Exam 3 NSCI 4123

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What type of amino acids are absorbed the fastest?

*BCAAs & essential AA are absorbed fastest

How is nitrogen balance/status calculated?

*[protein intake (g) x0.16]-[UN+2g] *[protein intake (g) x 0.16]-[UUN+4g]

During protein digestion, after the proteins have left the stomach, what takes place in small intestines?

*acidic chyme stimulates the release of secretin & cholecytokinin *secretin stimulates the release of pancreatic juice *cholecystokinin stimulates the secretion of pancreatic enzymes *enterocytes produces several peptidases that aid in protein digestion

What is albumin?

*an indicator of visceral protein status *levels decline with protein malnutrition *half life is 14-18days (not a reliable indicator of short-term protein intake)

What is BUN?

*blood urea nitrogen *used to clinically assess nitrogen balance

What can inborn errors of metabolism lead to?

*can lead to an accumulation of compounds with harmful effects *can also lead to deficiencies of substances that are essential for normal growth and development

What are complete proteins?

*contain all essential AAs in the approximate amounts needed by humans *most ANIMAL products are complete protein sources *soy, chia, quiona, are complete protein

What is the half life for albumin?

14-18 days

If an average adults has ~5 liters of blood and a circulating cholesterol level of 150 mg/dL, how much total cholesterol do they have circulating in their blood?

150mg/dLx50dL=7500mg

How much supplementation of glutamine has been shown to improve patient outcomes after infection or trauma?

20-25 g/day can improve patient outcome

If that same adult then consumes a meal containing ~300 mg cholesterol, what would their circulating cholesterol concentration be assuming all of it was absorbed?

7800/50=156 mg/dl

True/False: An essential amino acid cannot be synthesized by the body, and must be acquired through diet

TRUE

True/False: If BUN levels are LOW- ammonia is not being converted- ammonia levels would be high

TRUE

True/False: In healthy individuals nitrogen excretion should be equal to nitrogen intake

TRUE

True/False: Peptide absorption requires transport system PEPT1

TRUE

True/False: Peptide transport is more rapid than AA transport

TRUE

True/False: Protein degradation can occur through lysosomal degradation (autophagy) or proteosomal degradation

TRUE

True/False: Protein synthesis & protein degradation account for ~10-25% of resting energy expenditure

TRUE

True/False: Removal of AA helps maintain pH of blood- if they are not removed then the pH levels would rise

TRUE

True/False: Skeletal muscle prefers branched-chain amino acids

TRUE

True/False: The LARGER the side chain the HIGHER the affinity for absorption

TRUE

True/False: The brain has high capacity for active transport of AAs

TRUE

True/False: With renal failure individuals ability to get rid of urea is compromised

TRUE

True/False: Zygomens are inactive but activate with break down of peptide bonds?

TRUE

True/False: animal-based proteins are associated with greater gains in lean body mass in individuals participating in resistance training

TRUE

True/False: creatinine clearance can be used as an estimator of kidney function

TRUE

True/False: excess ammonium ions can be used to make non-essential AA

TRUE

True/False: plant-based proteins are typically limiting in one or more essential AA

TRUE

True/False: the liver derives ~50% of its energy from AA oxidation

TRUE

True/False: when energy needs are insufficient the catabolism of skeletal is increased in response to an elevation in plasma glucagon levels

TRUE

If a patient has elevated alanine aminotransferase, what would that indicate to medical staff?

elevated ALT levels suggest liver damage

If a patient presents elevated aspartate aminotransferase levels, what would that indicate to medical staff?

elevated AST levels would indicate heart damage

What cellular process can AA carbon skeleton be used for?

energy production (not ideal), glucose production, ketone body production, cholesterol production, fatty acid synthesis

Intestinal cells use AA for _______________ _________, ____________ ___ ____________, & ____________ ___________ _________________

energy production, synthesis of proteins, and nitrogen containing compounds

What are transamination reactions catalyzed by?

enzymes called aminotransferase

What is creatinine an important component of?

