Module 1: Carbohydrates II Flashcards
Where is glycogen primarily stored? How much is stored?
- Liver and muscle
- Due to more muscle mass, the quantity of glycogen in muscle (250gm) is about 3 times higher than that in the liver (75gm)
Functions of liver glycogen
- Liver glycogen functions to store and export glucose to maintain blood glucose level between meals
- After 12-18 hrs of fasting, liver glycogen is almost totally depleted
Functions of muscle glycogen
Serves as a fuel reserve for the supply of ATP during muscle contraction
Although muscle glycogen doesn’t yield ____ _______ (as muscle lacks ____-_-_____), _____ formed by glycolysis in muscle can undergo transamination to _____, which is exported from muscle and used for ____________ in liver
- Free glucose
- Glucose-6-phosphatase
- Pyruvate
- Alanine
- Gluconeogenesis
What enzymes are involved in glycogenesis? Are they active/inactive, and what happens to glucose?
- Glycogen synthase b (inactive) -> Glucose is phosphorylated
- Glycogen synthase a (active) -> Glucose is De-phosphorylated
Enzymes involved in glycogenolysis
- Phosphorylase a regulation -> ACTIVE Pi**, Ca2+*, Catecholamine
- Phosphorylase b regulation -> INACTIVE 5’-AMP
What is Carbo-loading?
Increases muscle glycogen content more than mixed or protein + fats diets with the same amount of calories
How they determine that Carbo-loading was an efficient way to increase glycogen stores?
Relationship between initial glycogen content in the quadriceps muscle in nine subjects who had been on different diets, and maximal work time when working at a given load demanding 75% maximal aerobic power
Amphibolic Pathway
A metabolic pathway that functions in both
anabolism and catabolism
Cost of gluconeogenesis from an energy input/output perspective
-2 moles of pyruvate to 2 moles of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate consumes 6 moles of ATP
Cost of glycolysis from an energy input/output perspective
- 2 moles of pyruvate only yields 2 moles of ATP
- This is why ketogenic diets work so well to lose weight
- The process of gluconeogenesis very costly from an energy standpoint
What is an anaplerotic reaction?
Reactions that can replenish the intermediates lost during biosynthesis