Nutrient Digestion 1 (Carbohydrates and Proteins) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 6 main principal dietary constituents?

A
Carbohydrate
Protein
Fat
Vitamins
Minerals
Water
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2
Q

What are the 3 hexose sugars?

A

Glucose
Galactose
Fructose

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3
Q

What absorbs monosaccharides?

A

Small intestine

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4
Q

What are disaccharides?

A

2 monosaccharides linked together by glycosidic bond

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5
Q

What happens to disaccharides?

A

Broken down to constituent monomers by brush border enzymes in small intestine

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6
Q

What is lactose?

A

Glucose + galactose

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7
Q

What is sucrose?

A

Glucose + fructose

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8
Q

What is maltose?

A

Glucose + glucose

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9
Q

What is starch?

A

Plant storage form of glucose

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10
Q

What is alpha-amylose?

A

Glucose linked in straight chains

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11
Q

What is amylopectin?

A

Glucose monomers linked by alpha-1,4 glycosidic bods - hydrolysed by amylases (saliva, pancreas)

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12
Q

What is cellulose?

A

Constituent of plant cell walls

Unbranched, linear chains of glucose monomers linked by beta-1,4 glycosidic bonds

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13
Q

Why can’t vertebrates use cellulase to break down beta-1,4 glycosidic bonds?

A

Vertebrates cannot produce cellulase which is the only enzyme that can break down beta-1,4 glycosidic bonds
Vertebrates can only digest through bacteria

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14
Q

What is glycogen?

A

Animal storage form of glucose

Glucose monomers linked by alpha-1,4 glycosidic bonds

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15
Q

What do you need in order to absorb glucose?

A

Sodium

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16
Q

What is SGLT1?

A

Transporter that has a binding site for Na and a binding site for glucose but they need to bind simultaneously to cause a conformational change

17
Q

What is GLUT2?

A

Expressed in epithelial cells - facilitated diffusion process since glucose cannot move out of the cell on its own

18
Q

What happens after sodium and glucose move into the cell?

A

Glucose moves into the blood (via GLUT2)
Na–> blood, potassium moves into cell (via Na-K pump) which creates an osmotic gradient allowing water to travel from lumen –> blood

19
Q

How does fructose move through cells?

A

Fructose moves from lumen into cell via GLUT-5 and moves into blood via GLUT-2
Na not required

20
Q

What are proteins?

A

Polymers of amino acids linked together by peptide bonds with large variations in length

21
Q

What are small proteins classed as and what are they called?

A

3-10 amino acids in length

Called peptides

22
Q

What are the enzymes called that hydrolyse peptide bonds and reduce proteins/peptides to amino acids?

A

Proteases or peptidases

23
Q

How does an amino acid move through a cell?

A

Needs a symporter to pull amino acid into cell
SAAT1 has binding sites for Na and amino acid which binds to both simultaneously which causes a conformational change
Creates water absorption effect due to Na moving onto Na-K pump

24
Q

Describe the process of di/tri-peptides moving into cell?

A

Process which takes peptides instead of full amino acid
H and the dipeptide both move into the cell via PepT1
H moves back out the cell at the same time Na moves in via NHE3
Involves Na-K pump

25
Q

What is it called when a H ion is involved?

A

Proton motive force

26
Q

What is NHE3?

A

Sodium hydrogen exchanger

Takes Na in and H ion out and acidifies it