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OPTO 5331 General Pathology and Medicine GI Physiology 2017 Dr. Alan Burns Rm 2168 [email protected] Overview 1. GENERAL ORGANIZATION - Components, Blood Supply, Control and Coordination 2. NEURAL AND CHEMICAL CONTROL - General Organization, Neural Control, Chemical Control, Reflex Control of Motility 3. MOTILITY-General Principles, Chewing and Swallowing, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine,Vomitting, Large Intestine or Colon 4. SECRETION - General Principles, Secretion (Salivary, Gastric, Pancreatic,Bile) 5. DIGESTION & ABSORPTION – General Organization, Carbs, Protein, Lipid, Vitamins, Ions and Water 6. OBESITY 1.1 Components Chewing, Hydrolysis – make bolus and swallow Propel bolus Churning, Hydrolysis, Storage - chyme (gastric juice and partly digested food) Absorption Hydrolysis, Absorption Storage Expulsion 1.2 Blood Supply • GI tract is supplied by splanchnic circulation which also supplies pancreas, spleen and liver • Portal system delivers all GI tract venous blood to the liver • In the liver, blood passes through a second capillary bed where the RES removes bacteria before blood re-enters general circulation 1.3 Control and Coordination • GI motility and secretion is controlled through a complex of sensors and effectors so that digestion and absorption are optimized • GI motility must also be coordinated with secretion from pancreas and gall bladder • Receptors outside and inside the GI tract receive visual, mechanical and chemical stimuli • Receptor activation induces responses through changes in autonomic and enteric nervous systems and through the effect of GI hormones • Understanding GI function requires an understanding of many interrelated reflex loops Overview 1. GENERAL ORGANIZATION - Components, Blood Supply, Control and Coordination 2. NEURAL AND CHEMICAL CONTROL - General Organization, Neural Control, Chemical Control, Reflex Control of Motility 3. MOTILITY-General Principles, Chewing and Swallowing, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine,Vomitting, Large Intestine or Colon 4. SECRETION - General Principles, Secretion (Salivary, Gastric, Pancreatic,Bile) 5. DIGESTION & ABSORPTION – General Organization, Carbs, Protein, Lipid, Vitamins, Ions and Water 6. OBESITY 2.1 General Organization • GI tract motor activity is largely performed by SMCs • Wall of GI tract is multilayered (glands, nerves and muscles) • GI tract has its own nervous system (enteric) • GI tract musculature is primarily smooth muscle. Only upper 1/2 of esophagus and external anal sphincter are skeletal GI Tract Wall Covered by mesothelium • Mucosa (mucous membrane) • Submucosa • Muscularis externa (Peristalsis) Auerbach’s Plexus • Serosa (adventitia) Meissner’s Plexus (Secretion) 2.2 Neural Control • Extrinsic component Parasympathetic nervous system Sympathetic nervous system • Intrinsic component Enteric nervous system 2.2 Neural Regulation sympathetic parasympathetic Motility Motility Secretions Secretions Sphincter constriction Sphincter constriction Gastrin 2.2 Neural Regulation Enteric Plexuses • • • Plexuses are networks of nerve fibers and ganglion cell bodies Interneurons connect afferent sensory fibers with efferent neurons to smooth muscle and secretory cells Local and central reflex pathways (NEXT SLIDE) 2.2 Neural Regulation Enteric plexuses interconnected by fiber tracts Reflex Control of Motility • Reflexes exist within gut to regulate motility • Mechanical and chemical stimuli initiate reflexes • Reflexes are classified by neural systems involved: a. Enteric b. Prevertebral ganglia with sympathetic afferents and efferents c. Spinal cord and brain stem with vagal afferents and efferents d. Combination of a, b and c 2.3 Chemical Control - Peptides • GI peptides divided into 3 classes: hormones, paracrines and neurocrines • Hormones – released by cells distant from their site of action and carried to target cells by the blood (gastrin, cholecystokinin (CKK), secretin, gastrin inhibitory peptide (GIP) and motilin) • Paracrines – released by cells adjacent to target cell and reach target by diffusion (somatostatin