GI 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the small intesting higly adapted for

A

The small intestine is

highly adapted for digestion & absorption

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2
Q

What are the adaptations that the small intestine has that increases absorption and how do they work

A
  1. Plicae (folds)
    Increase surface area
  2. Intestinal epithelium is only 1 cell thick

Presents a minimal barrier to the transfer of molecules from the lumen to the circulatory system

  1. The enterocytes (epithelial cells responsible for digestion and absorption) express enzymes
    These enzymes convert non-absorbable macromolecules to absorbable small molecules
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3
Q

What are incorporated into the plicae to increase surface area further

A

Plicae are covered with finger-like projections called villi (1 mm)
These villi are, in turn, lined with epithelial cells possessing microscopic projections - microvilli

All these adaptations lead to the small intestine having the equivalent surface area to a tennis court

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4
Q

Carbohydrate digestion:

Which GI enzymes are used to breakdown sucrose, lactose and maltose and what are the products formed

A

Sucrase catalyses the conversion of sucrose => glucose + fructose

Lactase catalyses the conversion of lactose => glucose + galactose

Maltase catalyses the conversion of maltose => glucose + glucose

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5
Q

Which transporter moves glucose and galactose into the enterocyte and what is required for this transporter to function

A

The SGLT1 transporter

This transporter is Na+-dependent meaning sodium ions are required to transport glucose. A sodium ion will also bing to the transporter along a chemical gradient and facilitate glucoses uptake into the cell

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6
Q

Which transporter moves fructose and galactose into the enterocyte and what is required for this transporter to function

A

Fructose is transported into the enterocyte by GLUT5

This transporter is Na+-independent meaning it doesnt need sodium ions to function

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7
Q

What do transporters in the basolateral membrane do

A

They transport substrates out of the cell and into the blood

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8
Q

How do we digest proteins

A

Proteins are digested into small peptides & amino acids

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9
Q

Which transporter moves small peptides into the enterocyte and what is required for this transporter to function

A

Small peptides are transported by PepT1 transporter which is

H+-dependent (has a similar principle as SGLT1)

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10
Q

What is the problem with hydrophilic drugs

A

Hydrophilic drugs do not readily enter plasma membrane leading to low drug bioavailability

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11
Q

How do drug designers exploit the high expression of transporters in the gut lumen

A

Absorption via GI uptake transporters is extremely efficient

This has been exploited by drug designers who formulate drugs based on natural products, e.g. peptide-based drugs (substrates for the PepT1)

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12
Q

Give 4 examples of drugs which are PepT1 substrates

A

> Enalapril
α-Methlydopa-phenylalanine
Penicillins
Cephalosporins, e.g. cefadroxil

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13
Q

What is the important feature of peptide like drugs which enables them to be taken up by transporters

A

They posess a peptide bond (which is recognised by the transporter)

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14
Q

Give an example of another important GI transporter which is used by drug designers

A

The OCTN2 - Organic cation transporter

Mechanism: antiporter/exchanger - as a drug enters the cell, a cation leaves

Substrates:
Quinidine, verapamil, imatinib, valproic acid
α-Methlydopa-phenylalanine, valacyclovir

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15
Q

OATP2B1 (Organic anion transporting polypeptide) is another clinically importent drug transporter. What are its substrates

A
Substrates:
Pravastatin
Rosuvastatin
Atorvastatin
Fexofenadine
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16
Q

What is a problem which can occur with GI transporters

A

Transporters can be detrimental to drug absorption. Drug efflux transporters have the opposite action of uptake transporters

17
Q

Give 2 examples of efflux transporters which actively efflux drugs into gut lumen

A

P-glycoprotein (P-gp)

Breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP) both efflux drugs into gut lumen

18
Q

What happens when a drug binds to an efflux transporter

A

Upon binding, atp is hydrolysed into adp and inorganic phosphate and the energy which is released is used to pump the drug out of the cell

19
Q

Give some examples of P-gp substrates (classes of drugs)

A

HIV Protease inhibitors (e.g. Indinavir)
Immunosuppressants (e.g. Cyclosporin-A, Tacrolimus)
Antibiotics (e.g. Erythromycin)
Cardiotonics (e.g. Digoxin)

Verapamil, quinidine, imatinib – which are also OCTN2 substrates

20
Q

Why are most anti-cancer agents not given orally

A

Many anti-cancer agents are P-gp substrates so drug absorption may be affected

21
Q

Why dont we use pgp modulators when administering anti cancer drugs

A

This has been shown to increase toxicity

22
Q

Give examples of clinical P-gp-based drug-drug interactions

A

Digoxin + Ritonavir (increase in digoxin Area Under the Curve hence plasma concentration)
Digoxin + Atorvastatin (increase in digoxin AUC)
Digoxin + Talinolol (increase in digoxin AUC)
This results in side effects of nausea, vomiting, blurred vision