Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Hormonal Reg of Fuel Metabolism
Anmerkungen:
- Insulin and glucagon/epinephrine are the major hormones regulating metabolic changes between fasting and the fed state.
- Glucagon and epinephrine activate PKA and thus promote enzyme phosphorylation.
- Insulin activates protein phosphatases which reverse the effects of glucagon.
- Some enzymes are activated by phosphorylation, while others are inactive when phosphorylated.
- insulin and glucagon/epinephrine activate signal transduction cascades which have opposite effects on key metabolic enzymes.
- Insulin
Anmerkungen:
- Insulin is peptide hormone with chains A and B linked by disulfide bonds
- Production of mature insulin:
synthesis, cleavage in RER lumen, transport proinsulin to Golgi and storage vesicles
cleavage --> insulin + C-peptie
coprecipitation with Zn++ in storage vesicles
- Insulin promotes glucose storage as glycogen and conversion of glucose to fat.
- B- cells of
pancreas
- High [blood glucose]
- Secrete Insulin
- Action
- Stimulates
- Glucose
- Uptake
- From blood
- In muscle cells
- + GLUT-4
- Major glucose transporter
- In brain cells
- Insulin independent
- Utilization
- In Liver
Anmerkungen:
- Insulin stimulates the utilization of glucose in the liver, but not glucose uptake
- Storage
- Fat
- Synthesis
- Storage
- Protein
- Synthesis
- Inhibits
- Glycogen
- Breakdown
- Fat
- Mobilization
- Response
- Biphasic
- Initial
- Release
from
vesicles
- Sustained
- De novo
synthesis
- [Blood glucose] increase
Anmerkungen:
- For increases in plasma glucose concentrations up to 300 mg/dL, the normal increase in insulin release is proportional to the glucose level
- Sugars stimulate a more rapid increase in blood sugar than complex carbs
Fiber decreases glycemic index of foods (area under 2 hr glucose curve after feeding 50 g CHO portion)
- 2-3x normal range
- Reverse PKA Effects
- + protein serine/threonine
phosphatase
- Reverses
phosphorylation
from PKA
- Inhibits mobilization of
glucose from glycogen
- + glycogen
synthase
- Glucagon
Anmerkungen:
- 29 AA polypeptide hormone released by a-cells of pancreas
Initial synthesis of proglucagon
Plasma glucagon has half-life of 3-5 mins
- Fasted State
- Liver
- Releases glucose
- Maintains
plasma
levels
- Mobilizes glycogen
- Gluconeogenesis
- AAs
- Muscle Catabolism
- Major Energy Source
- Fatty Acids
- TAGs
- Secretion
- Stimulated
- Epinephrine
- Cortisol
- Exhaustive
Exercise
- Amino
Acids
Anmerkungen:
- in normal, "mixed" meals, amino acids, especially lysine and arginine, increase (or potentiate) the insulin response to glucose.
- Protein
meal, no
CHO
- Inhibited
- High [plasma glucose]
- Insulin
- Action
- Targets
- Liver
- Adipocytes
- NOT muscle
- Stimulates
- Glycogen
breakdown
- Gluconeogenesis
- Glucose
release
- TAG
hydrolysis
- FA release
- Inhibits
- Glycogen synthesis
- Fat
storage
- Increase cAMP
- Activate PKA
- Epinephrine
- Synthesis
- Response to stress
- Adrenal Medulla
- Action
- Glycogen Mobilization
- Liver
- Blood Glucose
- Muscle
- glucose-P
- ATP generation
- Increase cAMP
- Activate PKA
- + phosphorylase
kinase
- + phosphorylase
- Release
glucose -P
from
glycogen
- + lipase
- Hydrolysis
of stored fat
- - glycogen
synthase
Anmerkungen:
- First step in FA synthesis
- inhibits
glycogen
synthesis
- Insulin
reverses
effects
- Glucocorticoids
- Action
- Stimulate fuel
mobilization
- Regulate gene
transcription
- Glycogen synthesis
Anmerkungen:
- Cortisol stimulates glycogen synthesis, then glucagon and epinephrine stimulate glycogen mobilization
- Bind
intracellular
receptors
- Mediate changes
over long periods
- Starvation
- Sepsis
- Stress