Control of Blood Glucose (Chapter 14) Flashcards
What happens to carbohydrate in the body?
1) it is transported through the blood stream in the form of glucose in solution in the blood plasma
2) glucose is converted into the polysaccharide glycogen, a short-term energy store found in liver and muscle cells
What is the concentration of glucose in a healthy human?
80-120mg of glucose per 100cm3 of blood
What happens when there is a low concentration of glucose in the blood?
There is not enough glucose for respiration, ∴ cells can’t carry out normal functions - especially important for brain cells, which can only respire glucose
What happens when there is a very high concentration of glucose in the blood?
It can cause major problems, upsetting normal behaviour of cells
What is the homeostatic control of blood glucose concentration carried out by?
2 hormones, glucagon and insulin, secreted by endocrine tissue in the pancreas
What does the endocrine tissue in the pancreas consist of?
Groups of cells (islets of Langerhans), scattered throughout the pancreas
What 2 types of cells does the islets of Langerhans contain and what does each 1 secrete?
1) alpha cells secrete glucagon
2) beta cells secrete insulin
What do alpha and beta cells act as?
The receptors and central control for the control of blood glucose concentration
What do glucagon and insulin coordinate?
The actions of effectors
What happens after a meal when glucose is absorbed into the small intestine and passes into the blood?
1) as this blood flows through the pancreas, alpha and beta cells detect this increase in glucose concentration
2) alpha cells respond by stopping secretion of glucagon, which liver cells respond to and ∴ there is no breakdown of glycogen
3) beta cells respond by secreting insulin into the blood plasma
4) insulin is carried to all parts of the body, in the blood
What is insulin?
A signalling molecule
Why can’t insulin stimulate mechanisms within the cell directly?
Because it is a protein and can ∴ not pass through CSMs
How does the release of insulin result in the decrease in the concentration of blood glucose?
1) insulin binds to a receptor on the CSM and affects the cell indirectly through the mediation of intracellular messengers
2) insulin stimulates cells with insulin receptors e.g. muscle cells, to move vesicles containing GLUT4 proteins from the cytoplasm to the CSM and fuse with it
3) GLUT4 proteins facilitate the diffusion of glucose into the cell, down its concentration gradient ∴ increasing the rate at which they absorb glucose from the blood, convert it to glycogen and use it in respiration
4) this results in the decrease of blood glucose concentration
What is the only way that glucose can enter cells?
Through a transporter protein called GLUT
Where are GLUT4 proteins normally kept?
In the cytoplasm
Which GLUT proteins are always in the CSM and not affected by insulin?
GLUT1 in brain cells and GLUT2 in liver cells
How does insulin also trap glucose inside cells?
1) insulin stimulates the activation of the enzyme glucokinase, which phosphorylates glucose
2) phosphorylated glucose cannot pass through the GLUT transporters in the CSM bc it is too big and charged ∴ the glucose is trapped inside the cells
What other 2 enzymes does insulin activate and what do they do?
Glucofructokinase and glycogen synthase, which add glucose molecules to glycogen, increasing the size of glycogen granules in the cell