The endocrine pancreas Flashcards

1
Q

What type of active transfer does glucose use?

A

Secondary active transport

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2
Q

What glucose transporter is involved with the absorption within the gut?

A

SGLT1: glucose absorption from gut

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3
Q

What glucose transporters are involved with glucose absorption in the kidney?

A

SGLT1, SGLT2: glucose reabsorption from kidney (PCT)

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4
Q

Where is GLUT 1 transporter found and describe its affinity for glucose

A

GLUT 1 (brain, erythrocytes) – high affinity for glucose: constant uptake of glucose at 2-6 mM

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5
Q

Where is GLUT 2 transporter found and describe its affinity for glucose

A

GLUT 2 (liver, kidney, pancreas, gut) – low affinity: glucose equilibrates across the membrane

Glucose-dependent insulin release in pancreas

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6
Q

Where is GLUT 3 transporter found and describe its affinity for glucose

A

GLUT 3 (brain) – high affinity

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7
Q

Where is GLUT 4 transporter found and describe its affinity for glucose?

What recruits these transporters?

A

GLUT 4 (muscle and adipose tissue) – medium affinity. Insulin recruits transporters

Insulin-dependent uptake of glucose into cells

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8
Q

What do alpha cells, beta cells and delta cells in the pancreas secrete?

Are these exocrine or endocrine cells?

A

α-cells (A cells): glucagon
β-cells (B cells): insulin
δ-cells: somatostatin

Endocrine

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9
Q

Describe the arterial and venous drainage of the pancreas

A

Pancreas supplied by branches of the coeliac, superior mesenteric, and splenic arteries.

The venous drainage of the pancreas is into the portal system.

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10
Q

When and where is insulin metabolised?

What is a good index of secretion?

A

Half of the secreted insulin is metabolized by the liver in it’s first pass; the remainder is diluted in the peripheral circulation

C-peptide is more accurate index of insulin secretion in peripheral circulation (not metabolized by liver)

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11
Q

What factors regulate insulin secretion?

A
  1. Plasma glucose
  2. AA
  3. Glucagon
  4. Aloha adregergic (-)
  5. PSNS
  6. Somatostatin (-)
  7. Incretin hormones
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12
Q

What factors regulate glucagon secretion?

A
  1. AA
  2. Beta-adrenergic
  3. PSNS
  4. Insulin (-)
  5. Somatostatin (-)
  6. Plasm glucose (-)
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13
Q

How do β cells sense rise in glucose?

A

Glucose entry to ATP production via glycolysis and TCA. The result is closure of a special kind of K channel, which is ATP-gated (negatively) and consequent membrane depolarization. This in turn leads to increased Ca entry, and intracellular Ca is the signal that triggers insulin exocytosis. If true, it follows that anything that can depolarize the B cell, or otherwise raise intracellular Ca, will also lead to insulin release

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14
Q

What type of receptor is insulin and what happens when it binds?

A

tyrosine kinase

Insulin binds to its receptor (1), which, in turn, starts many protein activation cascades (2). These include translocation of Glut-4 transporter to the plasma membrane and influx of glucose (3), glycogen synthesis (4), glycolysis (5), and fatty acid synthesis (6) (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin_receptor).

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15
Q

What happens when glucagon binds to its receptor?

A

On image

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16
Q

How to counter-regulatory hormones mainly act?

A

Counter-regulatory hormones act principally (not exclusively) through activity of PKA, which phosphorylates key enzymes in metabolic pathways

Insulin action leads to dephosphorylation of these same enzymes

17
Q

How is hyperglycemia central for DM diagnosis?

A

Random plasma glucose ≥ 11.1 mmol L-1
Fasting plasma glucose ≥ 7.0 mmol L-1
Oral glucose tolerance test (OGT) ≥ 11.1 mmol L-1

18
Q

The incretin effect

A

They are released in response to food ingestion, they can the release of insulin in beta cells in response to glucose. Causes increased glucose uptake and decreased glucose liver production