Term
What is the storage form of glucose? |
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Definition
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Term
Where is glycogen primarily synthesized? |
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Definition
liver(highest concentration) and muscle(greatest amount overall) |
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Term
Muscle uses glycogen for? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
raising blood glucose levels in response to glucagon |
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Term
Glycogen synthesis will occur in direct response to? |
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Definition
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Term
Why are the branches in glycogen, a(1,6), so important? |
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Definition
-They increase the overall solubility of glycogen.(W/o direct damage to our muscle and liver will occur.) -Allow for rapid synthesis and degradation |
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Term
What side are glucose residues added to? |
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Definition
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Term
Muscle has no glucagon receptors, so it has no response to its release. Does muscle,however, respond to insulin release? |
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Definition
Yes, it responds by taking glucose from the blood and it will also synthesize glucagon under these conditions. |
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Term
What two enzymes degrade glycogen? |
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Definition
1) glycogen phosphorylase (only can work up to 4 residues away from a branch point) 2) debranching enzyme |
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Term
What two enzymes synthesize glycogen? |
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Definition
1) glycogen synthase 2) branching enzyme |
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Term
What enzyme regulates glycogen phosphorylase activity? |
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Definition
(Glycogen) Phosphorylase kinase |
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Term
What are the regulatory enzymes of importance to glycogen metabolism? |
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Definition
1) Glycogen Phosphorylase Kinase 2) cAMP dependent protein kinase 3) Protein phosphatase I- dephosphorylates proteins 4) Protein Inhibitor- regulates the phosphatase |
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Term
What enzyme uses ATP to make G6P from glucose? |
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Definition
hexokinase or glucokinase |
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Term
What enzyme is reversible and can make Glucose-1-Phosphate from G6P? |
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Definition
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Term
What enzyme does the irreversible reaction of making UDPG from G1P? |
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Definition
UDP-Glucose Pyrophosphorylase Or glucose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferae |
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Term
Where do the phosphates comes from in UDPG? |
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Definition
One phosphate in UDP-glucose is from G-1-P; the other is the a phosphate of UTP. |
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Term
What is the role of glycogenin? |
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Definition
-It is the initiator of glycogen synthesis. -Glycogen Initiator Synthetase, an activity of glycogenin adds the first six glucose residues to itself (glycogenin). Glycogen synthase and branching enzyme can then use this as a primer to fully synthesize glycogen. |
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Term
How much ATP is required to add a glucose residue starting from glucose to an existing glycogen chain. |
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Definition
2 ATP or 1 ATP if you start from G6P |
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Term
What cofactor does Glycogen Phosphorylase require? |
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Definition
Vit B6 aka pyridoxal phosphate |
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Term
What adds one glucose residue from UDP-glu to non-reducing end of existing glycogen chain? |
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Definition
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Term
What transfers residues from one chain to create an a (1,6) bond and a new non-reducing end. Increases glycogen solubility and enzyme access rate to the ends? |
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Definition
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Term
What degrades glycogen at non-reducing ends one residue at a time via a phosphorolysis reaction? Will only work up to four residues of a branch point. |
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Definition
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Term
What removes 3 glucosyl residues from a non-reducing end and adds to another chain? Removes a (1,6) linkages by a hydrolysis reaction. |
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Definition
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Term
cAMP Dependent Protein Kinase does what in terms of glycogen metabolism? |
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Definition
It Phosphorylates both 1) Glycogen synthase- goes from a/I(active to b/D(inactive 2) Phosphorylase Kinase- goes from inactive to active form then this phosphorylates- Phosphorylase(inactive) b to Phosphorylase a(active) |
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Term
What can active Glycogen Synthase after it has been phosphorylated and this inactivated? |
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Definition
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Term
What can allosterically activate Glycogen Synthase D? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
1) Glycogen Synthase D- activates 2) UDP-glucose D form (decreases Km and Vmax)-activates 3) Hexokinase- inactivates |
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Term
What inhibits Phosphorylase a(active) in the liver and muscle? |
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Definition
Phosphorylase(liver)- Glucose
Phosphorylase(muscle)- Creatine-phosphate |
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Term
Thus Phosphorylase b in the liver have any allosteric modifiers? If yes what? |
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Definition
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Term
Thus Phosphorylase b in the muscle have any allosteric modifiers? If yes what? |
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Definition
Activator- AMP Inhibitor- ATP, G6P |
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Term
Phosphorylase kinase which is activated by PKA, also can be activated partially by what? |
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Definition
Ca2+ (it binds to the delta subunit) |
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Term
What is the delta subunit in Phosphorylase Kinase also called? |
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Definition
