glucose homeostasis Flashcards

1
Q

islets of langerhans

A
  • 1 million
  • 1-2% of pancreas mass but 20% blood flow
  • within exocrine tissue
  • neuromuscular bundle enters each islet through beta cell core
  • paracrine interaction
    venous effluent to portal vein and liver
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2
Q

hormones produced by the islets of langerhans and cell type

A

insulin = beta cells

somatostatin = Delta cells

glucagon = alpha cells

pancreatic peptide = F cells

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3
Q

GLUT2

A

glucose transporter in the liver and pancreas

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4
Q

GLUT4

A

glucose transporter in fat and muscles

- insulin mediated and present in vesicles
also exercise induced

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5
Q

insulin regulation

A
  • basal secretion is pulsatile 9-14 minutes
  • major regulator is glucose with acute phase release and then slower 2nd phase
  • other regulators are A.A. e.g. glucagon, incretins = all increase
  • somatostatin = decrease
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6
Q

explain how blood glucose is control from the ingestion of food

A

food that is ingested, enters the GI tract. Active GLP-1 and GIP release incretin gut hormones. These act on beta and alpha cells in the pancreas. The beta cells increase insulin release which increases peripheral glucose uptake. The alpha cells decrease glucagon , which again increases insulin and causes decrease glucagon reduce hepatic glucose output.

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7
Q

insulin signalling

A

binds to insulin receptors

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8
Q

insulins metabolic action of carbs

A
  1. liver - inhibits glyogenolysis and gluconeogenesis (both make glucose)
  2. muscle - increase glucose transport and glycolysis
  3. adipose tissue - same as muscle
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9
Q

insulin actions on fat

A

increases triglyceride storage and inhibits lipolysis (decreases hormone sensitive lipase) and FFA production

inhibits ketone production

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10
Q

insulin actions of protein

A

anabolic by increasing transport of AA into liver and muscle

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11
Q

energy storage

A

fat = 20-30% of body weight but 70-80% of stored energy

lipolysis - FFA and ketones
-glycerol —–> Krebs

protein 20% energy
-protein hydrolysis releasing A.A

carbs 1-2% but rapidly available

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12
Q

ketogenesis

A
  • oxidation of FFA to acute acetate, acetone and beta hydroxybutyrate
  • insulin deficiency results in hormone sensitive lipase being unchecked
  • uncontrolled glycogenesis and protein hydrolysis
  • GLUT4 inactive
  • overall nett result = Diabetic Ketoacidosis
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13
Q

what stops hyperglycaemia

A

insulin

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14
Q

falling glucose

A

as glucose falls in fasting state, insulin switched off and counter-regulatory hormones released

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15
Q

normal fasting glucose

A

3.5-5.5mmol/l

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16
Q

causes of hypoglycaemia

A
  • insulin in patients with diabetes
  • sulphonylurea therapy
  • insulinoma (-rare)
  • severe hormone deficiency e.g. Addisons disease (-rare)
17
Q

somatostatin action

A

binds to receptors on beta cells and blocks voltage-gated calcium channels. No influx of calcium and therefore inhibits insulin secretion

= hypoglycaemia