Intermediate Metabolism- glycolysis Flashcards

1
Q

What is glycolysis?

A

It is the pathway that converts glucose to Pyruvate - the metabolic precursor of acetyl coA

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2
Q

How does Glucose Enter the cell?

A

1) facilitated diffusion - GLUT transport proteins in the cell membrane
2) Na+ dependent co transport

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3
Q

Once Glucose is in the cell, how do you prevent it from leaving again?

A

once inside, the glucose is phosphorylated, thus trapping it by conversion to glucose 6 phosphate

*there are no cell-membrane transport systems for phosphorylated sugars!!*

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4
Q

What is phosphorylation catalized by?

A

Hexokinase- most cell types

glucokinase - liver parenchymal cells and pancreatic islet cells

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5
Q

Difference between Glucokinase and Hexokinase?

A

Hexokinase= has a very low Vmax and a low Km, regulated allosterically

Glucokinase= has a very high Vmax and a high Km, regulated by direct inhibition

*therefore, when there are small amounts of glucose (fasting state), the hexokinase has a greater affinity- so it binds tighter to the glucose. However, when there is a large amount of glucose (fed state), use of glucokinase is prefered because you have a greater capacity when you use glucokinase

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6
Q

What are the products of aerobic vs. anaerobic glycolysis?

A

aerobic - makes pyruvate

anaerobic - makes lactate

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7
Q

What is the rate limiting step of glycolysis?

A

the enzyme phosphofructokinase 1

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8
Q

What is substrate level phosphorylation and how does it differ from indirect phosphorylation?

A

substrate level phos= direct production of ATP

indirect phos= reduction of NADH under aerobic conditions

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9
Q

Under anaerobic conditions, what is pyruvate converted to?

A

it is reduced to lactate under anaerobic conditions

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10
Q

Anaerobic metabolism can lead to..

A

1) muscle cramping during vigorous exercise
2) lactic acidosis - elevated plasma levels of lactic acid secondary to circulatory collapse (MI, PE, or haemorrhage). It is potentially fatal

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11
Q

What are other metabolic fates of pyruvate?

A
  • under aerobic conditions - to acetyl coA, then into the TCA cycle
  • serve as a precursor for Fatty acid synthesis
  • convert to oxaloacetate and enter TCA cycle
  • serve as precursor for gluconeogenesis
  • reduce to ethanol (in microorganisms)
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12
Q

How much ATP overall do we yield from glycolysis?

A

we invest 2 ATP and we make 9, therefore

7 ATP overall

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13
Q

How do we regulate glycolysis?

A

1) feedback and allosteric inhibiton of enzymes

  • PFK1 inhibitied allosterically by ATP
  • Glucokinase inhibited by F6P

2) Hormonal regulation

  • PFK1 is activated allosterically by Fructose 2,6,bisphosphate produced by PFK2.
  • F2,6,B inhibitis gluconeogenesis as well
  • Insulin and Glucagon control PFK2 activity and thus regulate F26B levels
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14
Q

Describe the insulin/glucagon balance in fed vs. fasting state

A

Fed state, insulin produced and the glucose it absorbed quickly from the blood- increase the concentration of F2,6,B, increase the rate of glycolysis and decrease gluconeogenesis

In the Fasting state, glucagon is produced and it decreases the concentration of F2,6,B and furthermore the rate of glycolysis - while increasing the rate of gluconeogenesis

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15
Q

What is hereditary myopathy with lactic acidosis?

A

autosomal recessive muscular disorder

symptoms: exercise intolerance, muscle tenderness, cramps, dyspnea, palpitations

biochemical features: lactic acidosis, rhabdomyolysis

prognosis: chronic disorder

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