and histamine) • Neurocrines – similar to paracrines but released solely by nerves (vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), gastrin-releasing peptide and enkephalins) Summary of Chemical Control in GI Tract Chemical Control – Hormones - FEEDBACK • Gastrin o chyme acidity triggers stomach G cells to secrete Gastrin o Also, Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP; vagus) stimulates Gastrin release o Gastrin increases stomach motility and chyme delivery to duodenum o pH (<3) inhibits Gastrin secretion (negative feedback) • Cholecystokinin (CCK) o chyme fat triggers duodenal I cell CCK secretion o CCK stimulates pancreas to release lipase o CCK also causes gall bladder to release bile into the cystic duct for delivery to the duodenum o CCK slows chyme secretion to give time for digestion Chemical Control – Hormones -FEEDBACK • Secretin o acidic chyme triggers duodenal S cell secretion of Secretin o Secretin stimulates pancreatic ductule cells to release water and bicarbonate which neutralizes chyme o Secretin inhibits Gastrin secretion • Gastric Inhibitory Peptide (GIP) o Fat, CHO and AA trigger duodenal K cell GIP secretion o GIP inhibits acid and pepsin secretion and motility • Motilin o fat and acid trigger endocrine M cell Motilin secretion in the crypts of duodenum and jejenum o Motilin increases gut motility and pepsin secretion Overview 1. GENERAL ORGANIZATION - Components, Blood Supply, Control and Coordination 2. NEURAL AND CHEMICAL CONTROL - General Organization, Neural Control, Chemical Control, Reflex Control of Motility 3. MOTILITY- General Principles, Chewing and Swallowing, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine,Vomitting, Large Intestine or Colon 4. SECRETION - General Principles, Secretion (Salivary, Gastric, Pancreatic,Bile) 5. DIGESTION & ABSORPTION – General Organization, Carbs, Protein, Lipid, Vitamins, Ions and Water 6. OBESITY 3.1 General Principles Interdigestive period - Every 90 min, migrating motor complex (MMC) a strong contraction sweeps through the stomach and intestine - MMC extends to ileum and is triggered by cyclical release of “Motilin” from small intestine; inhibited by food Digestive period - During digestion, the basic electrical rhythm (BER) of SMCs is altered by nerve and chemical control Basic Electrical Rhythm (BER) • Interstitial cells of Cajal (pacemakers) in stomach, small and large intestine undergo spontaneous, rhythmic membrane depolarizations which create a slow wave (BER) • Slow waves are transmitted to smooth muscle cells • Neuronal and hormonal factors do not modify the BER but they do alter the SMCs likelihood of generating multiple APs in response to slow waves P=Perstalsis; S=storage; M=Mixing 3.2 Chewing and Swallowing Chewing (mastication) • Mechanoreceptors detect food and send signals to swallowing center in brain stem which sends rhythmic stimulatory signals to pharyngeal striated muscles • Functions Breaks food into small pieces Mixes food with saliva - mucins lubricate - digestion begins (amylase and lipase) Muscles of the Tongue • Intrinsic muscles (longitudinal, transverse and vertical) change tongue shape and size • Extrinsic muscles attach to bone and change tongue movement 3.2 Chewing and Swallowing Swallowing (deglutition) •Three phases: Oral (buccal) - voluntary Pharyngeal - involuntary Esophageal – involuntary propulsion (peristalsis) 3.3 Esophagus Muscle: Upper 1/3 skeletal, Middle 1/3 skeletal + smooth, Lower 1/3 smooth Upper esophageal sphincter (skeletal muscle – voluntary control) Lower esophageal sphincter (smooth muscle – involuntary control) and the crural diaphragm constitute the intrinsic and extrinsic sphincter, respectively. 