Title: Questions 36 - 42
1Questions 36 - 42
236. Fat Digestion
- Which treatment would LEAST likely affect the
uptake of fatty acids into the epithelial cells
of the small intestine after a SINGLE fat meal? - Co-consumption of a drug which prevents emptying
of the gall bladder - Co-consumption of a drug to prevent the formation
of bile salts in the liver - Substituting 50 of the fat in the meal with
Olestra - Co-consumption of a pancreatic lipase inhibitor
with the meal - Co-consumption of a compound that prevents the
formation of micelles
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would prevent efficient digestion of fat
bile salts already in the gall bladder
only half the fat would be available
would not be able to digest the fat
would not be able to emulsify the fat lipase
wont work
337. Chylomicrons
- Which statement BEST DESCRIBES chylomicrons?
- Lipoproteins that carry dietary fat to the
peripheral tissues - Discs of phosopholipid that mop up loose
cholesterol in the blood stream - Milky droplets formed from the churning of a
lipid/salt mixture in the small intestine - Microscopic droplets excreted by tissues that
have too much cholesterol - An emulsion of fat and protein in the stomach
looking good!
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a description of HDL
chyme
no such thing
not sure that this exits
438. Fate of Dietary Fat
- Which statement regarding the disposal of dietary
fat is CORRECT? - Fat is transported around the bloodstream in
micelles made from bile salts - Very Low Density Lipoproteins (VLDL) transport
dietary fat from the intestine to the liver - Unsaturated fat goes to the liver, but saturated
fat goes to the peripheral tissues - Lipoproteins are taken up into cells before being
acted on by lipoprotein lipase - Peripheral tissues encounter dietary fat before
the liver
lipoproteins made from phospholipid
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this is chylomicrons
not distinguished
all the hydrolysis in capillaries
chylomicrons delivered via the lymph
539. LDL metabolism
- What would be a consequence of taking a drug that
inhibited Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) uptake? - A decrease in the rate of cholesterol synthesis
by the peripheral tissues. - An increase in the concentration of LDL in the
bloodstream - Decreased intestinal absorption of cholesterol
- Decreased intestinal absorption of fat
- Prevention of bile salt synthesis
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rate UP, no LDL-chol coming in
seems obvious genetic defect too
no relevance
no relevance
perhaps less, liver takes up LDL?
640. Role of HDL
- Which statement BEST DESCRIBES the role of High
Density Lipoprotein (HDL)? - HDL is formed by the removal of fat from LDL
- HDL is assembled in the peripheral tissues and is
secreted into the bloodstream - HDL is assembled in the peripheral tissues and is
secreted into the lymphatic circulation - A high HDLLDL ratio is positively correlated
with heart disease - HDL is produced by the liver and picks up
cholesterol from the periphery
HDL different LDL already fat depleted
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made in the liver but close
wrong in both ways
opposite but positively unfair really
exactly
741. Essential Amino Acids
- Which statement is CORRECT?
- Essential amino acids are made into protein but
non-essential amino acids are used for energy - Consumption of a large amount of non-essential
amino acids will not counteract insufficient
consumption of essential amino acids - Essential amino acids are only found in animal
products - Aspartate, glutamate and alanine are all
essential amino acids - A deficiency in one essential amino acid intake
will increase the storage of the other 19 amino
acids
all proteins contain a mix
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horrid double negative (sorry) but true
no but some plant products deficient in
specific essentials
easy to work out that all are NON-essential
a deficiency in just one aa makes ANY protein
synthesis hard
842. Disposal of excess amino acids
- Which statement BEST DESCRIBES the fate of amino
groups derived from the catabolism of amino acids
in muscle? - The amino groups are mainly excreted from the
muscle as ammonia - The amino groups are mainly excreted from the
muscle as urea - The amino groups become linked to pyruvate for
transport to the liver - The amino groups are stored on pre-existing
proteins by converting glutamate residues in
proteins to glutamine - The amino groups are stored on pre-existing
polynucleotides by converting thymine bases to
cytosine
most come out as alanine
so no
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urea made in liver
yes, aminated pyruvate is alanine
would change the protein function!
similarly crazy!