Absorption of monoglycerides & fatty acids

Cards (16)

  • What do micelles do?
    Micelles transport fatty acids and monoglycerides to the epithelial cell membrane.
  • What are micelles made up of?
    • Bile salts (which are hydrophobic & hydrophilic)
    • Monoglycerides & fatty acids (which are hydrophobic)
  • Why are micelles needed to transport monoglycerides and fatty acids to the epithelial cell membrane?
    Because monoglycerides and fatty acids are hydrophobic and so will repel water.
  • How do monoglycerides and fatty acids enter the epithelial cell membrane?
    They exit the micelle near the cell membrane and diffuse through it.
  • Why can monoglycerides and fatty acids move through the cell membrane by simple diffusion?
    Because they are lipid soluble and small.
  • What do monoglycerides and fatty acids do in the smooth ER in the epithelial cell?
    They recombine to form triglycerides.
  • What happens to the triglycerides in the golgi body?
    They are associated with cholesterol and lipoproteins to form chylomicrons.
  • What are chylomicrons?
    Large structures which move triglycerides around the body.
  • How do chylomicrons leave the epithelial cell?
    Via exocytosis.
  • Where do chylomicrons go once they have left the epithelial cell?
    They enter the lacteal.
  • What does the lacteal link to?
    The lymphatic system
  • How does the chylomicron leave the lymphatic system and enter the blood?
    Exits through the thoracic duct and into the subclavian vein.
  • What are micelles?
    • Water soluble vesicles formed from fatty acids, glycerol, monoglycerides and bile salts
  • How does lipid absorption work?
    • Micelles deliver fatty acids, glycerol and monoglycerides to epithelial cells of ileum for absorption
    • cross via simple diffusion as lipid-soluble and non-polar
  • How and where are lipids modified in the cell?
    • Smooth ER reforms monoglycerides / fatty acids into triglycerides
    • golgi apparatus combines triglycerides with proteins to form vesicles called chylomicrons
  • How do lipids enter the blood after modification?
    • Chylomicrons move out of cell via exocytosis and enter lacteal
    • lymphatic vessels carry chylomicrons and deposit them in bloodstream