BIOL class 23 Flashcards
insulin signaling and diabetes
insulin
a peptide hormone secreted by the beta cells of the pancreas; the major target tissues are the liver, muscle, and adipocytes
insulin induces..
- GLUT4 movement to the cell surface in FAT and MUSCLE
- helps support protein synthesis, cell division, differentiation, glycogen synthesis/storage, fatty acid synthesis
insulin inhibits..
gluconeogenesis, lipolysis, glycogen catabolism
what is “insulin sensitivity” and “insulin resistance”
refers to the roles of insulin in glucose homeostasis, prolonged elevated glucose levels in the serum during fasting are indications of insulin resistance and the onset of diabetes
diabetes mellitus
a group of diseases that are manifested by hyperglycemia; persistence of excessive levels of glucose in serum (and urine)
how the pancreas senses an increase of glucose in the serum
- an increase in serum glucose increases the production of ATP by respiration which in turn closes an ATP-gated K+ channel
- this causes membrane depolarization and Ca1+ channel opening
- Ca2+ activates secretion of insulin
- as glucose is depleted from serum, ATP levels in cells go down, channel re-opens and insulin secretion stops
the post-meal clearance of glucose is through the RAS-independent pathway of insulin signaling
- insulin receptor activation in muscle and adipose tissue leads to fusion of vesicles carrying the GLUT4 glucose transporter with the plasma membrane
- this allows glucose to be dumped from the serum and into muscle and adipocytes
- these tissues then complete glycolysis
when insulin signaling is normal…
- liver metabolism shifts to glucose storage and fatty acid production/packaging and transport; gluconeogenesis is inhibited
why is gluconeogenesis inhibited when insulin signaling is normal?
- insulin inhibits gluconeogenesis
decreased insulin signaling = uncontested glucagon signaling
- diabetes
- increased ketone and glucose production
- increased ketone and glucose in the bloodstream
what is diabetes?
chronic disease which occurs when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin, or when the body cannot effectively use the insulin it produces
- this leads to an increased concentration of glucose in the blood (hyperglycemia)
- diabetes is the persistence of high glucose levels in the serum after a meal
type 1 diabetes
- autoimmune disease that leads to the elimination of the beta-cells in the pancreas, resulting in NO insulin production/secretion
- treatments include daily insulin injection, candidate for stem cell therapy
type 2 diabetes
- caused by increasing insulin resistance that develops over time due to defects that can occur in any part of the pathways downstream of insulin production
- treatments include diet, exercise, stimulation of insulin secretion, suppression of glucagon signaling, inhibition of glucose uptake and/or activation of glucose excretion
why is obesity a risk factor for type II diabetes?
- insulin-stimulated glucose transport/uptake is impaired by obesity
- blood glucose stays high even as insulin levels increase
- the system becomes increasingly “resistant” to insulin
- excessive levels of lipids already in the system “dampens” the insulin signaling pathway through feedback inhibition of IRS-1
IRS1 (insulin receptor subrate 1)
key regulator of insulin signaling
- its downstream effects are ACTIVATED by its phosphorylation on TYROSINES
- the pathway is negatively regulated by phosphorylation on IRS-1 SERINES
- unregulated phosphorylation of serines on IRS1 can lead to insulin signaling defects