Control of Blood Glucose Flashcards

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1
Q

What is negative feedback?

A

any deviation from normal values/conditions are restored to their original levels

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2
Q

What impacts blood glucose?

A
  • increases after ingesting food/drinks with CHOs
  • decreases following exercise or after not eating for a period of time
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3
Q

What cells release insulin and glucagon and where are they found?

A

alpha cells: glucagon
beta cells: insulin
found in the Islets of Langerhans in the Pancreas

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4
Q

What does insulin do? (4 points)

A
  • binds to complementary receptors on cell membrane of liver and muscle cells
  • widens channels/increases permeability
  • stimulates vesicles containing carrier proteins to fuse with membrane
  • activates enzymes
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5
Q

What is meant by the term glycogenolysis?

A

hydrolysis of glycogen back into glucose in the liver

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6
Q

What is meant by the term gluconeogenesis? When does it occur?

A

glucose being made from non-CHO stores in the liver, when all glycogen has been converted and glucose level is still too low

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7
Q

How does insulin attaching to receptors on target cells reduce blood glucose levels?

A

changes tertiary structure of channel proteins resulting in more glucose being absorbed by facilitated diffusion

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8
Q

How does insulin activating enzymes lower blood sugar?

A

more glycogenesis

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9
Q

How does an increase in protein carriers lower blood sugar levels?

A

more glucose is absorbed into cells (larger SA for facilitated diffusion)

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10
Q

How does insulin attaching to receptors on target cells increase the number of carrier proteins?

A
  • stimulates intracellular chemical to be produced
  • causes vesicles containing carrier proteins to fuse to membrane
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11
Q

How does the binding of glucagon increase blood sugar levels?

A

bind to complementary receptors, activating a protein to become adenylate cyclase

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12
Q

What is the role of adenylate cyclase?

A
  • converts ATP into cyclic AMP
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13
Q

How does activating enzymes result in increase blood glucose levels?

A
  • stimulates enzymes to carry out gluconeogenesis (from glycerol or a/a)
  • secondary messenger system activates enzyme that breaks down glycogen to glucose
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14
Q

What activates adenyl cyclase?

A

change in tertiary structure caused by G- subunit binding to its receptor on the inside of the membrane

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15
Q

What is the second messenger? what does it activate?

A

cAMP, protein kinase

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16
Q

What proteins does adrenaline activate?

A

G proteins (that convert ATP into cAMP)

17
Q

what is glycogenesis?

A

the formation of glycogen from glucose

18
Q

What is the role of cAMP?

A

activates the enzyme protein kinase which carries out glycogenolysis

19
Q

What are four ways blood glucose concentration is lowered?

A
  • increased rate of absorption of glucose into cells
  • increase in respiratory rate in cells
  • increased glycogenesis
  • increased rate of conversion of glucose to fat
20
Q

Describe the actions of glucagon…

A
  • increases blood glucose concentration
  • attachment to specific receptors on cell-surface membranes
  • activate enzymes that convert glycogen to glucose
  • activates enzymes involved in gluconeogenesis
21
Q

How does adrenaline regulate blood glucose?

A
  • raises blood glucose
  • attaches to protein receptors on cell membranes of target cells
  • activates enzymes that cause the breakdown of glycogen to glucose in the liver