Title: Digestion and Absorption
1Digestion and Absorption
- Digestion is the process in which complex food
substances (carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids)
are degraded to products that can be absorbed. - Absorption (or uptake) of these products occur
when they are transported into absorptive cells
in the small intestine.
2Organs
- Several major organs contribute to the digestion
and absorption of food substances. They include
the mouth, stomach, small intestine, liver,
pancreas, and the gall bladder. - Each organ is responsible for degrading and/or
absorbing food substances. They contain enzymes
and other substances that allow this process to
occur. - What breaks down where?
- Mouth- carbohydrates
- Stomach- proteins, lipids, (histones)
- Small intestine- proteins, lipids, and carbos, (
nucleic acids). -
3Organs (Cont.)
- Which organ contains which enzyme (or
substances)? - Mouth- amylase, saliva, and mucins
- Stomach- HCl, pepsinogen (pepsin), gastric
lipases, and mucins. - Liver- Bile
- Gall Bladder- Bile (concentrated)
- Pancreas- pancreatic juices (ex. Lipases,
peptidases, (chymo)trypsinogen, amylase, and
etc) - Small Intestine- Bile (from the gall bladder),
pancreatic juices.
4Secretagogues
- Secretogogues regulate substances secreted by the
various digestive organs by acting on receptors
to certain cells. - Three types of secretogogues
- 1.) Neurotransmitters-
- acetylcholine (salivary, gastric, pancreatic
secretions) - 2.) Biogenic amines-
- histamine (stimulates HCl secretion in stomach)
- 3.) Hormones-
- aldosterone (electrolyte composition of saliva)
- gastrin (stimulates HCl and pepsinogen)
- cholecystokinin (gall bladder contraction,
pancreatic secretions, inhibits gastric
motility)
5Secretagogues (cont.)
- Secretin (helps neutralize stomach acids by
stimulating pancreatic secretion of NaHCO3) - vasoactive intestional peptide (VIP)
(stimulates NaCl secretion in small intestine) - Question Would a combination of gastrin
inhibition and the presence of a histamine analog
cause an increase or decrease in stomach pH? - Ans Increase. Inhibition of gastrin and
histamine lead to decreased HCl production.
6Carbohydrate digestion absorption
- Carbohydrate digestion involves the enzymatic
degradation of di-, tri, and polysaccharides to
monosaccharides (glucose, fructose, galactose). - Digestion begins in the mouth with salivary
amylase (hydrolyzes ? 1-4 bonds). - Polysaccharides are then further broken down by
pancreatic amylase ( also hydrolyzes ? 1-4 bonds)
in the small intestine. - Final degradation occurs on the surface
(brushborder) of the absorptive cells in the
jejunum. The brushborder secretes
amylo-1,6-glucosidase (hydrolyze ? 1-6 bonds),
lactase, sucrase, and maltase.
7Carbohydrate digestion absorption (cont.)
- Once carbohydrates are broken down into
monosaccharides, the are then absorbed into the
intestinal cells by facilitated (membrane
carrier) or active transport (membrane carrier,
Na, and ATP). - Fructose facilitative transport
- Glucose and galactose active transport
- Lactose intolerance Caused by deficiency in
lactase. Lactose is not hydrolyzed and
accumulates in the intestine where it is
fermented by intestinal microorganisms.
8Carbohydrate digestion absorption (cont.) and
Protein digestion absorption
- Question How would a deficiency in
amylo-1,6-glucosidase effect carbohydrate
absorption? - Ans. Any polysaccharide containing an ? 1-6 bond
will not be hydrolyzed and therefore will not be
absorbed by the intestinal cells. - Protein digestion involves the enzymatic
degradation of proteins to amino acids, di-, or
tri- peptides. - Digestion begins in the stomach with the
interaction with pepsin (active form of
pepsinogen which is cleaved by HCl).
9Protein digestion absorption (cont.)
- Further proteolytic cleavage occurs in the
intestinal lumen by pancreatic trypsin,
chymotrypsin, elastase, and carboxy peptidases.
These enzymes are only active in the intestine
and are activated by trypsin. - Trypsin is activated by enteropeptidase and
trypsin. - Final degradation occurs on the membrane of the
intestinal microvilli by the action of
aminopeptidases. - Carboxypeptidases and aminopeptidases
exopeptidases - Endopeptidases trypsin, chymotrypsin, and
elastase. - Protein absorption occurs through active
transport.
10Protein digestion absorption (cont.)
- Question How would a significant decrease in
trypsin production effect overall protein
digestion and absorption? - Ans. A significant decrease in trypsin will lead
to a decrease in protein digestion and absorption
because trypsin is the key enzyme that is
responsible for activating pancreatic proteases.
11Lipid digestion and absorption
- Lipid digestion is the enzymatic degradation of
fats (TAGs) to monoacylglycerols and fatty
acids. - Degradation (lipolysis) begins in the stomach
with (slow acting) gastric lipases. - Pancreatic lipases and bile are mixed with
hydrolyzed product (TAG) in the duodenum. The
bile emulsifies the fat into fat droplets
(miscelles) while the action of colipase and
pancreatic lipase act on the product to produce
monoacylglycerol and 2 fatty acid chains. - Monoacylglycerol and long chain fatty acids are
packaged into mixed micelles (cholesterol, bile
salts, and fat soluble vitamins) and diffuse
across the cellular membrane (of the jejunum). - Fatty acids with 10 carbon atoms are absorbed
across the membrane without mixed micelle
formation.
