Carbohydrate Metabolism Flashcards
What are the dietary sources of energy?
Carbohydrates –> Glucose
-polysaccharides
-disaccharides
-monosaccharides
Fats –> Fatty Acids
-mostly TAG
Proteins –> Amino Acids
What are the 4 major fates of glucose?
-Synthesis of structural polymers : extracellular matrix and cell wall polysaccharides
-storage: glycogen, starch, sucrose
-oxidation via glycolysis: pyruvate
-oxidation via pentose phosphate pathway: ribose-5-phosphate
what is a dietary polysaccharide?
-mostly starch
-digested by amylase to maltose and oligosaccharides
-saliva
-duodenum
What is fiber?
-cellulose!
-B 1-4 linkages not hydrolyzed in vertebrates
-ruminants have microbes that can degrade cellulose
other types: pectin, lignin, etc.
How are oligosaccharides and disaccharides digested?
digested to monosaccharides by various enzymes including: sucrase and B-galactosidase
What is a monosaccharide?
mostly: glucose, galactose, fructose
taken up in then intestine by :
-Facilitated diffusion
-active transport
What is glycolysis?
glucose taken up into cells baby facilitated diffusion, glucose (6 carbon) is split into 2 pryuvates, free energy conserved as ATP and NADH
What are the 2 phases of glycolysis?
Preparatory: glucose is phosphorylated twice (2 ATP’s invested), split into two 3 carbon molecules
Payoff: leads to formation of pyruvate, generates 4 molecules of ATP and 2 of NADH per 6-carbon glucose
What is the net energy of glycolysis?
2 ATP and 2 NADH per glucose
What happens to the NADH from glycolysis overall?
-two molecules of NAD+ are reduced to NADH per molecule of glucose
what happens to NADH under aerobic conditions?
-shuttle systems indirectly transfer cytosolic NADH into mitochondria
-glyercol phosphate shuffle
-malate-asparate shuttle
-shuttle electrons from cytoplasmic NADH to mitochondrial NADH or FADH2
-NADH and FADH2 are then oxidized through electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation
what happens to NADH under aerobic conditions?
-must oxidize the NADH to regenerate NAD+ for glycolysis to continue
-fermentation: lactic acid fermentation and ethanol fermentation
What is the final product of glycolysis?
pyruvate!
still contains most of the energy in glucose
can be converted to acetyl-coA then:
oxidized to CO2 in the Krebs cycle, used for fat synthesis and other reactions, can be reduced to lactate or ethanol
How is lactate formed in the body?
during vigorous muscle contraction
some tissues release lactate under aerobic conditions
converted back to glucose in the liver
How is glucose taken into the liver?
regulated at the level of glucose transport
in the liver: high levels of GLUT2, essentially equilibrium step, allows uptake to increase as concentration in hepatic portal vein increases