Integration of metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

What fuels the brain?

A

Continuous supply of glucose

Cannot use fatty acids

Can use ketone bodies as a partial substitute

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2
Q

What can hypo/hyperglycaemia do to the brain?

A

Hypo: faintness and coma
Hyper: irreversible damage

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3
Q

What fuels skeletal muscle at rest and during contraction?

A

Light contractions requirements met my OP

Vigorous contractions - O2 becomes a limiting factor : glycogen breakdown occurs in muscles and lactate formation occurs

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4
Q

What fuels the heart?

A

Designed for complete aerobic metabolism = rich in mitochondria

Uses TCA substrates: free fatty acids, ketone, lactate, glucose

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5
Q

What can happen if there is a loss of O2 supply to the heart?

A

Myocardiac infarction

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6
Q

What are the roles of the liver?

A

Highly metabolically active

Central role in maintaining blood glucose

Glucose storage organ

Lipoprotein metabolism

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7
Q

What can excess glucose 6 phosphate do?

A

Generate glycogen in the liver and muscle

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8
Q

What can excess Acetyl CoA be used for?

A

Generate fatty acids : stored as triglycerides in adipose

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9
Q

Why is lactate produced?

A

During extreme exercise the ATP demands of muscle outstrip the oxygen needed for aerobic respiration

= lactate made

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10
Q

What changes occur during fasting?

A

Instead of Acetyl CoA entering TCA, it is used to ketone body production

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11
Q

What is the pentose phosphate pathway?

A

Glucose 6 phosphate can be used as a source of nucleotides which also produced the bulk of NADPH needed

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12
Q

What does the body do, short term, to avoid hypoglycaemia?

A

breakdown liver glycogen = glucose

Release fatty acids from adipose

convert acetyl CoA = ketone bodies

  • muscle can use the fatty acid and ketone bodies leaving more glucose for the brain
  • once glycogen is depleted gluconeogenesis kicks in
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13
Q

What is gluconeogenesis?

A

Making glucose from pyruvate

Pyruvate -->
Oxaloacetate --> 
Phosphoenol pyruvate -->
G3P ( + DHAP ) -->
Fructose 1,6 biphosphate -->
Fructose 6 phosphate -->
Glucose 6 phosphate -->
Glucose
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14
Q

What is the cori cycle and how is it relevant to gluconeogenesis?

A

The Cori cycle:

generation of pyruvate from lactate in the liver and lactate dehydrogenase

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15
Q

Why is glycerol relevant to gluconeogenesis?

A

glycerol is used in generating dihydrocyyacetone phosphate ( DHAP ) which is in glycolysis and needed for gluconeogenesis

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16
Q

What are bypass reactions of gluconeogenesis?

A

Glycolysis has 3 irreversible reactions catalysed by the kinases. So these three reactions have to be bypassed on the way back to glucose

17
Q

Where does the first bypass reaction take place?

A

Mitochondria ( the rest in cytosol )

pyruvate carboxylase to make oxaloacetate

18
Q

What bypass enzyme is used for pyruvate kinase?

A

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase

19
Q

What bypass enzyme is used against phosphofructokinase?

A

Fructose 1,6 biphosphate

20
Q

What bypass enzyme is used against hexokinase?

A

Glucose 6 phosphatase

21
Q

What is the difference in gluconeogenesis and glycolysis reversal?

A

Gluconeogenesis not a reversal at the reactions have to be bypassed with other enzymes. To make it energetically favourable.

G ( glycolysis reverse ) = +90

G ( gluconeogenesis ) = -38

22
Q

What is the difference between glucogenic and ketogenic amino acids?

A

Glucogenic: amino acids whose skeletons can give rise to glucose via gluconeogenesis

Ketogenic: amino acids give rise to skeletons used for fatty acid and ketone body synthesis

23
Q

What happens to the products of triglyceride breakdown?

A

Broken down into fatty acids and glycerol

Glycerol –> DHAP in gluconogenic pathway

Fatty acids –> converted to ketone bodies

24
Q

What occurs during aerobic exercise?

A
  • contractions increase ATP demands
  • contractions increase glucose transport
  • Muscle glycolysis increases ( adrenalin )
  • gluconeogenesis increases ( adrenaline )
  • fatty acids increase ( adrenaline )
25
Q

As muscle contracts the demand for ATP increases, why?

A

Actomyosin ATPase requirements increase

26
Q

What occurs during anaerobic exercise?

A
  • ATP demand cannot be matched by O2 delivery
  • transport cannot keep up with glucose demand
  • muscle glycogen breakdown increases
  • lactate increases
  • liver uses lactate to form glucose ( recovery )
27
Q

What are the differences in the hexokinase in the muscle and in the liver?

A

Contain isoforms of this enzyme

Maximally active at different concentrations of glucose.

Km in muscle = 0.1mM =active at low levels of glucose and inhibited by accumulating levels of glucose 6 phosphate

Km in liver = 4mM = less sensitive to blood glucose and the inhibitory effects of glucose 6 phosphate

28
Q

What does glucose 6 phosphatase do?

A

Found in the liver not muscle

Catalyse reverse reaction to hexokinase, generating glucose from glucose 6 phosphate

29
Q

What do glucocorticoids do for hormonal control of blood glucose levels?

A

steroid hormone which increase synthesis of metabolic enzymes concerned with glucose availability

30
Q

What happens after a long fast?

A
  • Glucagon/insulin ratio increases further
  • Adipose tissue hydrolyses triglycerides to provide fatty acids for metabolism
  • TCA cycle intermediates redules to provide substates for gluconeogenesis
  • protein breakdown provides amino acid substrates for gluconeogenesis
  • ketone bodies are produced from fatty acids and amino acids in liver to substitute partially the brain’s requirement for glucose