important component of the energy compounds phosphocreatine

True/False: AA absorption requires carriers

true

What are the end products of protein digestion?

typically di & tripeptides & free AA

Which amino acid becomes conditionally essential in patients with PKU?

tyrosine

Which of the following is a conditionally essential amino acid?

tyrosine

What are examples of fairly common conditionally essential AA?

tyrosine, cysteine, proline, arginine, and glutamine

What occurs after urea is formed?

urea travels through the blood to the kidneys for excretion in urine

What are nitrogen losses measure in?

urine, feces, and skin

What are inborn errors of metabolism?

when some component of BCKAD is mutated an leads to a build up of a-keto acids which leads to acidemia which will lower blood pH and can lead to neuro toxicities *a diet recommendation would be very LOW or NO branched AA

What are pancreatic enzymes secreted as?

zymogens

How much of total body protein is turned over each day?

~1-2%

What percentage of protein is nitrogen?

~16%

How much nitrogen is lost in feces, skin, nails, or hair?

~2g

How much of all essential AA are absorbed from the diet by the intestines?

~30-40%

How much protein do endogenous sources produce?

~70g

What percentage of dietary glutamate do the intestines use?

~90%

True/False: Albumin play an important role in the maintenance of osmotic pressure.

TRUE

What would you expect for BUN levels during renal failure?

BUN levels would be HIGH

What are BCAAs most commonly taken up and used by?

muscle

What is maple syrup urine disease?

*defect in one of the proteins in the branched-chain ketoacid decarboxylase complex *inability to catabolize isoleucine, *leucine*, valine *clinical manifestations include seizures, acidosis, coma, and death

What are endogenous proteins?

*desquamated mucosal cells & digestive enzymes

What is the function of phosphocreatine?

*functions as a storehouse for high energy phosphate *phosphocreatine replenishes ATP in muscle that is contracting *this can help preserve muscle glycogen stores

Amino Acid carbon skeletons can be used for?

*glucose production *fatty acid synthesis *energy production *ketone bodies

What are the storage forms for glucose and for lipid?

*glucose storage form: glycogen *lipid storage form: triaglycerol

What would be recommended for an individual with early stage vs advanced renal failure?

*in early stages a low protein would likely be recommended *advanced renal failure dialysis would be necessary to remove urea nitrogen

What is the glucose-alanine pathway?

*in fasted/catabolic state glutamate will transfer its amino group to pyruvate to form a-ketoglutarate *alanine is released into blood & travels to liver *once alanine is in the liver it undergoes transanimation back to pyruvate- which is used to make glucose *glucose is released into the blood where it can be taken up and used by muscles *muscles cells can use the glucose through glycolysis and generate pyruvate *pyruvate can be used by transamination to reform alanine

What can lead to hepatic encephalopathy and how is it treated?

*increased nitrogen levels *treated by targeting GI tract to promote ammonia diffusion and by promoting the colonic bacteria to DECREASE ammonia production

What occurs during deamination of AA?

*involves the removal of an amino group with NO transfer to another compound *amino group is released as AMMONIA and is converted to AMMONIUM and is taken to the liver to be cleared

What is transthyretin?

*pre-albumin & retinol binding protein *indicators of visceral protein status *half life of 2 days and 12 hours

What is histamine?

*synthesized from histidine *mediates attention and alertness

What is serotonin?

*synthesized from tryptophan * an excitatory neurotransmitter & potent vasocontrictors *affects sleep, mood, appetite, & cognitive functions

What is catecholamines?

*synthesized from tyrosine *dopamine helps coordinate movement (disregulation causes tremors in parkinsons) *norepinephrine is important for alertness and sleep *epinephrine functions as hormone with effects on nutrient metabolism

What are incomplete proteins?

*tend to have too little of one or more essential AAs (limiting AA) *most plant-based proteins are incomplete protins

What would you expect for BUN levels during liver disease?

