Insulin Secretion and Intermediary Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

State four hormones that increase blood glucose concentration.

A

Glucagon
Cortisol
Catecholamines
Somatotrophin

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2
Q

State some complications of diabetes.

A
Diabetic retinopathy
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Peripheral neuropathy
Coma
Heart Attacks
Stroke
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3
Q

What is the normal blood glucose range?

A

4.0-5.5 mM

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4
Q

What percentage of pancreatic cells are islets of Langerhans?

A

2%

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5
Q

What do the delta cells in the islets of Langerhans produce?

A

Somatostatin

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6
Q

Why do cells in the islets of Langerhans have gap junctions?

A

Allow hormones to have a paracrine effect

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7
Q

What effect does somatostatin have on glucagon and insulin secretion?

A

Decreases both insulin and glucagon secretion (it is sometimes called ‘endocrine cyanide’)

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8
Q

What are the main effects of insulin?

A
Increase glycogenesis
Increase glycolysis
Increase glucose transport via GLUT-4
Decrease lipolysis
Increased protein synthesis 
Overall decrease blood glucose
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9
Q

State some factors that increase insulin secretion.

A

Certain amino acids
Gastrointestinal hormones
Parasympathetic activity

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10
Q

State some factors that decrease insulin secretion.

A

Sympathetic activity

Somatostatin

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11
Q

What is the effect of GLP-1?

A

Amplifies our insulin response - it makes us produce more insulin

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12
Q

What are the main effects of glucagon?

A

Increased lipolysis
Increased gluconeogenesis
Increase blood glucose
INSULIN inhibits glucagon release (via paracrine)

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13
Q

What is the role of glucokinase?

A

It is the rate limiting step that regulates insulin secretion
It converts glucose to G6P
Glucose moves into the beta cell via Glut-2 (which is NOT insulin regulated)
It is then converted to G6P by glucokinase (hexokinase IV), which then determines insulin secretion

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14
Q

Describe the structure of insulin and what can be measured to indirectly give an indication of blood insulin concentration?

A

Insulin is synthesised as a prohormone with an A, B and C chains
The C chain is removed in the conversion of proinsulin to insulin so the ratio of insulin: C peptide is 1:1
This means that C peptide can be measured to give an indication of insulin output

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15
Q

Describe how glucose uptake causes release of insulin from the beta cell.

A

Glucose enters through Glut-2 and is metabolised to produce ATP
There is an increase in intracellular ATP concentration
This BLOCKS ATP sensitive potassium channels —> changes membrane potential
Leads to opening of voltage dependent Ca2+ channels
Ca2+ influx causes insulin exocytosis

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16
Q

What is the incretin effect?

A

Oral glucose load stimulates more insulin release than IV glucose load
This is to do with intestinal hormones

17
Q

What enzyme breaks down GLP-1?

A

Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4 (DPPG-4)

18
Q

Describe the differences in first phase insulin release between a normal person and someone with T2DM.

A

Administration of glucose causes a sharp increase in insulin in a normal person
This surge of insulin (first phase release) is not present in someone with T2DM

19
Q

Describe the structure of the insulin receptor and how it works.

A

Insulin is a peptide hormone so it doesn’t enter the cell
The receptor has two alpha subunits and two transmembrane beta subunits, which have tyrosine kinase domains
Insulin binds to the alpha subunits and cause a conformational change in the beta subunits
You get phosphorylation of the receptors which recruit other substances that also get phosphorylated and have effects on the metabolic pathway

20
Q

Where does the fault causing insulin resistance lie?

A

Insulin resistance lies in the post-receptor cytoplasmic elements of insulin function