Chapter 12.6 Flashcards
What are the major sites of metabolic activity in the body
- the major sites are the liver, skeletal muscles, cardiac muscles, brain and adipocytes
- > connective tissues and epithelial cells do not make major contributions to the consumption of energy
What happens to fatty acids converted to triacylglycerols in th eliver
-these triacylglycerols are released into the blood as very-low-density lipoproteins(VLDL)
Describe where the liver gets most of its energy from in the well fed state
-it gets its energy from oxidation of excess amino acids
What is lipoprotein lipase? When is it activated
- it is an enzyme found in the capillary bed of adipose tissue
- > it is induced by insulin
- > fatty acids that are released by lipoproteins are taken up by adipose tissue and made into triacylglycerol for storage
-it is activated during the fasting state
Where does the glycerol phosphate that is required for triacylglycerol synthesis come from
- it comes from glucose that is synthesized in adipocytes
- >as an alternative product of glycolysis
What happens to adipose tissue during the fasting state
- there are decreased levels of insulin and increased levels of epinepherine
- > so hormone sensitive lipase is activated in adipose tissue
- > allowing fatty acids to be released into the circulation
What is the major fuel source for skeletal muscle during the well fed state and the fasting phase?
Well fed
->it is glucose
Fasting
- > it is fatty acids in the blood
- > may also use ketone bodies
Is creatine phosphate a long lived source of energy
- no it is short
- >it transfers a phosphate group to ADP to form ATP
What do skeletal muscles use during short amount of exercise for fuel and what do they use during long amounts of exercise for fuel
For short amounts of exercise
->use glucose and stored glycogen
For long amounts of exercise
- > start using fatty acids
- > so oxidation of fatty acids
What energy source do cardiac muscles use in well fed state and fasting state
- for both states
- > they use fatty acids
- they can also use ketones during prolonged fasting
- > therefore, cardiac muscles mimic skeletal muscles during prolonged periods of fasting