3.4 Stomach Two regions with different motility - “Orad” (fundus and proximal body) - “Caudad” (distal body and antrum) Functions 1) Orad, thin walled, relaxes and receives food bolus from esophagus 2) Caudad, thick walled, churns food bolus to fragment food and mix it with chyme before propelling it into duodenum 3.4 Stomach 3.4 Stomach Gastric Emptying • Approx 3hrs • Regulated by duodenal contents • Regulation achieved by hormones • Migrating myoelectric complex 3.5 Small Intestine Duodenum – receives chyme; most digestion (breakdown) occurs here Jejenum – most absorption of nutrients occurs here Ileum – Vit B12, A, D, E and K; important absorption 3.5 Small Intestine • Functions : Mixing chyme with digestive enzymes Bringing digested material in to contact with mucosa Propelling unabsorbed material in to large intestine • Slow waves (BER) • Two types of contraction: - Segmentation - circular muscle - Peristaltic - longitudinal muscle • Muscularis mucosa – thin innermost layer of intestinal muscle - contraction throws mucosa into folds • Migrating myoelectric complex - extends to Ileum 3.5 Small Intestine longitudinal SMC circular SMC 3.6 Vomitting • A reflex contraction of stomach and small intestine to rid the body of noxious or toxic substances • Can also occur in response to other stimuli (dizziness,tickling in back of throat, or painful injury) • Controlled by vomitting center in Brain medulla • Involves skeletal (abdominal wall, diaphragm) and smooth muscle (esophagus, stomach and intestine) • Begins with contraction of stomach and small intestine (reverse peristalsis) combined with skeletal muscle to propel food out of the mouth 3.7 Large Intestine • Receives 500-1500ml chyme/day • Ileocecal sphincter relaxes intermittently to allow entry 3.7 Large Intestine • Enteric nervous system regulates two basic motility patterns: segmentation and mass movement • Segmentation mixes and makes intestine appear divided into small interconnected sacs (haustra) • Mass movement pushes contents significant distance 3.7 Large Intestine haustra • 1-3 times/day coordinated peristaltic contraction occurs (mass movement) propelling contents of one large intestine segment into the next downstream segment • Segmentation stops in the area of the large intestine undergoing mass movement and the haustra disappear and the contour of the colon is smoothened smoothened 3.7 Large Intestine • Defecation: Mass movement propels material from sigmoid colon in to rectum • Rectal distension initiates involuntary relaxation of internal anal sphincter (defecation reflex) as well as rectal peristalsis • Defecation reflex involves enteric nervous system and parasymp. • Rectal contraction signals urge to defecate. • If convenient, external anal sphincter (skeletal muscle) relaxes (voluntary) • If inconvenient, relaxation is not initiated, rectum accommodates and reduces intensity of defecation reflex, and internal anal sphincter contracts Overview 1. GENERAL ORGANIZATION - Components, Blood Supply, Control and Coordination 2. NEURAL AND CHEMICAL CONTROL - General Organization, Neural Control, Chemical Control, Reflex Control of Motility 3. MOTILITY-General Principles, Chewing and Swallowing, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine,Vomitting, Large Intestine or Colon 4. SECRETION - General Principles, Secretion (Salivary, Gastric, Pancreatic,Bile) 5. DIGESTION & ABSORPTION – General Organization, Carbs, Protein, Lipid, Vitamins, Ions and Water 6. OBESITY 4.1 General Principles • GI secretions function to lubricate, protect, sterilize, neutralize and digest • Secretions - specialized cells lining GI tract, pancreas, liver and gall bladder • Secretions – generated by cell clusters connected to the GI tract lumen • Secretion rate regulated by autonomic nerves and hormones 4.2 Secretion- Salivary 3 paired Salivary glands (acinar and ductal cells) - Parotid glands (serous...alpha-amylase) - Submandibular and Sublingual glands (mixed serous & mucous) - amylase remains active until caudad stomach Von Ebner’s gland - Lingual lipase converts triglycerides to FFAs - Lipase remains active until duodenum Salivary Glands • 1L of saliva/day • Functions Digestion (amylase, lipase) Dilution and buffering Lubrication (mucus) • Composition : Water Electrolytes α-amylase lingual lipase mucins Salivary Glands (Acinus) • Formation Tonicity pH Step 1 acinar cells produce primary secretion Step 2 ductal cells modify electrolyte composition • Neural stimulation by parasympathetic (+++) and sympathetic (+) Salivary Glands • Acetylcholine and norepinephrine released from parasymp and symp