Energy: Carbohydrate 1 Flashcards
1
Q
Polymers
A
Disaccharides (2 units) - maltose (glucose & glucose) - lactose (galactose & glucose) - sucrose (fructose & glucose) Oliosaccharides (3-12 units) - dextrins Polysaccharide (10-1000 units) - glycogen, starch, cellulose - all polymers of glucose
2
Q
Disaccharides
A
Condensation of 2 monosaccharides
H20 eliminated
O-glycosidic bonds
3
Q
Glycogen
A
- main storage polysaccharide in mammals (liver and skeletal muscle)
- alpha 1-4 and 1-6 linked (branched)
- polymer of glucose
4
Q
Starch
A
- polymer of glucose in plants
- mixture of amylose (alpha 1-4) and amylopectin (alpha 1,4 and alpha 1,6)
- enzymes release glucose and maltose
5
Q
Cellulose
A
- structural polymer of glucose in plants
- beta 1-4 linkages
- no human enzymes to digest beta 1-4 linkages
- an important for GI function
6
Q
Enzymes to digest carbohydrates
A
Saliva - amylase STARCH AND GLYCOGEN TO DEXTRINS Pancreas - amylase DEXTRINS TO MONOSACCHARIDES Small intestine - disaccharides attached to brush boarder membrane of epithelial cells on the lumen - lactase - sucrase - pancreatic amylase - isomaltase
7
Q
Absorption of monosaccharides
A
- actively transported into intestinal epithelial cells to blood supply to target tissues (glucose level in cells higher than that in lumen)
- uptake into cells via facilitated diffusing using transport proteins (GLUT1-GLUT5)
GLUTs have different tissue distributions and affinities, can be hormonally controlled
8
Q
Tissue requirement of glucose
A
- major sugar in blood
- all tissues can metabolise glucose
- blood glucose regulated ~5mM
- RBC, WBC, kidney medulla, lens of eye) have an absolute requirement and uptake by these tissues
- CNS (brain) prefers glucose
- some tissues need it for specialised functions (liver, adipose)
9
Q
Glycolysis
can be controlled - unidirectional
A
Cytosolic - oxidise glucose/NADH production - synthesis of ATP from ADP - produces C6 and C3 intermediates Exergonic, oxidative No loss of CO2 can operate anaerobically with the addition of one enzyme
10
Q
Phase 1 of Glycolysis
reactions 1-3
A
- phosphorylation of glucose to glycose-6-phosphate (G6P)
- glucose negatively charged (anionic)
- prevents passage back across the plasma membrane
increases the reactivity of glucose to permit subsequent steps after the initial investment of energy - reaction 1 and 3 have large negative delta G values - so are irreversible
Step three is the committing step - first step that commits glucose to metabolism via glycolysis
11
Q
Carbohydrates
CHO
A
General formula: (CH2O)n
Contains aldehyde or keto group
Multiple -OH groups
Hydrophilic - attracts water, water soluble, cannot pass across cell membranes without help
Partially oxidised - needs less oxygen than fatty acids for complete oxidisation
D-Glucose is the naturally occurring form
12
Q
Phase 2 Glycolysis
reactions 4-10
A
Reaction 4 - cleavage of C6 into two C3 units Reaction 6 - small amount of reducing power NADH captured reactions 7 and 10 ATP SYNTHESIS - SUBSTRATE LEVEL PHOSPHORYLATION - 1,3-BPG and PEP - transfer PI to ADP to give ATP Reaction 10 - large -ve delta G so irreversible
13
Q
ATP synthesis during Glycolysis
A
- 2 moles ATP invested
- 4 moles of ATP produced
- net of 2 moles of ATP produced per 1 mole of glucose by SUBSTRATE LEVEL PHOSPHORYLATION