Energy Storage Flashcards
What is the difference between muscle and liver glycogen stores?
- Muscle glycogen is made up of Glucose-6-Phosphate, it’s only utilised by muscle cells
- Muscle lacks the enzyme Glucose-6-Phosphotase so G-6-P enters glycolysis. Liver has this enzyme, so glucose is released by liver into blood for use by other tissues
Describe the process of Glycogenolysis
Step 1:
- Glycogen (n residues) + Pi is converted into Glucose-1-Phosphate and Glycogen (n-1 residues)
- Glycogen Phosphorylase or Debranching Enzyme catalyses this
Step 2:
-Glucose-1-Phosphate converted into Glucose-6-Phosphate via Phosphoglucomutase
Describe the process of Glycogenesis
Step 1:
- Glucose + ATP converted into Glucose 6-Phosphate and ADP
- Hexokinase used (Glucokinase in liver)
Step 2:
- Glucose 6-Phosphate converted into Glucose 1-Phosphate via Phosphoglucomutase
- Reversible
Step 3:
-Glucose 1-Phosphate + UTP + H20 converted into UDP-Glucose and 2Pi
Step 4:
- Glycogen (n residues) + UDP-Glucose converted into Glycogen (n+1 residues) and UDP
- via Glycogen synthase or Branching enzyme
Describe the process of Gluconeogenesis
Three major precursors:
Lactate- from anaerobic glycolysis in exercising muscle and red blood cells
Glycerol- released from adipose tissue breakdown of triglycerides
Amino Acids- mainly alanine
Key Enzymes in Gluconeogenesis
1) Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK)
2) Fructose 1,6- bisphosphotase
3) Glucose-6-phosphotase
How is liver glycogen metabolism regulated?
Glycogen Synthase is rate limiting enzyme in Glycogen Synthesis
Glycogen Phosphorylase is rate limiting enzyme in Glycogen degradation
- Glucagon and adrenaline act on glycogen synthase via phosphorylation, decreasing enzyme activity
- Glucagon and adrenaline acts on glycogen phosphorylase via phosphorylation, increasing enzyme activity
- Insulin does the opposite
NOTE:
Glucagon has no effect on muscle glycogen stores
AMP is an allosteric activator of muscle glycogen phosphorylase but not the liver form of the enzyme
Explain how glucose can be obtained from non-carbohydrate sources
- Gluconeogenesis
- Substrates can be pyruvate, lactate, glycerol, amino acids whose metabolism involves pyruvate or krebs cycle intermediates (oxaloacetate)
-Glycolysis, irreversible steps bypassed
Discuss the clinical relevance of glycogen storage diseases
-Inborn errors of metabolism
-Arise from deficiency or dysfunction of enzymes of glycogen metabolism
11 distinct types. Incidence varies from 1 in 20,000 to 1 in 1,000,000
- Excess glycogen storage can lead to tissue damage
- Diminished glycogen stores can lead to hypoglycaemia and poor exercise tolerance
Examples:
- von Gierke’s disease- Glucose 6-Phosphatase deficiency
- Macrocell’s disease- muscle glycogen phosphorylase deficiency
When and where does gluconeogenesis occur?
- Beyond 8 hours of fasting, liver glycogen stores start to deplete and an alternative source of glucose is required
- Occurs in Liver and to lesser extent in kidney cortex
precursors are lactate, glycerol, amino acids esp. alanine
How is gluconeogenesis controlled?
- Glucagon and Cortisol stimulate PEPCK and Fructose 1,6 bisphophatase
- Insulin inhibits PEPCK and Fructose 1,6 bisphosphotase