Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Glucose Metabolism Flashcards
What are fuels for muscle?
-ATP
-glucose
-glycogen
-triacylglycerol/ fatty acids
-proteins/ amino acids
-phosphocreatine
What is phosphocreatine?
-= creatine phospahte
-primarily in skeletal muscle
-some in heart and brain
-provides “reservoir” of ATP
-catalyzed by creatine kinase
Phosphocreatine + ADP <-> creatine + ATP
What are the 2 sources of energy for muscle contraction?
What is the additional one?
-phosphocreatine
-anaerobic metabolism:
primarily glycogen from glycogenolysis or glycolysis
glycogen forms 3 ATP and glucose forms 2
-aerobic metabolism:
glycogen, fatty acids (also glucose, amino acids, ketone bodies), produces much more ATP than does anaerobic metabolism (30-32 ATP per mol of glucose, more than 100 per mol of fatty acids), limited by oxygen supply
What is the ATP yield from anaerobic glycolysis?
glycogen forms 3 ATP and glucose forms 2
What is the ATP yield from aerobic oxidation of glucose?
30-32 ATPs per glucose
What is the bottom line? (2 effects)
Glucose has to go much faster in the absence of oxygen to supply same amount of ATP
Pasteur effect: oxygen inhibits fermnation
warburg effect: most cancers have high rate of glucose metabolism
What are limits to oxygen supply?
-blood flow
-capillaries
-oxygen uptake in the alveoli
-oxygen concentration
-number of erythrocytes (red blood cells)
Aerobic vs. Anaerobic metabolism endurance vs sprint:
Marathon run: most aerobic
Sprint: mostly anaerobic
Red muscle: aerobic
White muscle: anaerobic
What happens when sprinting?
-lactate can reach 20 mM
-converted to glucose (Cori cycle)
-build up oxygen debt
What happens when sprinting?
-lactate can reach 20 mM
-converted to glucose (Cori cycle)
-build up oxygen debt
What is the lactic acid myth?
-cells produce lactate ions not lactic acid, this increases pH
What lowers pH during anaerobic exercise?
-hydrolysis of cytoplasmic ATP produced protons
-mitochondria use protons to maintain the proton concentration, so no protons released from mitochondrial ATP hydrolysis
-high dependence on cytoplasmic ATP will lower pH
Go owe fuel use in notes
done
What are the fates of aerobic and anaerobic metabolism in muscle?
Glycogen -> pyruvate-> splits into two paths
1. Anaerobic: lactate( (little ATP, not limited by oxygen)
2. Aerobic (Krebs, oxidative phosphorylation): CO2 plus water (lots of ATP, limited by oxygen)
Explain the 2 types of muscle fibers.
Type I:
-slow twitch (dark)
-specialized for prolonged, slow effort
-many mitochondria
-high myoglobin content
-lower glycolytic capacity
-high fat
Type II:
-fast twitch (white)
-specialized for short bursts of activity
-few mitochondria
-low myoglobin
-high glycolytic capacity
-low fat
-type II a and II b