post-ganglionic nerves, respectively, increase: 1) 2) 3) 4) Ion transport activity Blood flow Cell metabolism Myoepithelial cell (surround acinii) contraction • • Chewing, taste and smell increase nerve activity and secretion Sleep, fear and fatigue decrease nerve activity and secretion 4.2 Secretion - Gastric • Major components : Hydrochloric acid (HCl) Pepsinogen (pepsin) Intrinsic Factor* Mucus • Gastric glands (oxyntic and pyloric) • In oxynitic gland, parietal and chief cells secrete into a common gland • Surface epithelial cells *necessary for Vit B12 uptake in the ileum 4.2 Secretion - Gastric • Distinct regions of the stomach produce 4 secretions • Proximal (80%) of stomach (oxynitic gland area) • Remaining (20%) of stomach (pyloric gland area) pyloric Histamine ECL cells Somatostatin Somatostatin (to circulation) D D cells cells Gastric Juice • Regulation of Pepsin Secretion: - Secreted in response to vagal nerve stimulation - Acid is not only necessary for pepsin formation but also for enhancing its secretion Gastric Juice HCl secretion • Required to convert pepsinogen to pepsin • Regulation: - Acetylcholine (parasymp), histamine and gastrin stimulate acid (HCl) secretion - Somatostatin inhibits acid secretion • Mechanism • Phases : Cephalic Gastric Intestinal Gastric Juice • Acetylcholine released by enteric parasymp. neurons • Histamine (paracrine) released from ECL (enterochromaffin-like) cells • Gastrin (hormone) released by G cells in gastric epithelium • Somatostatin (paracrine/hormone) is secreted by endocrine D cells of the gastric epithelium Gastric Juice HCl secretion • Required to convert pepsinogen to pepsin • Regulation: - Acetylcholine, histamine and gastrin stimulate acid (HCl) secretion - Somatostatin inhibits acid secretion • Mechanism • Phases : Cephalic Gastric Intestinal Gastric Juice - Mechanism of HCl secretion *During a meal, the elevated acid secretion increases bicarbonate levels in venous blood leaving the stomach (alkaline tide) Gastric Juice Termination of HCl secretion • Gastric pH too low • Acidic chyme in duodenum • Fat digestion products Gastric Juice HCl secretion • Required to convert pepsinogen to pepsin • Regulation: - Acetylcholine, histamine and gastrin stimulate acid (HCl) secretion - Somatostatin inhibits acid secretion • Mechanism • Phases : Cephalic Gastric Intestinal Phases Gastric Juice o Cephalic - stomach responds to sight,smell,taste or thought of food - 30% of total acid secretion occurs before food enters stomach o Gastric – begins when food enters stomach - increases gastric juice and gastrin o Intestinal – when chyme moves into duodenum - triggers nerve impulses and hormones to inhibit gastric secretion Small Intestine 4.2 Secretion- Pancreatic • Secretes pancreatic juice into duodenum • HCO3- neutralizes acid… allows enzymes to function • Formation : ductal cells secrete aqueous HCO3- fluid acinar cells secrete enzyme rich acinar fluid • Regulation - neural and hormonal: regulates rate of secretion not rate of synthesis 4.2 Secretion- Pancreatic Phases: cephalic, gastric, intestinal (major stimulus – 70%) • Cephalic and gastric (stomach distension) phases stimulate enzyme secretion via Ach (vagal nerves) • Intestinal phase initiated by duodenal contents (acid, protein and fat) 4.2 Secretion- Pancreatic Pancreatic enzymes and targets: o Amylase - carbohydrates o Lipase, cholesterol esterase, phopholipase - fats o Trypsinogen, chymotrypsinogen,proelastase, procarboxypolypeptidase, proaminopeptidase – proteins* o Ribonuclease and deoxyribonuclease – nucleic acids * Proteolytic enzymes activated in small intestine lumen Pancreas 4.2 Secretion- Bile • Liver secretes bile, for lipid digestion and absorption • Gall bladder stores and concentrates bile • Composition of bile Bile Bile Acids Composition Bile acids (50%) Bile pigments (2%) Cholesterol (4%) Phospholipids (40%) Electrolytes Water Cholic acid 1o Chenodeoxycholic acid Deoxycholic acid 2o (bacterial Lithocholic acid conversion of 1o) Small intestine: bile emulsifies fats, forms micelles for excretion Bile • Ejection begins 30min after ingestion • Most release during intestinal phase • 