Physiology 3.2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the primary role of insulin?

A

to increase glucose uptake by tissues - to lower blood glucose levels

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2
Q

What are other roles of insulin?

A
Fat synthesis
Protein synthesis 
Glycogen synthesis 
Glucose oxidation
Fat, protein and glycogen breakdowns are inhibited.
Moves potassium into cells
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3
Q

Which pancreatic cell secretes insulin?

A

Beta cell from islets of Langerhans.

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4
Q

What is made alongside insulin, used in tests?

A

C-peptide.

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5
Q

How much more does C-peptide resist degradation in comparison to insulin?

A

5x less likely to be degraded.

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6
Q

What is the main stimulus causing insulin secretion?

A

Blood glucose concentration.

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7
Q

What are other stimuli causing insulin secretion?

A

Amino acid concentration
Glucagon
Incretin hormones
Vagal nerve activity

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8
Q

What are incretin hormones?

A

These control GI function.

Secretin, gastrin, cholecystokinin etc.

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9
Q

What stimuli inhibit insulin release?

A

Low blood glucose levels.
Somatostatin (Growth hormone inhibiting hormone).
Sympathetic alpha 2 effects.
Stress ^ causing sympathetic reaction.

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10
Q

How is excess glucose stored in the liver, muscles and adipose tissue?

A

Glycogen via Glycogenesis. - In muscles.

TAGs. - in adipose tissue.

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11
Q

How is excess amino acids stored in adipose tissue and the liver?

A

Triacylglycerol

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12
Q

How can glucose be stored?

A

As either TAGs or glycogen.

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13
Q

Which tissues are insulin dependant?

A

Only adipose and skeletal muscle tissue. But this makes up 65% of the body.

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14
Q

Which glucose transporter is not insulin dependant?

A

GLUT 1 (brain, kidney, red blood cells), GLUT 2(pancreas and liver), GLUT 3 (widespread)

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15
Q

Which glucose transporter is insulin dependant?

A

GLUT 4 (these reside in cytoplasm not the cell surface) (adipose tissue and muscle)

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16
Q

What is an insulin receptor?

A

Tyrosine kinase.

Kinase = phosphorylation = increase or decrease protein activity.

17
Q

when can muscle tissue take up glucose without insulin?

A

During exercise in an independent process.

18
Q

How does the liver take up glucose?

A

Via GLUT 2 transporters, these are not insulin dependant.

BUT insulin does enhance uptake.

19
Q

How does insulin aid in liver uptake of glucose?

A

Insulin acts on tyrosine kinase, which acts on hexokinase. Hexokinase breaks glucose into G6P - maintaining a low glucose concentration to allow more glucose to move down the concentration gradient into the liver cell through GLUT2.

20
Q

What does insulin have a permissive effect on?

A

On growth hormone

21
Q

What ion pump does insulin stimulate?

A

Sodium-potassium ATPase. It promotes K ion entry into the cell.

22
Q

How long is the half life of insulin?

A

5 minutes.

23
Q

Do you get more insulin by consuming glucose orally or IV?

A

Orally - you also get vagal stimulation and release of incretin hormones. If done IV in the blood you only get an increase in BGL.

24
Q

How does an increase in glucagon stimulate the release of insulin?

A

Because the insulin will be required to take up the new glucose created by glucagon so that BGL don’t rise too much.