8. intergrated metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

define anabolic pathways

A

synthesis of large molecules

uses ATP and NADH

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2
Q

define catabolic pathway

A

breakdown of large molecules

fuel oxidation

exergonic, makes ATP, waste products made

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3
Q

Metabolic homeostasis

A

control of balance between substrate availability and need by anabolic vs catabolic pathways

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4
Q

four basic types of metabolic pathways

A

fuel oxidation: glycolysis and TCA

fuel storage and mobilisation: glycogenesis and glycogenoylsis

Biosynthetic pathways

Detoxification/waste disposal pathways urea cycle

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5
Q

what are the normal levels of blood glucose

what happens if there is a significant decrease in blood glucose levels <60mg/dl

why does this occur

what happens if there is too much glucose

A

80-100 mg/dl

hypoglycemia, can enter coma

glucose influx lowers due to low Km of BBB transporters- need a lot of glucose to get past it

hyperosmolar effects= neurological defects and coma

  • Concentration rises above renal tubular threshold
  • Non-enzymatic glycosylation of proteins, sticking glucose to proteins which don’t need it- changes structure and function
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6
Q

3 ways the balance between use, release, storage by different tissues is achieved

A
  1. Blood [nutrient]: Fatty acids, Conc. determines whether skeletal muscle uses fatty acids or glucose.
  2. Hormones
  3. Central Nervous System: controls via pituitary gland with hormones or sympathetic
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7
Q

The two major hormones that regulate fuel storage & mobilization:

A
  • Insulin: promotes storage of fuels (& use for growth)
  • Glucagon: promotes mobilization of fuels
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8
Q

what tissues do insulin act on?

A

liver, muscle & adipose

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9
Q

what does insulin promote?

A
  • Glycogen formation in liver & muscle
  • Conversion of glucose to triacylglycerols (liver)
  • Protein synthesis (e.g. albumin) in liver
  • Storage of triacylglycerols (adipose)
  • Increases glucose uptake by muscle & adipose
  • Amino acid uptake & protein synthesis in skeletal muscle
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10
Q

what tissues do glucagon act on?

A

liver and adipose (muscles dont have receptors)

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11
Q

what does glucagon promote?

A
  • Increased Glycogenolysis, reduced glycogen synthesis in liver
  • Stimulates gluconeogenesis & ketogenesis
  • Mobilises fatty acids from adipose triacylglycerols
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12
Q

which cells secrete insulin and glucagon?

A
  • α cells secrete glucagon: ↓ Plasma [glucose] & ↑ [adrenaline]
  • β cells secrete insulin: ↑ Plasma [glucose]
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13
Q

what is insulin synthesised as

insulin release:

insulin release modulation

A

preprohormone- C peptide is cleaved

  • 80 mg/dL threshold
  • Proportional release up to 300 mg/dL
  • Rapidly degraded by liver

autonomic nervous system and vagus nerve

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14
Q

glucagon: what is it synthesised as

where is it degraded

regulation

what promotes release

A

preprohormone

degraded by liver and kidneys

seceretion regulated by [insulin] and [glucose]

released promoted by

  • catecholamines (e.g. epinephrine)
  • amino acids (so, meal composition is important)
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15
Q

Intracellular Events: Insulin

A

•Insulin autophosphorylates cell receptor

-receptor’s tyrosine kinase domain phosphorylates enzymes

•Basic cellular responses:

1) Reverses glucagon-stimulated phosphorylation
2) Kicks off a phosphorylation cascade
3) Induction/repression of enzyme
4) Stimulate protein synthesis
5) Stimulate glucose & amino acid intake

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16
Q

Intracellular Events: Glucagon

A

•Glucagon binding causes 2nd’ry messenger formation:

  • G protein dissociation activates Adenylate cyclase
  • Creates cAMP
  • Activates cAMP-dependent protein kinase
  • Phosphorylates regulatory enzymes
  • Controls carbohydrate & lipid metabolism

amplification cascade

17
Q
A