8. carbohydrate metabolism 1 Flashcards

1
Q

where are the main stores of glycogen?

A

skeletal muscle 400g (1-2% fresh weight)

liver 100g (10% fresh weight)

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2
Q

where does mobilisation of glucose from glycogen occur?

A

in liver and kidney cells

in the muscle it serves as reserve for ATP synthesis

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3
Q

why is glucose stored in glycogen?

A

glycogen polysaccarides reduces osmotic forces on a cell

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4
Q

glycogen structure

A

one reducing end

and a non reducing end on every branch for rapid mobilisation (enzymes)

branches: alpha 1-6 glycosidic bonds

alpha 1-4 glycosidic bonds between molecules

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5
Q

Which cytosolic enzymes are needed for glycogen degradation?

A
  1. Glycogen Phosphorylase
  2. Glycogen Debranching enzyme
  3. Phosphoglucomutase
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6
Q

what does glycogen phosphorylase do?

A

dimer

Cleaves α(1→4) bonds until 4 glycosyl units remain on a branch point

  • Binds pyridoxal-5’-phosphate
  • a limit dextrind (fragment cant break down)

allosteric Interactions & covalent modification

Inhibitors: ATP, G6P, Glucose

Activator: AMP

-Induces conformational change (reveals buried active site)

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7
Q

Glycogen Debranching Enzyme

A

bifunctional with separate active sites:

- acts as a α(1→4) transglycosylase (glycosyltransferase) moves trisaccharide units to non-reducing branch end for glycogen phosphorylase

  • then hydrolytically removes the remaining glycosyl using amylo-α(1→6)-glucosidase activity

10% released as just glucose

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8
Q

what does the reducing end have

A

anomeric carbon C1 not linked to another glucose, free aldehyde group

non reducing does not have a free aldehyde group

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9
Q

Phosphoglucomutase

A
  • Glycogen Phosphorylase converts the glycosyl units of glycogen to G1P
  • then phosphorylation of the glucose molecule followed by a re-phosphorylation of the enzyme
  • G6P can continue along the glycolytic pathway or the pentose phosphate pathway. It can be hydrolysed by glucose-6-phosphatase to glucose (bloodstream)
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10
Q

Glycogen synth: when might this happen?

A

G6P produced by gluconeogenesis may not be hydrolysed to glucose but may be converted to G1P for incorporation into glycogen

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11
Q

Describe glycogen synthesis (glycogenesis)

A

Glycogen synthase makes alpha(1-4) to extend existing chain but it cannot initiate formation

requires primer: glycogen fragment

if absent: protein glycogenin (catalyses) accepts glucose residues from UDP-glucose (usually attaches to glucose)

side chain OH of tyrosine site of attachment for initial glycosyl unit

branching enzymes transfers 5-8 residues from end of chain to alpha(1-6) resulting in a new non-reducing end and old non-reducing end to be elongated further

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12
Q

Regulation of Glycogenesis & Glycogenolysis

A

hormonal and allosteric

hormonal: insulin, glucagon and adrenaline

Hormones act through changes to phosphorylation state of enzymes

  • cell surface receptor triggers intracellular events
  • Adrenaline and glucagon act through a “second messenger” – cyclic AMP (cAMP)

Adrenaline acts on muscle and liver

Glucagon acts on liver

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13
Q
A
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14
Q
A

•Glycogen synthase

  • Active form is dephosphorylated
  • Level of inactivation proportional to phosphorylation level
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15
Q

Allosteric Regulation

A
  • Permits rapid response
  • Can override hormone-mediated covalent regulation
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16
Q

Glycogenolysis & Calcium

A

Glycogenolysis in muscle is activated by calcium

Released into cytoplasm after neural stimulation

Released from sarcoplasmic reticulum

Muscle contraction results from increased cytosolic calcium

Calcium binds to and activates calmodulin (Ca2+ binding protein)

Subunit of phosphorylase kinase

  • Activates complex b

Phosphorylase kinase phosphorylates and activates glycogen phosphorylase