BUN has decreased levels & ammonia levels are high

True/False: nonessential AA are absorbed faster than essential AA

FALSE- essential are absorbed faster than nonessential

True/False: the urea cycle is an energy producing process

FALSE- it is an energy CONSUMING process

True/False: Transamination reactions are important for essential AA synthesis.

FALSE- transamination is important for NON ESSENTIAL synthesis

True/False:Advanced liver disease results in increased urea synthesis

FALSE0 advanced liver disease results in DECREASED urea synthesis

True/False: AA catabolism generates a significant amount of ammonia

TRUE

What are the 9 essential amino acids?

PVT TIM HLL 1. Phenylalanine 2. Valine 3. Threonine 4. Tryptophan 5. Isoleucine 6. Methionine 7. Histidine 8. leucine 9.lysine

True/False: 24 hour urinary creatine secretion is compared against a standard based on height * a value of 60-80% of standard suggest moderate skeletal muscle depletion *40-59% suggest moderate skeletal muscle depletion *<40% is considered a SEVERE loss of skeletal muscle

TRUE

What is BCKAD?

a large mutlienzyme complex that requires cofactors: thiamin, niacin, magnesium, and panthoenic acid

What does deamination produce?

a-keto acid

What is a conditionally essential amino acid?

aa can become conditionally essential if an essential AA is limiting (not getting in diet) or if the metabolism of an essential AA is impaired

How are the majority of AA absorbed?

absorbed as peptides

What is kwashiorkor?

adequate consumption but insufficient protein intake

What is sarcopenia?

age-related loss of muscle mass and function

What are the major categories for sources of amino acids?

animal products, plant products, endogenous proteins

What percentage of animal proteins are digestible? What about plants?

animal proteins ~90-99% plant proteins ~70-90%

What does muscle preferentially catabolize?

aspartate, asparagine, glutamate, leucine, isoleucine, & valine

Where does AA interdependence of organs begin?

beings with intestinal cells because they are the first cells in the body to receive dietary AAs

How would hypoglycemia be the primary concern with both carbohydrate disorders and fatty acid disorders of metabolism?

blood glucose levels drop because glycogen isn't being broken down anymore

Why is both too much and too little protein a major concern with urea cycle disorders?

both would result in increased nitrogen accumulation

What occurs during the catabolism of branched-chain a-keto acids?

branched-chain a-keto acids are catalyzed by branched-chain a-keto acid dehydrogenase (BCKAD)

What is glutamate dehydrogenase?

can use ammonium ion & a-ketoglutarate to make amino acid glutamate

What is glutamine sythetase?

can use an ammonium ion and glutamate to make the amino acid glutamine

In a _________ state, glucagon levels increase, and there is a net breakdown of protein.

catabolic

What occurs during amino acid catabolism?

catabolism of skeletal muscle contributes gluconeogenic substrates made available to the liver to synthesis & export glucose to maintain plasma glucose levels during periods of fasting

What is marasmus?

chronic reduced access to food

Within the first 3 hours after consuming a cholesterol containing meal, which lipoprotein will be transporting the majority of the dietary cholesterol?

chylomicrons

What are neurotransmitters?

compounds generated in the body that transmit signals from a neuron to a target cell across a synapse

What is the most likely fate of alanine during a fasted or catabolic state?

converted to pyruvate for glucose production

What are the functional roles of protein?

enzymes, hormones, structural elements (actin & myosin in skeletal muscle and fibrous proteins (collagen in skin, bones, and teeth)), buffers, fluid balancers, immunoprotectors, transporters

What scenario would creatinine levels not be contraindicated for use as an indicator of muscle mass?

extremely fit individuals

What are the preferred energy substrate at rest?

fatty acids

Where is glutamine formed and where does it go after formation?

formed in the muscle and released into the blood for transport & is used by other muscles

What is body comp influenced by?

gender, age, race, and genetics

Infection or trauma significantly increases the use of which amino acid?

gluatmine

What hormones promote muscle protein catabolism?

glucagon, epinephrine, and cortisol

Histidine is transanimated to a-ketoglutarate and is thus described as a _________?