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Term
What regulates Protein Phosphatase I? And what activates this? |
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Definition
Protein phosphatase inhibitor I- regulated by PKA(activated via phosphorylation)- when activated it binds to and blocks Protein Phosphatase I |
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Term
What else regulates Phosphtase I? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens when glucagon is released? |
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Definition
1) Glucagon binds to receptors on the cell 2) Gs activated, binds GTP 3) Adenylate cyclase activated, cAMP levels increase, the cascade is initiated 4) PKA(cAMP dependent protein kinase activity increases) 5) Phosphorylase kinase is phosphorylated and activated 6) Protein inhibitor-1 phosphorylated, activated, and binds to protein phosphatase 1 to block phosphatase activity 7) Phosphorylase kinase activates phosphorylase, converting it from the b to the a form 8) Phosphorylase a converts glycogen to G-1-P, which is isomerized(by Phosphoglucomutase) to G-6-P, and then exported as glucose 9) Glucose is exported because glycogen synthase has been phosphorylated and inactivated by the cAMP dependent protein kinase (or phosphorylase kinase, or a calcium activated kinase) 10) As G-6-P levels increase, G6Pase produces glucose, which is in levels below the Km for glucokinase, so rephosphorylation does not occur 11) Protein kinase A has also inhibited PFK-2 and PK in the liver, stopping glycolysis 12) This aids liver glucose export |
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Term
Epinephrine has two receptors alpha and Beta, when it binds to this receptor the same cascade occurs as when glucagon binds? |
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Definition
Beta receptor for epinephrine |
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Term
What happen epinephrine binds to the alpha receptor? |
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Definition
1) Generates second messengers based on phosphatidylinositol a- Diacylglycerol(DAG) and IP3 are released b- DAG activated Protein Kinase C c- IP3 stimulates calcium entry into the hepatocyte 2) The calcium binds to, and activates, phosphorylase kinase (also another calcium dependant kinase, via calmodulin) 3) PKC also phosphorylates, and inactivates, glycogen synthase |
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Term
Glycogen Storage Disease: Type 0
What is lacking and what are the symptoms? |
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Definition
Lacks: liver glycogen synthase
Symptoms: Fasting hypoglycemia. Liver has very low, if any, glycogen.
Treatment- frequent small meals |
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Term
Glycogen Storage Disease: Type I (von Gierke's disease)
What is lacking and what are the symptoms? |
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Definition
Lacks- glucose-6-phosphatase
Symptoms- Enlargement of liver, severe hypoglycemia. Increased glycogen in liver, of a normal structure.
Treatment- frequent small meals |
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Term
Type I Glycogen Storage Disorder is also known as? |
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Definition
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Term
Glycogen Storage Disease: Type IV (Anderson's disease)
What is lacking and what are the symptoms? |
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Definition
Lacks- branching enzyme
Symptoms- Fatal disease. Liver has low levels of non-branched glycogen, which presents solubility problems. Cirrhosis develops.
Treatment- liver transplant |
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Term
Type IV Glycogen Storage Disease is also known as |
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Definition
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Term
Glycogen Storage Disease: Type V (McArdle's disease)
What is lacking and what are the symptoms? |
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Definition
Lacks- muscle phosphorylase
Symptoms- Weakness and cramping after exercise; inability to use muscle glycogen as energy source.
Treatment- pt can still makes ATP from fatty acids, more of an inconvenience |
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Term
Type V Glycogen Storage Disease is also called? |
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Definition
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Term
What does MODY stand for? |
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Definition
Maturity onset diabetes of the young |
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Term
How do you get MODY and what problems are associated with it? |
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Definition
-Inheritable(in one case, mapped to glucokinase/other case transcription factors are mutated)
- Glucokinase is only expressed in liver and pancreatic B-cels -Normally B-cells release insulin in response to glucose -MODY pt doesn't release insulin properly -this suggests that a metabolite of glucose signals the b-cell to release insulin, since glucokinase is the defective enzyme |
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Term
What makes Glucokinase an effective glucose sensor for the pancreatic B-cells as apposed to Hexokinase? |
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Definition
Glucokinase has a higher Km than Hexokinase, so it will only work when glucose levels are high Hexokinase with its lower Km will always be sensitive to glucose even low levels |
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Term
What drug is given to type II diabetics? They bind to and close the potassium channels on the surface of the beta cells. This increases calcium movement into the beta cell, leading to insulin release. |
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Definition
Sulfonylurea-based drugs (Glipizide) |
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Term
What is the critical metabolite for releasing insulin from the B-cell? |
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Definition
ATP (it inhibits the K+ channel/ Ca2+ keeps flowing in and then once a critical level is hit- insulin goes out) |
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Term
What is the influence of these factors on insulin release? 1) glucose 2) amino acids 3) neural input 4) gut hormones 5) epinephrine |
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Definition
1) positive 2) minor- positive 3) minor- positive 4) minor- positive 5) negative |
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Term
Are neural signals(vagus nerve) required for insulin release? |
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Definition
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Term
What released after food ingestion also stimulates insulin release(minor)? |
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Definition
Gastric Inhibitory Peptide |
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Term
Does a MODY pt develop the same longterm problems that a Type I diabetic has? |
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Definition
No, because insulin is still being produced, GK has been altered and is not making G6P as well and not enough ATP to stimulate proper release of insulin. |
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