50. Biochemical Signalling in Exercise Flashcards
How does signal transduction work?
A certain signal e.g. hormone, nutrient
Binds to receptor on cell
Molecule activated e.g. transcription factor
This allows the organism to react to the stimulus recieved
What chanegs may occur in repsonse to a signal
Protein synthesis
Protein breakdown
Transcription
What changes occur in a cell after exercise?
Resistance training- Protein synthesis
Endurance training- Cell signalling
Discuss how the signal transduction pathway grew throughout time with relation ot calcium
Bacteria- Calcium is bad and can precipitate when exposed to phosphate. Calcium pumps developed
Prokaryotes- Need some calcium so developed calcium channels to allow calcium back in
Eukaryotes- Developed calcium storing organelles and calcium binding proteins
How is MTOR activated
Insulin can be one activator- shows that protein synthesis should occur
Insulin binds to insulin receptor
PKB is activated
PKB activates MTOR
What occurs when MTOR is activated
More protein is produced from RNA pathways
Studies have shown without MTOR individuals cannto stimulate protein synthesis
How is mitochondrial biogenesis induced (mitochondrial growth)
Increase in AMP (decreasing ATP stores, increased calcium) causes activation of transcription factor AMPK and therefore the production of PCGa1
This causes productions of proteins that indices mitochondrial protein induction leading toedurance adaptations e.g. increase in mitochondria
What different components are involved in gene expression and transcription
Primer and pioneer trnascription factors
Signal responsive Transcription factor promotors
Signal responsive Transcription factor enhancer (loops, sometimes from other chromosomes)
What dont i understand
The IGF-1 Study
How does hypoxia signalling induce adaptation?
Mediated by HIF-1 which is contantly produced but typically broken down by oxygen
In hypoxia HIF-1 is translocated to the nceaus ad=nd binds to hypoxia response element
What does HIF-1 induce
EPO
Apoptosis- IGF-2
Glucose metabolism- Metabolism
Protelysis
Angiogenesis- VEGF
Many, many more- see paper
How is energy metabolism affected by HIF-1
Reduced or innaportiate repsonses to glycolysis and beta oxidation when HIF-1a is reduced
What is the warburg study?
Measurement of lactate formation and glucose in tumour cells
Foudn out that glucose utilisation is through the roof however also found that lactate fermentation is the main form of energy production
What tissue has constant lactate supply
Red blood cells
What is the warburg effect shown by the warburg study
The TCA cycle is oversaturated and is unable to recycle the NADH the mode of energy production becomes anearobic glycolysis