L11 – The Physiology of Calcium and Phosphate Metabolism Flashcards
Describe the storage and transport forms of calcium?
Storage = 99% in bones
Transport:
- Free ionized form - active (50%)
- Protein-bound form (40%)
- Complexed with anions (10%) e.g., phosphates, HCO3-, citrate
Describe the storage and transport forms of phosphate?
Storage = 85% in bones, complexed with Ca as hydroxyapatite or calcium phosphate
Extra-skeletal tissues (14%): phosophoproteins, phosopholipids, nuclei acids
Circulation (1%):
- Free ionized form (60%) as H2PO4- or HPO42-
- Protein-bound form (10%)
- Complexed with cations (30%)
Compare the rate of mobilization between hydroxyapatite and calcium phosphate?
Hydroxyapatite = stable pool = require Oct and Ob to process, takes time to mobilize
CaPO4 = exchangeable pool = Rapid absorption and mobilization, non-crystalline
Both calcium and phosphate levels are age and sex specific. True or False?
False
Calcium = highly age and sex specific
Phosphate = age specific (only infant vs adult, not by year)
Variation in extracellular Ca elicits a larger response than variation in Phosphate. T or F?
True
Ca needs more tight control
Intake amount, absorption and excretion of Ca? which organs involved
Adults: 1000 mg/day = 1g/day
GIT absorption (inefficient) + Kidney reabsorption (99%)
Feces (majority) + urine excretion
Organs for absorption and excretion of PO4?
absorbed by the alimentary tract
90% plasma PO4 freely filtered, 80% reabsorbed in PCT
Phosphate level determined by renal phosphate excretion rate:
What determines the rate of PO4 excretion?
GFR vs reabsorption in PCT by Na/PO4 symporters (transport maximum)
Which hormones regulate Ca and PO4 levels?
calcitonin, active vitamin D, and parathyroid hormone
List some functions of Ca?
Bone and teeth
Cell signaling (IP3-Ca2+ pathways)
Neural transmission
Muscle contraction (e.g. heartbeat)
Blood coagulation (e.g. factor IV, IX and X)
List some functions of PO4?
- Protein, RNA, DNA > growth, maintenance, repair
- Energy metabolism, ATP production
- Chemical buffer to neutralize acids
arterial supply of parathyroid glands?
Inferior thyroid artery
Mechanism of PTH control in Chief cells under high serum Ca levels?
Chief cells:
- calcium sensing receptor (CaSR = Gαq protein-coupled receptor) activated during high serum Ca >> Activate phospholipase A2 >> arachidonic acid cascade >> increase PTH degradation >>suppresses PTH release
Mechanism of PTH control in Chief cells under low serum Ca levels?
Low serum Ca
> relax calcium sensing receptor
remove inhibitory signal
Release PTH from secretory vesicles
*Increase CaSR stimulation also increases calcitonin release from parafollicular cells**
How does PO4 level influence the PTH control in Chief cells?
High serum PO4 = low serum Ca
High PO4 inhibits Phospholipase A2 and arachidonic acid cascade» decrease PTH degradation
Works synergistic with Ca to increase PTH release