80% recycled to liver (enterohepatic circulation) • 20% excreted • Bile synthesis is negatively regulated by portal venous blood bile levels Bile Composition Bile acids (50%) Bile pigments (2%) - primarily bilirubin Cholesterol (4%) Phospholipids (40%) Electrolytes Water Bile Composition Bile acids (50%) Bile pigments (2%) - primarily bilirubin Cholesterol (4%) Phospholipids (40%) Electrolytes Water Overview 1. GENERAL ORGANIZATION - Components, Blood Supply, Control and Coordination 2. NEURAL AND CHEMICAL CONTROL - General Organization, Neural Control, Chemical Control, Reflex Control of Motility 3. MOTILITY-Chewing and Swallowing, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine,Vomitting, Large Intestine or Colon 4. SECRETION - General Principles, Secretion (Salivary, Gastric, Pancreatic,Bile) 5. DIGESTION & ABSORPTION – General Organization, Carbs, Protein, Lipid, Vitamins, Ions and Water 6. OBESITY 5.1 General Organization • Small intestine is primary site for digestion and absorption • Surface area increased by villi and microvilli (brush border) – surface are > basketball court • Secreted and surface-bound enzymes break down of food 5.1 General Organization • Small intestine is extremely efficient • 60% can be removed with no change in carbohydrate or protein absorption • Only if the Ileum is removed will Vit B12 and fat absorption be impaired • Absorption occurs by diffusion, facilitated diffusion, active transport, endocytosis and paracellular transport 5.2 Carbs • Ingested carbs (starch) converted to glucose, galactose or fructose • Only monosaccharides absorbed Carbohydrates Starch Amylase Trehalose Lactose Sucrose α-dextrins Maltose Maltotriose Trehalase Lactase Sucrase Dextrinase Maltase Sucrase Glucose Glucose + Glucose Glucose + Galactose Glucose + Fructose Carbohydrates SGLT1: energy-dependent sodium-hexose cotransporter GLUT5 and GLUT2 : facilitative hexose transporters 5.3 Protein • Must be broken down to amino acid, di- or tri-peptides • Digestion : Pepsin in the stomach Pancreatic enzymes (see below) Brush border enzymes - (enterokinase, peptidases) Inactive Acted upon by Trypsin Trypsinogen Chymotrypsinogen Proelastase Procarboxypeptidase A Procarboxypeptidase B Active Trypsin Chymotrypsin Elastase Carboxypeptidase A Carboxypeptidase B 5.4 Lipids • Triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipids • Digestion Lingual and gastric lipase Pancreatic lipases Bile Enzyme Substrate Products Pancreatic lipase Triglyceride 2 fatty acids + monoglyceride Cholesterol ester hydrolase Cholesterol esters Cholesterol + fatty acid Phospholipase A2 Phospholipids Fatty acid + lysolecithin 5.4 Lipids Enterocytes re-synthesize Chol E, TG and PL which are then packaged into chylomicra or VLDL particles which are exocytosed through lymphatics because they are too large to cross blood capillary endothelium – entering blood via thoracic duct 5.5 Ions & Vitamins • Iron • Calcium • Vitamins - Fat soluble (A,D,E and K): incorporated into micelles, diffuse into cells and then into chylomicra - Water soluble (B, C, thiamine, niacin and folate): carrier mediated uptake coupled to Na+ movement Iron DMT1 – divalent metal transporter 1 DcytB – a ferroreductase FPN – a ferroportin Hephaestin – a ferroxidase Tf - transferrin Calcium Ca++ is actively absorbed in all intestine segments Calcium transporter Anti-porter Vitamin D increases Ca++ transport across apical membrane and it increases calbindin and Ca++ ATPase levels IMCal – intestinal membrane calcium-binding protein Vitamin B12 TCI – transcobalamin I Pancreatic proteases TCI Salivary glands secrete TCI which binds and protects B12 from stomach acid until duodenum where pancreatic proteases degrade TCI enabling B12 to bind IF. TCII- B12 complex enters portal circulation Fluid • 9L absorbed/day • Most important ions are Na+ and Cl- • Transcellular/paracellular transport • Neural & hormonal regulation Electrolytes What gets excreted What gets excreted Composition 75% water 25% solids Solids : Cellulose & indigestible fiber Dead bacteria Inorganic matter Fats Desquamated cells, mucus, enzymes Stercobilin & urobilin Odor due to bacterial products