12Nucleic Acid digestion and Absorption
- Nucleic acid digestion occurs when DNA or RNA is
degraded to nucleosides - Occurs in the duodenum where diesterases
hydrolyzes oligonucleotides to monononucleotides
and phosphatase hydrolyzes mononucleotides to
nucleotides. - Passive diffusion
- Question Will a significant decrease in colipase
cause an increase or decrease in the hydrolysis
of TAG to monoacylglycerol and 2 fatty acids? - Ans Decrease. Colipase is responsible for
stabilizing pancreatic lipase in the fat droplet
which will allow TAG hydrolysis to occur.
13Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- Metabolism consists of two types of reactions
Catabolism Anabolism - Catabolism Process in which macromolecules are
broken up to yield energy and simple organic
compounds. Catabolic reactions mainly involve
oxidative degradation. - Anabolism Process in which simple organic
compounds and energy are used to form
macromolecules. Anabolic reactions mainly involve
reductive biosyntheses. - Free Energy the energy that is capable of doing
work at a constant temperature and pressure.
14Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- Free Energy that is utilized by an organism is in
the form of free energy Carriers ATP, NADH,
NADPH, FADH2, and CoA. - ATP is the universal energy carrier. Its
synthesized during glucose metabolism and is used
to maintain homeostasis (muscle contraction,
active transport, anabolic processes, and signal
transduction). - ATP Structure consists of an adenine base, a
ribose sugar, a negatively charged triphosphate
group. - The triphosphate group contains 2
phosphoanhydride bonds which give ATP its high
energy characteristic. - These anhydride bonds are unstable and require a
Mg2 cation to stabilize ATP. - Mg2 cation is used to prevent electrostatic
repulsion between negatively charged phosphate
groups.
15Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- ATP hydrolysis to ADP Pi occurs at the ?
phosphoanhydride bond and yields a free energy of
7.3 kcal/mol. This is a thermodynamically
favorably reaction, so the ?G will be -7.3
kcal/mol. Remember, the (-) sign is used to
signify that the reaction is thermodynamically
favorable. - ATP, when compared to other high energy
molecules, has an intermediate position when it
comes to the amount of free energy released. As a
result, ATP can function as the principle
phosphate donor and ADP can function as the
principle phosphate acceptor.
16Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- Question
- Acetyl phosphate H2O gt Acetyl Pi ?G
-10.3 kcal/mol - ADP Pi gt ATP H2O ?G 7.3
kcal/mol -
- Acetyl Phosphate ADP gt Acetyl ATP ?G -3.0
Kcal/mol
Thermodynamically favorable
17Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- NADH and FADH2 are electron carriers during the
oxidation of fuel molecules. - During oxidation, NAD and FAD is reduced whereby
NAD accepts 1 H and 2 e- and FAD accepts 2 H and
2e-. - Active site of reduction on NAD is at the
nicotinamide ring and for FAD, the flavin ring. - These two e- carriers will transfer eventually
transfer their electrons to O2 in the e-
transport chain which will ultimately lead to ATP
production. - NADPH is similar to NADH in structure (except for
the phosphate group at the second carbon of the
ribose sugar). NADPH however is involved in
biosynthetic (reductive) pathways as an electron
donor.
18Basic Concepts of Metabolism
- CoA is an acyl or acetyl carrier. The active site
for CoA is the sulfhydryl (SH) group located at
the end of the ?-Mercaptoethylamine unit. - Question
-
- NAD and FAD are_________(oxidized, reduced)
during various catabolic pathways?
19Glycolysis
- Glycolysis is the major pathway of glucose
metabolism. It is the process in which glucose (6
C molecule) is degraded into two 3 C molecules. - This pathway occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell
and is an anaerobic process in itself. The
products, however can be utilized under both
aerobic and anaerobic conditions. - In anaerobic conditions, the final product is 2
molecules of Lactate and for aerobic conditions,
2 molecules of pyruvate are produced. - Conditions in which glycolysis products are used
anaerobically include microorganisms, during
increased glycolysis where the e- transport chain
is saturated with reducing equivalents, and
occasionally in muscle cells during extreme
exercise.
20Glycolysis
- Glycolysis yields a net gain of 2 ATP and
produces 2 molecules of NADH. These two NADH
molecules can either be used in conjunction with
LDH to produce lactate under anaerobic conditions
or enter the mitochondria through the
glycerol-3,P-shuttle under aerobic conditions to
regenerate NAD. - Question What would a eukaryotic cell do if it
were unable to regenerate NAD through the
glycerol phosphate shuttle? - Ans It would utilize the anaerobic pathway to
regenerate NAD.
21Glycolysis
- There are three reactions in the glycolytic
pathway that are irreversible. This
irreversibility is mainly due to a high negative
?G value in the three reactions. - hexokinase (or glucokinase)
- Glucose ATP -----------gtGlu-6-P ADP
- high Glu-6-P can cause inhibition
- not the committed step (intermediate in glycogen
biosynthesis) - PFK
- Fructose-6-P ATP----gtFructose-1,6-bisphosphate
ADP - Committed step
- PFK is inhibited by high ATP and
citrate.
22Glycolysis
-
- Pyruvate Kinase
- PEP ADP -------gt Pyruvate ATP
- Inhibited by high ATP
- not rate limiting (used in amino acid
biosynthesis) - Its also important to know which steps yield ATP
and NADH. The steps that result in the formation
of 3-phosphoglycerate and pyruvate yield ATP and
the formation of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate yield
NADH. - Question What enzyme is responsible for
converting fructose-6-p to dihydroxyacetone-P
and/or Glyceraldehyde-3-p? How many carbon
molecules does the substrate have? Products? - Ans Aldolase. 6. 3
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