals and hydroxide ions

26
Q

absorption of iron

A

PP
reduced iron absorbed across apical membrane (across enterocyte) to basolateral membrane via molecular chaperone
iron oxidised and transported to tissues
haem imported across apical membrane followed by cytoplasmic metabolism to release iron

27
Q

how is oxidation of iron promoted

A

HCl within the stomach
vitamin C
ferric reductase, duodenal cytochrome B (Dctyb) - present on the brush border membrane of enterocytes
gasteroferrin (secreted by gastric parietal cells) reversibly binds Fe2+ -preventing the formation of insoluble anion salts

28
Q

absorption of vitamin B12

A

stomach releases vitamin B12 from protein
haptocorin secreted in saliva 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

29
Q

where is vitamin B12 found

A

not in vegetables - vegans deficiency

30
Q

absorption of fat soluble vitamins

A
requires adequate bile secretion and an intact intestinal mucosa
Incorporated into mixed micelles
passively transported into enterocytes
Incorporated into chylomicrons, or VLDLs
Distributed by intestinal lymphatics
31
Q

examples of fat soluble vitmains

A

vit A, D, E, K

32
Q

absorption of water vitamins

A

similar to those described for monosaccharides, amino acids and di- and tri-peptides.
May be Na+-dependent, or Na+-independent