Chapter 9.6 Flashcards
What are the three important substrates for gluconeogenesis
1) Glycerol 3-phosphate(from stored fats, or triacylglycerols)
2) Lactate(anaerobic glycolysis)
3) Glucogenic amino acids(from muscle proteins)
What are the two classification of amino acids
-Glucogenic or ketogenic
What are glucogenic amino acids
-they are amino acids that can be converted into intermediates that can be used in gluconeogenesis
- these are all amino acids except leucine and lysine
- > these intermediates can be fed into gluconeogenesis
What are ketogenic amino acids
- they are amino acids that can be converted into ketone bodies
- > ketone bodies are alternatives to glucose, particularly during periods of prolonged starvation
What is pyruvate carboxylase activated by? What is its funciton
- it is activated by acetyl coA
- >it converts pyruvate to oxaloacetate
How does oxaloacetate move out of the mitochondria into the cytoplasm
- it needs to be reduced into malate
- >once outside in the cytoplasm, malate is again oxidized to oxaloacetate
What is phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase induced by? What is its role
- it is induced by glucagon and cortisol
- it converts oxaloacetate to phosphoenolpyruvate in a reaction that requires GTP
What is the role of fructose-1,6-biphosphatase?
- it is the rate limit step of gluconeogenesis
- takes fructose-1,6-biphosphate and then converts it to fructose-6-phosphate
What inhibits and activates fructose-1,6-biphosphatase
- ATP activates it
- AMP and fructose 2,6-biphosphate inhibit it
Where is glucose-6-phosphatase only found
- it is only found in the lumen of ER liver cells
- it is transported into the ER and free glucose is transported back into the cytoplasm
Is glucose-6-phosphatase present in skeletal muscle
- no
- >therefore, muscle glycogen cannot serve as a source of blood glucose and it is only for use within th emuscle
What is the role of glucose-6-phosphatase
-to convert glucose-6 phosphate to glucose
What is hepatic gluconeogenesis dependent upon
- it is dependent on the Beta-oxidation of fatty acids
- therefore, glucose produced by the liver does not represent an energy source for the liver
Can acetyl coA be converted to glucose? If not, then what fuel source is used in its place
- acetyl coA can be converted to ketone bodies
- >which can be used as a fuel source instead of glucose