Test Your Knowledge on Bile and Bilirubin
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Questions and Answers

What is the primary organic composition of bile?

  • Cholesterol and bile pigments
  • Bile salts and phospholipids (correct)
  • Cholesterol and phospholipids
  • Bile salts and bile pigments
  • What enzyme is used by hepatocytes to convert cholesterol into bile acids?

  • Cholecystokinin
  • Urobilinogen
  • 7-alpha-hydroxylase (correct)
  • Stercobilinogen
  • What is the name of the muscular valve between the common bile duct and the duodenum?

  • I-cells
  • Cholangiocytes
  • Sphincter of Oddi (correct)
  • Chyme
  • What is the purpose of bile?

    <p>To help with digestion and absorption of fats</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the first part of the small intestine?

    <p>Duodenum</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the hormone secreted by I-cells?

    <p>Cholecystokinin</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the yellow-green pigment produced from the breakdown of hemoglobin in red blood cells?

    <p>Bilirubin</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the process by which bile is recycled?

    <p>Enterohepatic circulation</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the name of the small, pear-shaped hollow organ located beneath the liver?

    <p>Gallbladder</p> Signup and view all the answers

    What is the name of the slurry that enters the first part of the small intestine?

    <p>Chyme</p> Signup and view all the answers

    Study Notes

    • Bile is a greenish liquid that’s made by the liver and is stored in the gallbladder.

    • Bile does a number of things including helping with digestion, absorption of fats, and excretion of various molecules.

    • Normally, lipids are insoluble in water, so that’s why bile is needed to help emulsify and solubilize them.

    • The organic composition of bile is mainly made up of bile salts and phospholipids, with cholesterol, and bile pigments called bilirubin, making up only a small percentage.

    • Bile is first manufactured in the liver by cells called hepatocytes.

    • Hepatocytes use an enzyme called 7-alpha-hydroxylase to convert cholesterol into two primary bile acids, called cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid.

    • In the intestines, some of these primary bile acids get dehydroxylated, giving rise to secondary bile acids - deoxycholic acid and lithocholic acid.

    • The liver can conjugate, or attach the amino acids glycine or taurine to all four of these bile acids and this ultimately gives rise to 8 different forms of bile salts.

    • Bile is made in the liver and flows into the intestines.

    • The journey starts when bile flows into the left and right hepatic ducts which eventually merge to form the common hepatic duct.

    • The common hepatic duct then leads to the cystic duct which brings the bile to the gallbladder.

    • The gallbladder is a small pear-shaped hollow organ located beneath the liver, and this is where bile is stored and becomes more concentrated.

    • Approximately 30 minutes after consuming a meal, the food is broken down into a slurry called chyme, and that chyme begins to enter the first part of the small intestine - the duodenum.

    • When that happens, I-cells, which are in the mucosal lining of the intestine secrete a hormone called cholecystokinin, or CCK, into the bloodstream.

    • Cholecystokinin travels through the blood and reaches the gallbladder, causing it to contract really strongly.

    • Those strong contractions cause the stored bile to be get squirted out of the gallbladder and into the common bile duct.

    • The bile ducts are lined by cells called cholangiocytes, which secrete bicarbonate-rich fluid into the biliary tree.

    • Cholecystokinin also causes the relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi, the muscular valve between the common bile duct and the duodenum. This allows the b

    • Bile is a yellow-green pigment that comes from the breakdown of hemoglobin in red blood cells.

    • Bile is produced in the liver and enters the intestines where it is recycled.

    • Conjugated bilirubin is water-soluble and is excreted in the urine as urobilinogen.

    • Stercobilinogen is formed from urobilinogen and is what makes feces brown in color.

    • Enterohepatic circulation recycles both bilirubin and bile acids.

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    What is the main role of bile in the body? Bile helps with the digestion of food, absorption of fats, and the excretion of various molecules. It is also important for the emulsification and solubilization of lipids.

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