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4.1 Folic Acid (Pteroylglutamic Acid, PteGlu1) 4.1.1 FOOD SOURCES Dietary folates (folacins) are synthesized by bacteria and plants. They occur mostly as polyglutamates, which are not absorbed intact. All folacins, or polypteroylglutamates (PteGlun), are hydrolyzed to folic acid, or pteroylglutamic acid (PteGlu1), during absorption. Pteroylglutamic acid (PteGlu1) is absorbed at a faster rate than larger polymers (PteGlun). Only 25-50% of dietary folacin is nutritionally available; boiling destroys much of folate activity. Therefore, uncooked foods with a large portion of the monoglutamate form (PteGlu1) - e.g., bananas, lima beans, liver and yeast - contain the highest availability of folacin. Average Canadian diets contain about 240 µg of folate a day. The daily requirement for folate is approximately 100 µg, although the recommended dietary allowance is 400 µg. Tissue stores of folate are only about 3 mg; therefore, malabsorption can deplete the body of folate within one month.
Polyglutamate forms of
folate (PteGlun) hydrolyze sequentially down to the monoglutamate form (PteGlu1). This
hydrolysis takes place at the brush border by the enzyme folate conjugase (Figure 1). Folic acid (PteGlu1) is
absorbed from the intestinal lumen by a sodium-dependent carrier. Once in the intestinal
epithelial cell, folic acid is methylated and reduced to the tetrahydro form
(CH3H4PteGlu1).
Interference with folic acid absorption at the brush-border carrier site
occurs with drugs such as phenytoin and sulfasalazine. In addition, folic acid deficiency
itself can impair folic acid absorption by producing "megaloblastic" changes in
columnar epithelial cells of the gut - an abnormal epithelium.
4.2.1 FOOD SOURCES Cobalamin refers to cobalt-containing compounds with a corrin ring: these have biological activity for humans. Vitamin B12 is the generic term for all of these compounds with bioactivity in any species. Cobalamin is therefore the preferred term to distinguish those compounds that are active in humans from the many analogues produced by bacteria. Cobalamin enters animal tissues when the animal ingests bacteria-containing foods or from production in the animal's rumen. Microorganisms in the human colon synthesize cobalamin, but it is not absorbed. Thus, strict vegetarians who do not eat cobalamin- containing meats will develop cobalamin deficiency. The average Western diet contains 10-20 µg per day. The daily requirement for cobalamin is 1 µg. The human liver is the repository of approximately 5 mg of cobalamin. These large hepatic stores account for the delay of several years in the clinical appearance of deficiency after cobalamin malabsorption begins.
Once cobalamin is liberated
from food, it is bound at acid pH to R proteins (so called because of their rapid movement
during electrophoresis). R proteins are glycoproteins present in many body secretions,
including serum, bile, saliva and gastric and pancreatic juices. Most of the gastric R
protein is from swallowed saliva. The R proteins cannot mediate the absorption of
cobalamin alone, and their physiologic function is incompletely understood. Rare cases of
complete R-protein deficiency have occurred without obvious clinical effect on the
patient.
The cobalamin/R protein complex leaves the stomach along with free intrinsic
factor (Figure 2). In the
duodenum, pancreatic proteases in the presence of bicarbonate (i.e., neutral pH) hydrolyze
the R protein, thereby liberating free cobalamin. The cobalamin now combines with gastric
intrinsic factor. A conformational change takes place, allowing the
cobalamin/intrinsic-factor complex to be resistant to proteolytic digestion. This
resistance allows the complex to safely traverse the small intestine and reach the ileum,
its site of active absorption.
Since transfer of cobalamin from R protein to intrinsic
factor depends upon pH, pancreatic insufficiency (with deficient bicarbonate production)
or the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (with excess hydrogen ion production) interferes with
this process and may result in cobalamin deficiency.
In the ileum, the
cobalamin/intrinsic-factor complex binds to a specific receptor located on the brush
border. Free cobalamin does not bind to the ileal receptor. After passage across the
enterocytes, cobalamin is transported in blood bound to circulating proteins known as
transcobalamins.
Understanding the normal absorptive processes allows a classification of
cobalamin malabsorption and deficiency (
4.3.1 FOOD SOURCES Iron is available for
absorption from vegetables (nonheme iron) and from meats (heme iron). Heme iron is better
absorbed (10-20%) and is unaffected by intraluminal factors or its dietary composition.
Nonheme iron is poorly absorbed, with an efficiency of 1-6%, and absorption is largely
controlled by luminal events. The average dietary intake of iron is 10-20 mg/day. Men
absorb 1-2 mg/day, while menstruating women and iron-deficient patients absorb 3-4 mg/day.
In acute blood loss, increased absorption of iron does not occur until three days later.
Nonheme iron (in the ferric, Fe+++ state), when ingested into a stomach unable to produce
acid, forms insoluble iron complexes, which are not available for absorption (Figure 3). In the presence of gastric
acid and such agents as ascorbic acid, however, ferrous iron (Fe++) forms. The ferrous
iron complexes bind to a mucopolysaccharide of about 200,000 MWr and are transported as an
insoluble complex into the duodenum and proximal jejunum. Here, with the assistance of
ascorbic acid, glucose and cysteine, the iron is absorbed. Dietary factors such as
phosphate, phytate and phosphoproteins can render the iron insoluble and so inhibit
nonheme iron absorption. Heme iron (ferrous, Fe++) is ingested as myoglobin and
hemoglobin. In the presence of gastric acid, the globin molecule is split off, and ferrous
iron is liberated and transported with its phosphorin ring from the stomach into the
duodenum and jejunum for absorption.
Both heme and nonheme iron are absorbed most rapidly
in the duodenum. Some of the iron taken up is deposited as ferritin within the enterocyte,
and the remainder is transferred to the plasma-bound transferrin. When the enterocyte
defoliates, iron deposited as ferritin is lost into the intestinal lumen. This mechanism
for loss is probably overwhelmed by the large amounts of iron ingested. The amount of iron
entering the body depends largely upon two factors: (1) total body iron content and (2)
the rate of erythropoiesis. |
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