glucogenic amino acid

What is the primary source of energy for intestinal cells?

glutamine

What is glutamine used for in extrahepatic tissue (like skeletal muscle)?

glutamine is used for ammonia transport

What are the functional roles of nitrogen-containing nonprotein compounds?

glutathione, carnitine, carnosine, choline, purine & pyrimidine bases, creatinine

What AA act directly as neurotransmitters?

glycine, taurine, aspartate, glutamate

What are examples of plant product amino acid sources?

grains, legumes, nuts, & seeds

Which protein is an indicator of iron status in the blood?

hemoglobin

Which disease state is caused by increased blood nitrogen levels?

hepatic encephalopathy

An individual on an extremely high protein diet would likely have ________ BUN levels.

increased

What would be recommended for someone in negative nitrogen balance?

increased carbohydrate and protein intake

What increases protein synthesis?

ingestion of food and physical activity

What hormone typically increases protein synthesis?

insulin

To maximize AA uptake would administration of individual amino acids or intact proteins be more effective?

intact proteins

What is transamination of AA?

involves the transfer of an amino group from one AA to an a-keto acid (amino acid carbon skeleton)

What is an example of a clinical scenario in which the urea cycle might be impaired?

kidney failure, liver failure,

What organ is responsible for ridding the body of nitrogenous waste that would otherwise accumulate in plasma?

kidneys

What is renal failure?

kidneys failure in which kidneys lose the ability to remove waste and balance fluids

What occurs once creatinine is formed?

leaves the muscle and is excreted in the urine

Elevated levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) would indicate damage to which organ?

liver

What are common causes for decreased BUN levels?

liver failure, positive nitrogen balance, and in pregnant women

Urea is formed in the _______ and removed by the ________

liver; kidney

What dietary recommendations might you make to restore a patient's elevated creatinine levels back to normal?

low protein diet

What are examples of animal product amino acid sources?

meat, poultry, fish, eggs, & dairy

If an individual takes in 65 g protein, has a UUN output of 9.9 mg/ml, and a 24 hour urine volume of 1,000 ml would they be in positive or negative nitrogen balance?Remember, nitrogen status = Nitrogen intake - UUN + 4 g

negative

The primary function of the urea cycle is to remove __________ from the body?

nitrogen

What does a-keto acid help remove?

nitrogen

Where does AA absorption primarily occur?

occurs primarily in the duodenum and jejunum

In which form are the majority of amino acids absorbed?

peptides- more rapid as well

During pregnancy, nitrogen balance should be __________?

positive

during pregnancy nitrogen balance should be ________?

positive

What is the end product of protein digestion?

primarily large poly peptides along with some oligopeptides and free amino acids which are emptied into the small intestine

What formula do you use to convert grams nitrogen into grams protein?

protein (g)= nitrogen (g) x (100/16) OR protein (g)= nitrogen(g) x (6.25)

What are common causes for increased BUN levels?

renal disease, excessive protein catabolism

What is the primary therapeutic treatment for an individual with an amino acid disorder?

restrict intake of the problematic amino acid

What are urea cycle disorders?

results in impaired capacity of the body to excrete nitrogen in the form of urea

In which of the following scenarios would urinary creatinine secretion would be elevated?

sepsis

What AA act as biogenic amines?

serotonin, catecholamines, and histamine

Though most AAs are taken up and catabolized by the liver, branch chain AAs are taken up by ___________ ?

skeletal muscle

What does glutamine stimulate?

stimulates mucosal cell proliferation

Protein digestion begins in the _____ via the action of ________

stomach; HCl

What forms creatinine?

the cyclization of creatine and phosphocreatine forms creatinine

What is the main site for essential AA catabolism?

the liver

What is the primary site for most amino acid uptake?

the liver

Where does the urea cycle function?

the liver

Primary storage form of amino acids in the body?

there is not storage form of AA in the body

What occurs when peptides are taken into the intestinal cells?

they are broken down to free amino acids which are then released into the blood


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