Energy Storage Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between muscle and liver glycogen stores?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

Describe the process of Glycogenolysis

A

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

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3
Q

Describe the process of Glycogenesis

A

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
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4
Q

Describe the process of Gluconeogenesis

A

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

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5
Q

How is liver glycogen metabolism regulated?

A

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

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6
Q

Explain how glucose can be obtained from non-carbohydrate sources

A
  • Gluconeogenesis
  • Substrates can be pyruvate, lactate, glycerol, amino acids whose metabolism involves pyruvate or krebs cycle intermediates (oxaloacetate)

-Glycolysis, irreversible steps bypassed

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7
Q

Discuss the clinical relevance of glycogen storage diseases

A

-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
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8
Q

When and where does gluconeogenesis occur?

A
  • 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

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9
Q

How is gluconeogenesis controlled?

A
  • Glucagon and Cortisol stimulate PEPCK and Fructose 1,6 bisphophatase
  • Insulin inhibits PEPCK and Fructose 1,6 bisphosphotase
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