Gluconeogenesis, glycogen metabolism and the PPP Flashcards

1
Q

What are the uses of glucose?

A
  • storage
  • growth
  • glycolysis
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2
Q

Memorise glycolysis/glyconeogenesis diagram

A

(slide 3)

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3
Q

What is the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP)?

A

A metabolic process that generates:
- NADPH
- pentose (5-carbon sugars)

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4
Q

What are the 2 phases of PPP?

A
  • oxidative phase
  • non-oxidative
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5
Q

What does the oxidative phase of PPP generate?

A
  • 2 molecules of NADPH (used as reducing power in fat synthesis)
  • ribose-5-phosphate for DNA & RNA synthesis
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6
Q

Describe the steps of the oxidative phase of PPP

A

glucose 6-phosphate

↓ (G-6P dehydrogenase)

6-phosphoglucono-δ-lactone

↓ (lactonase)

6-phosphogluconate

↓ (6-phosphogluconate DH)

ribulose 5-phosphate

↓ (phosphopentase isomerase)

ribose 5-phosphate

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7
Q

What does the non-oxidative phase of PPP generate?

A

3 ribose-5-phosphate → 2 fructose-6-phosphate + glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate

3 C5 → 2 C6 + C3

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8
Q

When does the non-oxidative phase of PPP occur?

A
  • if the pentose (C5) sugars are not required
  • then the non-oxidative phase allows for the sugars to be converted
  • into glycolytic or gluconeogenic intermediates
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9
Q

Where is glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase (G6PDH) from the oxidative phase found?

A
  • G6PDH found on the X-chromosome
  • expressed almost exclusively in red blood cells; only enzyme to reduce NADP+
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10
Q

What does a deficiency of G6PDH cause?

A

Haemolytic anaemia
- 400 million people affected
- many variants → different severity, but no null mutants (lethal)
- only red blood cells affected as other cells have H6PDH (hexose…)

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11
Q

What is gluconeogenesis?

A

the formation of new glucose

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12
Q

What is the overall equation of gluconeogenesis?

A

2 NADH + 4 ATP + 2 GTP + 2 Pyruvate + 6 H20 + 2 H+
→ Glucose + 2 NAD+ + 4 ADP + 2 GDP + 6 Pi

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13
Q

What is Pi?

A

inorganic phosphate

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14
Q

What is our main gluconeogenic tissue?

A

liver

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15
Q

How is glucose made during/after anaerobic respiration?

A

pyruvate / lactate from muscle is converted to glucose by liver

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16
Q

What reactions does the Cori cycle involve?

A
  • glycolysis
  • gluconeogenesis
17
Q

What 3 main reactions (in glycolysis) need to be reversed for gluconeogenesis?

A

3 bypass reactions:
- phosphoenolpyruvate → pyruvate
- fructose 6-phosphate → fructose 1,6-biphosphate
- glucose → glucose 6-phosphate

18
Q

What happens in the bypass reaction 1?

A
  • NB needs energy input (4 ATP equivalents per glucose formed)
  • reverses pyruvate kinase reaction in glycolysis
19
Q

Where does the 1st bypass reaction occur?

A
  • first part of reaction happens in mito matrix
  • second in cytoplasm
  • oxaloacetate cannot pass through inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM)
  • solution = malate shuttle
    (slide 17)
20
Q

What is a malate shuttle?

A
  • mechanism that transports NADH molecules produced in glycolysis into the mitochondrial matrix
  • to reduce oxaloacetate into malate
21
Q

What happens in the bypass reaction 2?

A

negative bicarbonate (NB) cannot make ATP as not a high energy phosphate bond

22
Q

What happens in the bypass reaction 3?

A

NB cannot make ATP as not a high energy phosphate bond

23
Q

Why can’t all cells bypass reaction 3?

A
  • not all cells have G-6-Pase
24
Q

What are the gluconeogenesis substrates?

A
  • protein
  • lactate
  • glycerol
25
Q

What is a disease of gluconeogenesis?

A

Von Gierke’s Disease - Type I glycogen storage disease (GSD)