UNIT 4: REVIEW OF INTERMEDIARY METABOLISM Flashcards

1
Q

Match the definitions with the terms:
1. “breakdown of stored glycogen to release glucose molecules”
2. “production of glucose from non-sugar substrates (lactate, glycerol, a.a.)”
3.
“glucose forms NADPH and ribose sugars”
4. “oxidation of glucose to pyruvate”
5. “production of glycogen granules from glucose”
6. “oxidize acetyl CoA to CO2”

A
  1. Glycogenolysis
  2. Gluconeogenesis
  3. Hexose monophosphate shunt = pentose phosphate pathway
  4. Glycolysis
  5. Glycogenesis
  6. Tricarboxylic acid cycle
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2
Q

What are 3 fates of glucose?

A

Depending on the cell:

  • glycogen
  • glycolysis (to produce acetylCoA and fuel TCA cycle)
  • pentose phosphates (for biogenesis)
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3
Q

Glucagon is made in the ____ whereas Insulin is made in the _____.

A

Glucagon: alpha cells
Insulin: beta cells

…of the islets of pancreas

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4
Q

What tissues make glycogen?

What is the content of glycogen in each tissue?

A

liver and muscle
- liver stores 10% of wet weight
- muscle 1%
BUT 75% of glycogen is in muscle (because more muscle

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5
Q

What triggers glycogen synthesis?

A

Presence of G6P (accumulation)

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6
Q

What 2 enzymes are involved in glycogen synthesis (glycogenesis)?

A

Hexokinase and Glucokinase

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7
Q

What is the role of hexokinase?

A

Hexokinase is in the muscle
- allosterically inhibited by high glucose 6
phosphate
- free glucose builds up inside muscle
- since hexokinase cannot convert glucose to G6P
- stops glucose being transferred from blood to muscle (since build up of glucose in muscle)

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8
Q

What is the role of glucokinase?

A

in the liver

  • NOT inhibited by G6P, liver cells continue to phosphorylate free glucose (from blood stream)to G6P
  • build up of G6P, satisfies hexose monophosphate shunt, to process G6P to acetyl CoA (glycolysis)
  • removed from liver as VLDL particles made de novo fatty acids and triglycerides
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9
Q

The muscle takes up glucose _____ , while liver takes up glucose _____.

A

Muscle: based on needs
Liver: continuously/ongoing removing glucose from blood stream

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10
Q

How many high energy phosphates are expended per glucose to be stored as glycogen?

A

2 Phosphates

  1. ATP used. Glucose (in blood) —> G6P in muscle (via hexokianse) or liver (glucokinase)
  2. Glucose 1 Phosphate reacts with UTP to form UDP-glucose (Pi released). UDP-glucose bond can release enough energy to add glucose to form glycogen chain.
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11
Q

What protein does glycogen synthesis start on?

A

glycogenin

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12
Q

What’s the difference between a-1-4 and a-1-6 links?

A

Glycogen links.
a-1-4 chain is linear
a-1-6 chain is at branched points.

(too much branching = increase volume = very dense sphere = glycogen granule)

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13
Q

What happens to glycogen in glycogenolysis?

A
  • glycogen is converted to G1P in liver or muscle, then G6P

- G6P then converts to glucose in blood OR lactate in blood to liver

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14
Q

What is the fate of G6P in glycogenolysis?

A

Liver: G6P released to blood stream because of glucose6phosphatase in the SER
Muscle: G6P is fully oxidized to CO2 or converted to lactate

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15
Q

What happens to lactate that comes from the muscle from glycogenolysis?

A

Lactate is taken up by liver and converted back to glucose. (Therefore, muscle plays an indirect role in contributing to blood glucose)

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16
Q

Substrate level phosphorylation occurs in:

a. glycolysis
b. TCA
c. ETC

A

Substrate level phosphorylation occurs in both a. glycolysis and b. TCA

ETC is oxidative phosphorylation

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17
Q

What are the products of glycolysis?

A
  • Net: 2ATP
  • 2 pyruvate
  • 2 NADH
18
Q

When does pyruvate form acetyl-coa and how?

