Gluconeogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

What is gluconeogenesis?

A
  • Glucose formation from precursors/ substrates such as lactate, glycerol, and amino acids
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2
Q

Where does gluconeogenesis occur?

A
  • Mostly in liver.
  • Some in Kidneys.
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3
Q

Is Gluconeogenesis the reverse of glycolysis?

A

No, as there are 3 irreversible steps in glycolysis:

  1. Glucose to glucose 6-P (hexokinase)
  2. Fructose 6-P (phosphofructokinase)
  3. Phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate (pyruvate kinase)
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4
Q

What are the sources of substrates needed for gluconeogenesis?

A
  1. Lactate = anaerobic glycolysis via lactate dehydrogenase .
  2. Glycerol = from adipose tissues during hydrolysis of TAG into blood (glycerol to glycerol phosphate via glycerol kinase. Glycerol phosphate to DHAP and then DHAP to glyceraldehyde 3-P).
  3. Amino acids converted to TCA intermediates
    & to oxaloacetate (OAA) via TCA cycle. (OAA= direct precursor of phosphoenolpyruvate)

**Acetyl coA release when FA mobilised:
so ^Fatty acid breakdown = ^glycerol & ^acetyl coA

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4
Q

Why is Acetyl CoA not considered a substrate for
gluconeogenesis?

A
  • Acetyl-CoA is not used in gluconeogenesis because it cannot be converted to pyruvate.
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5
Q

How is the irreversible action of pyruvate kinase bypassed in gluconeogenesis?

A
  1. Pyruvate is converted to oxaloacetate via pyruvate carboxylase
  2. Oxaloacetate is converted to phosphoenolpyruvate via PEP carboxykinase
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6
Q

What is the intermediate step in converting oxaloacetate to glucose?

A
  • Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) via PEP carboxykinase.

-This happens in mitochondrion and cytosol.

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7
Q

How does oxaloacetate cross mitochondrial membrane?

A
  • Converted to malate or aspartate which can cross the membrane and be reconverted in cytosol
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7
Q

How is the irreversible action of phosphofructokinase (rate limiting step in glycolysis) bypassed in gluconeogenesis?

A
  • Fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase converts fructose 1,6 bisphosphate to fructose 6 phosphate.
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8
Q

What inhibits the action of fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase?

A
  1. AMP
  2. Fructose 2,6, bisphosphate: F-2,6-BP levels decreased by glucagon. Thus, glucagon increases rate of gluconeogenesis.
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9
Q

How is the irreversible action of hexokinase bypassed in gluconeogenesis?

A
  1. G6P is transported to ER via glucose-6-phosphate translocase
  2. Glucose-6-phosphatase releases phosphate (only in liver and kidney).
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10
Q

How is gluconeogenesis activated and regulated?

A
  1. Gluconeogenesis is activated when energy is required (i.e., low ATP/AMP ratio) and inhibited if there is an excess of energy available.

-Activation: Glucagon

-Inhibition: Insulin

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