Thompson 5 Flashcards
(6 cards)
Elevated glucose (diabetes) results in increased cellular sorbitol levels in certain tissues. Which tissues? Why? What does this cause?
Lens, nerves, kidneys. They lack sorbitol dehydrogenase (cannot convert it to fructose). Causes cell swelling as sorbitol draws in water, which leads to cataracts, neuropathy, kidney damage.
Glucose is converted to sorbitol using _____ and then to fructose using ______. The latter step only occurs in the _____ and ____.
Aldose reductase, sorbitol dehydrogenase, liver, seminal vesicles
Non-classical galactosemia is caused by a deficiency in ______, leading to a build-up of _______ in the cell, which is then converted to _______ by _______.
galactokinase, galactose, galactitol, aldose reductase
Classical galactosemia is caused by a deficiency in ______, which causes a build-up of _______.
Galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, galactose-1-phosphate
In the liver, fructose is converted to F1P by _____, and then to glyceraldehyde and DHAP by ______. This enzyme is important because deficiency results in severe hypoglycemia and others symptoms because ______.
fructokinase, aldolase B; DHAP and glyceraldehyde are glycolytic metabolites and the cell needs them coming from glucose and fructose. Aldolase B also catalyzes F1-6BP breakdown (in the normal glycolysis pathway). Aldolase B deficiency is known as ‘hereditary fructose intolerance’ and is more severe than ‘essential fructosuria’ which is a deficiency in fructokinase.
Glycosaminoglycans are made of repeating disaccharides consisting of an _____ and an ______. Clusters of glycosaminoglycan fibers attached to a protein core make a _______.
Acidic sugar, acetylated amino sugar; proteoglycan