Lecture 2.1: Energy Production from Carbohydrates (1) Flashcards

1
Q

What is Anabolism?

A

The synthesis of larger molecules from simple molecules

(Monomers to Polymer)

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2
Q

What is Catabolism?

A

The breakdown of complex molecules in living organisms to form simpler ones

(Polymer to Monomer)

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3
Q

What are the 4 Stages of Catabolism?

A

1: Extracellular, GI Tract. Lipids, Carbs broken down into smaller parts so they can be taken into cells
2: Intracellular in cytosol and mitochondria [Glycolysis]
3: Intracellular in mitochondria [Krebs Cycle]
4: Intracellular in mitochondria [Oxidative Phosphorylation]

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4
Q

Recommend Daily Intake of C,L&P

A

Carbs: 15%
Lipids: 8%
Proteins: 5%

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5
Q

What are Carbohydrates?

A

General formula: (CH2O)n
Contain aldehyde or ketone group
Hydrophilic

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6
Q

Monosaccharides

A

Glucose
Fructose
Galactose

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7
Q

Aldose

A

Aldehyde containing sugar

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8
Q

Ketose

A

Ketone containing sugar

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9
Q

Isomers of Glucose

A

D and L

But only D isomer is naturally occurring

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10
Q

Common Disaccharides

A

Lactose: Galactose + Glucose
Maltose: Glucose + Glucose
Sucrose: Glucose + Fructose

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11
Q

α-glucose vs β-glucose

A

α-glucose: -OH group is below on Carbon 1
β-glucose: -OH group is above on Carbon 1

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12
Q

Monosaccharide Shape

A

Not Planer

They assume “boat” or “chair” shapes in 3D space

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13
Q

Oligosaccharides

A

Contain 3 –12 monosaccharides

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14
Q

Polysaccharides

A

Contain 10 – 1000 monosaccharides

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15
Q

Glycogen

A

– Human Starch, stored in liver and skeletal muscle
– α-glucose
– Contains α1,4 and α1,6 glycosidic bonds
– Highly Branched Structure [allows more rapid breakdown from all ends for
energy production]

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16
Q

Starch

A

– Polymer of glucose found in plants
– Mixture of amylose (α1-4 bonds) and amylopectin and α1-4 andα1-6
glycosidic bonds
– Less branched than glycogen
– GI tract enzymes release glucose and maltose

17
Q

Cellulose

A

– Structural polymer of glucose in plants
– β1-4 linkages
– No GI enzymes to digest β1-4 Linkages
– It forms dietary fibre that is important for GI function

18
Q

Digestion of Dietary Carbohydrates: where? what enzymes?

A

Mouth: Salivary α-amylase

Pancreas: α-amylase

Small intestine: Pancreatic amylase

Disaccharidases attached to brush border membrane of epithelial cells (enterocytes): lactase, sucrase, maltase, isomaltase

19
Q

Carbohydrate Transport

A

Glucose, galactose and fructose are transported to enterocytes by facilitated or active transport

GLUT2 (glucose transporter type 2)
SGLT1 (Na+/glucose/galactose cotransporter)
GLUT5 (fructose transporter type 5)

They are transported from enterocytes to blood by GLUT2 and then transported to target tissues via various transporters

20
Q

GLUT Transporters and their corresponding organs

A

Brain: GLUT3
Heart/Fatty Tissue/Skeletal Muscle: GLUT4
Enterocytes: GLUT1
Liver/ Pancreatic β-cells/ Intestines/ Kidney: GLUT2
Jejunum/ Kidney: GLUT5

21
Q

Lactose Intolerance: Science

A

Loss of / reduced lactase activity
→ Therefore Inability to hydrolyse lactose

Results from reduced expression of the LCT gene

Onset from late childhood to early adulthood

22
Q

Lactose Intolerance: Consequences

A

Undigested lactose is passed to the large intestine

Increases osmotic pressure and draws in H2O causing osmotic diarrhoea

Fermented by colonic bacteria produces organic acids (acetic and lactic
acids) and H2, CO2 and CH4 gases causing abdominal cramps and flatulence

23
Q

Lactose intolerance: Symptoms, Clinical Tests, Management

A

No immune system involvement/ Not allergic reaction

Symptoms: abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhoea, and nausea appear in 30
to 120 minutes following consumption of lactose

Clinical Tests: Positive hydrogen breath test, Positive stool acidity test

Management: Decrease or elimination of the amount of lactose in diet, Consumption of lactase-treated foods or lactase supplements

24
Q

Anaerobic Glycolysis: Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) Reaction

A

Overall reaction of the 11- step anaerobic glycolysis:

Glucose + 2 Pi + 2 ADP → 2 lactate + 2 ATP + 2 H2O

25
Q

Where Does Lactate Go?

A

The lactate produced by skeletal muscle and RBCs is released into the blood

It is then metabolised by the liver, heart and kidney

2 NADH + (2 H+) + 2 pyruvate (2 NAD+) + 2 lactate

This is facilitated by LDH in both directions

26
Q

Plasma Lactate Concentrations

A

Blood concentration normally constant: <1 mM

Hyperlactaemia: 2-5 mM in blood, Below renal threshold, No change in blood pH (buffering capacity)

Lactic acidosis: Above 5 mM in blood, Above renal threshold, Blood pH lowered

27
Q

Essential fructosuria

A

Caused by fructokinase deficiency

Fructose accumulates in urine

No symptoms

28
Q

Fructose Intolerance

A

Caused by aldolase deficiency

Fructose-1-P accumulates in liver, liver damage and hypoglycaemia

Symptoms: poor feeding as baby, vomiting, nausea, abdominal pain

Treatment- elimination of sucrose and fructose from diet

29
Q

Galactokinase Deficiency‐Non‐Classical Galactosaemia

A

Very rare

↑ Galactose in blood (Galactosaemia) and urine (Galactosuria)

Galactose and Galactitol accumulation causes cataracts

Treatment ‐ dietary restriction (lactose and galactose)

30
Q

GALT Deficiency‐ Classical Galactosaemia

A

Galactosaemia and Galactosuria

Galactose-1-P and Galactitol accumulate causing cataracts

Brain and Liver damage

Treatment ‐ dietary restriction (lactose and galactose)