Title: BIOC 460 - DR. TISCHLER - LECTURE 24
1BIOC 460 - DR. TISCHLER - LECTURE 24
DIGESTION ABSORPTION OF CARBOHYDRATES
2OBJECTIVES
- 1. Principal dietary monosaccharides and
disaccharides. - 2. General structural features of amylose,
amylopectin, glycogen and cellulose. - 3. Products of starch digestion by pancreatic
a-amylase. - Four glycoprotein brush-border enzyme complexes,
their roles in digestion of carbohydrate,
products of their actions. - How the primary nutritional monosaccharides
(glucose, fructose, and galactose) are moved from
the intestinal lumen to capillaries. - 6. Tissue where each facilitative glucose
transporters (GLUT 1 - to GLUT 5) is found describe their basic
function
3Figure 1. Structures of the most common dietary
monosaccharides.
4Figure 1. Structures of the most common dietary
disaccharides.
5Figure 2. General structure of amylopectin
(principal plant polysaccharide) and glycogen
(principal animal polysaccharide)
6TYPES OF POLYSACCHARIDES
Glycogen animal CHO storage similar to
amylopectin except more branches
Cellulose linear chain with ?1,4 glycosidic
bonds
7Figure 3. Digestion of carbohydrates Top
Early digestion depicting the intake of dietary
carbohydrates and the role of salivary amylase
8Figure 3. Digestion of carbohydrates Middle
Luminal digestion showing the combined roles of
the stomach, pancreas and intestine.
9Figure 4. ?-Amylase, of salivary or pancreatic
origin, cleaves amylopectin to produce all of the
products shown
10Figure 4. ?-Amylase, of salivary or pancreatic
origin, cleaves amylopectin to produce all of the
products shown
11Figure 4. ?-Amylase, of salivary or pancreatic
origin, cleaves amylopectin to produce all of the
products shown
12Figure 3. Digestion of carbohydrates Bottom
Summary of the brush border glycoprotein
complexes containing disaccharidases and
oligosachharidases.
13Table 1. Brush border complexes of the luminal
membrane (brush border).
14- Primary
- defective lactase enzyme at birth
- late onset appears gradually in late teens/adults
- Secondary (acquired)
- consequence of diseases that damage brush border
- tropical sprue bacterial infection
- celiac sprue gluten-sensitive enteropathy
15Patient with celiac sprue
Normal intestinal villi
16Na
Fructose
Glucose
Galactose
Lumen of
also glucose
intestine
Na
Intestinal
SGLT-1
GLUT-5
Epithelial cell
Brush border
Na
Fructose (glucose)
Na
2K
ATP
3Na
2K
contraluminal membrane
ADP Pi
2K
3Na
to capillaries
2K
3Na
facilitated diffusion
Na,K-ATPase
Na
-
dependent co
-
transport
Figure 5. Absorption of monosaccharides
17Table 2. Types of Facilitative Glucose
Transporters
Transporter Tissue Function
GLUT-1 many mammalian tissues (e.g., red blood cell, brain, kidney) glucose uptake
GLUT-2 Liver pancreas ?-cell, contraluminal membrane of intestinal cell high capacity low affinity regulates insulin release by pancreas liver removes glucose after a meal
GLUT-3 many mammalian tissues especially brain, kidney glucose uptake
GLUT-4 skeletal muscle, heart, adipose insulin-stimulated glucose uptake helps prevent hyperglycemia through insulin action
GLUT-5 small intestine primarily fructose absorption