A
  • Aerobic conditions: in the presence of O2

- pyruvate dehydrogenase activity

19
Q

What causes muscle pain in anaerobic conditions?

A

Lactate production increases H+ ions that increase metabolic acidosis and decreases muscle contractility.

20
Q

Under anaerobic conditions, NAD+ is regenerated by…

A

converting pyruvate to lactate

21
Q

Under anaerobic conditions how is glucose regenerated?

A

lactate is sent to the liver and converted to glucose via gluconeogenesis (Cori Cycle)

22
Q

Is the Cori Cycle energy producing or energy using?

A

Energy using.
In the liver, Lactate to Glucose (gluconeogenesis)
- requires 6ATP per 2 molecules of lactate to form 1 glucose
- 1 glucose produces 2 ATP
- not sustainable under intense exercise

23
Q

Where does the hexose monophosphate shuttle take place?

A

Cytosol

- uses G6P as substrate

24
Q

What are the two possible routes of the HMPS?

A
  • oxidative phase

- non-oxidative phase

25
Q

What do each of the two phases of HMPS produce?

A

Oxidative phase: produces ribulose-5-phosphate

Non-oxidative phase: ribose-

26
Q

In the oxidative phase, what is the purpose of the redox couple in HMPS?

A

HMPS is the major pathway that maintains the reduced state NADPH in the NADP+/NADPH.

  • reducing power is used for anabolism and oxidant defense
27
Q

_____ acts as a strong reducing agent for oxidant defense.

A

NADPH

- anabolic metabolism

28
Q

How is pyruvate converted to acetyl CoA?

A

Pyruvate Dehydrogenation via pyruvate dehydrogenase complex

29
Q

Pyruvate Dehydrogenation is important because it converts pyruvate (3C) to acetyl CoA (2C). The type of metabolism changes from ____ to _____.

A

Glucogenic to Ketogenic

30
Q

What are the 4 cofoactors involved in pyruvate dehydrogenation?

A
  • Pantothenic acid as CoA
  • Thiamine as TPP
  • Niacin as NAD+
  • Riboflavin as FAD
31
Q

What are the products of pyruvate dehydrogenation?

A
  • acetyl CoA
  • CO2
  • NADH
32
Q

What are the 2 TCA inputs?

A
  • acetyl CoA

- oxaloacetate

33
Q

From 6C citrate to 4C succinyl-CoA how many electrons are captured?

A

4 electrons as 2 NADH

  • C released as CO2
34
Q

From 4C succinyl coA what happens as it is reverted back to oxaloacetate?

A
  • GTP
  • FADH2
  • NADH
    produced
35
Q

TCA cycle is also the starting place for ______

A

gluconeogenesis or de novo synthesis of glucose

36
Q

What is the molecule that is gluconeogenic/glucogenic?

A

malate

- if malate can be transported out of mitochondria, then all other intermediaries can be removed

37
Q

Compare and contrast Glucogenic vs Ketogenic molecules in TCA.

A

Glucogenic: converted to TCA intermediate, removed when forming malate converted to glucose
Ketogenic: elongates existing intermediate but does not produce new intermediates and does not produce glucose

38
Q

de novo synthesis of glucose from non-glucose precursors is called

A

Gluconeogenesis

39
Q

Where does gluconeogenesis occur?

A

in the liver

start: mitochondria
end: cytosol

(reverse glycolysis)

40
Q

What molecules can be the starting point for gluconeogenesis?

A

any metabolite that can enter TCA as a new intermediate

  • alpha keto acids (pyruvate, glutamate, oxaloacetate)
  • lactate
  • glycerol
41
Q

What happens to malate when it leaves the TCA cycle?

A
  • Malate leaves the mitochondria
  • Oxaloacetate in cytosol
  • Oxaloacetate converted to PEP and reverse glycolysis
42
Q

Why can’t ketogenic molecules be glucogenic?

A

acetyl coA only elongates the TCA cycle, it does not provide extra TCA intermediates