Glucose Homeostasis Flashcards
What is the importance of glucose?
- Energy substrate
- hypoglycaemia (<4-5mmol/L) impaired CNS function
- <2 mmol/L = death and comma
How is glucose regulated?
By Insulin to lower blood glucose
By Glucagon, Cortisol, GH, Catecholamines to increase blood glucose
- Persistent hyperglycaemia = diabetes mellitus
Describe the structure of the pancreas gland?
Retroperitoneal structure
Has a head and a tail
Body of Pancreas is between the kidneys, above intestine
What are the roles of the pancreas?
Exocrine acinar cells secrete digestive enzymes via duct to small intestine ( 98% of gland )
Islets of Langerhans ( near tail of pancreas )
Structure of the islets?
paracine communication
Alpha cells = Glucagon
Beta cells = Insulin
Delta cells = Somatostatin keeps both in balance
Gap junctions : allow small molecules to pass between cells
Tight junctions : Create small intercellular spaces
What roles does Insulin play?
Can act as insulin growth factor - in utero growth
And lowers blood glucose
How does insulin lower glucose?
Build up of glycogen stores in liver ( glycogenesis )
Breakdown of glucose ( glycolysis )
Increase uptake of glucose to cells via GLUT 4
- additional actions of insulin : increase protein synthesis and reduction of breakdown of fat
What do some amino acids, some GI hormones, PNS and SNS pathways do?
Affects alpha and beta cell stimulation to stop either side overshooting
How does glucagon increase glucose?
hepatic glycogenolysis
Amino acid transport into liver = gluconeogenesis
Increased lipolysis = gluconeogenesis
How is Insulin released by high glucose levels in the blood - mechanism?
GLUT2 allows proportionate glucose into beta cell so it mirrors the blood levels
Glucose intraculleualr is broken down by Glucokinase to Glucose-6-P which then turns to ATP ( all is proportional as there is no negative feedback )
ATP stops Potassium leaving the cell causing depolarisation, opening calcium channels
Intracellular shift of calcium leads to release of stored insulin
What is Insulin and C-peptide?
Proinsulin breaks down through proteolytic cleavage into Insulin and C-peptide. ( C-peptide can hence be an indicator of endogenous reserve - so will be low in diabetics T1)
What is the incretin affect?
oral glucose in comparison to intravenous glucose promotes a larger secretion of insulin - incretin affect
Due to gut-derived factors e.g. Glucagon like peptide-1
WHat are the characteristics of GLP-1?
Glucagon like peptide 1
Gut hormone stimulating insulin supressing glucagon
Transcription product of Pro-glucagon gene mostly from L-cell
Increases satiety
Short half life due to rapid degradation from enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase-4 ( DPPG-4 inhibitor )
- used in treatment of diabetes ( and diabetic weightloss)
What is first phase insulin release ( FPIR )?
Normal glucose tolerance vs type 2 diabetes response
Describe the structure of the glucose receptor?
Once insulin binds to extracellular alpha subunit domain = conformational change in tyrosine kinase domains of beta subunit