Integration Flashcards

1
Q

Example of Regulation via Compartmentation

A

pyruvate in cytoplasm –> lactate or alanine while in mito –> acetyl Coa –> TCA cycle

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2
Q

5 Phases of Glucose Homeostasis

A
  • I- FED- blood glucose is from diet; all tissues use glucose
  • II- FAST- start to replenish blood glucose via glycogen mobilization; all tissues still use glucose except liver
  • III- FAST 24 HR- supplement w/ hepatic gluconeogenesis; still all tissues use glucose except liver
  • IV- FAST 2 DAYS- no more glycogen and kidney starts to contribute to gluconeogenesis too; brain starts to use ketone bodies; glucose only used by brain/RBC and some muscle
  • V- FAST 1 MONTH- only brain and RBC using glucose; brain uses more ketones than glucose
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3
Q

2 Features of Starvation

A
  • Protein sparing - muscles will start to degrade protein –> AAs as fuel; to prevent this…ketones formed in liver to be used as energy in muscle instead
  • Metabolic acidosis - leads to cation loss in urine; overcome in kidney by using glutamine –> NH4+ and bicarb (the bicarb acts as a buffer for acidosis and NH4+ can now be excreted instead of cations)
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4
Q

6 Metabolic Paths of Carbs

A
  • 1- glycogen synthesis
  • 2- glycogen mobilization
  • 3- glycolysis
  • 4- gluconeogenesis
  • 5- pentose phosphate shunt (aka hexose monophosphate shunt)
  • 6- TCA (Krebs) cycle
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5
Q

Which processes dispose of glucose? Which are oxidative v non-oxidative?

A
  • Oxidative…TCA cycle, PPP

- Non-oxidative… glycogen synthesis, glycolysis

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6
Q

Effects of insulin on liver

A
  • Reduces hepatic glucose output
    • Inc glycogen synthesis (activate glycogen synthase)
    • Inc glycolysis (activate PFK and pyruvate kinase)
    • Suppress glycogen mobilization (inhibit phosphorylase kinase - so glycogen phosphorylase not active)
    • Suppress gluconeogenesis (inhibit pyruvate carboxylase, PEPck and fructose 1,6 bisphosphate

**intermediate sensitivity

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7
Q

Effects of insulin on fat

A
  • Stim glucose uptake
    • Recruit glucose transporters to cell surface (bind insulin receptors –> phos cascade)
  • Stim TG synthesis
    • Stim glycolysis –> pyruvate + glycerol
    • Produce NADPH through PPP
    • Activate FFA synthase

**Most sensitive

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8
Q

Effects of insulin on skeletal muscle

A
  • Stim glucose uptake
    • Recruit glucose transporters to cell surface (bind insulin receptors –> phos cascade)
  • Stim glycogen synthesis

**least sensitive

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9
Q

Which hormone suppress and stimulate hepatic glucose production?

A

Stimulate

- Epinephrine, glucagon, cortisol, GH
- All stim by falling plasma glucose levels ("counter-regulatory hormones")

Suppress
- Insulin

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10
Q

Classic Symptoms of Hyperglycemia (6)

A
  • Polyuria (frequent urination)
  • Nocturia (getting up frequently at night to pee)
  • Polydipsia (excessive thirst stim by excessive urination)
  • Weight loss (from loss of glucose/calories in urine)
  • Yeast infections in female urogenital tract (yeast likes the sugar)
  • Polyphagia (excessive appetite)
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11
Q

Type 1 v Type 2 Diabetes

A

Type 1- lean, islet cell antibodies, insulin secretion absent, no insulin resistance, beta cells do not function

Type 2- fat, no islet cell antibodies, insulin secretion present but not enough, insulin resistance, beta cells functioning but not enough

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12
Q

Diabetic Ketoacidosis

A
  • Only in type I
  • Acute, life threatening episode
  • Complete absence of insulin + excess glucagon –> generation of keto-acids
    • How? Accelerated lipolysis –> free FAs to liver; more FAs taken up by liver mito –> beta oxidation + accumulation of acetyl CoA –> acetyl CoA then used in ketone formation (also in liver mito)
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13
Q

How to treat type 1 diabetes

A

use insulin right from start; not oral agents

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14
Q

How to treat type 2 diabetes (5)

A

Hepatic insulin sensitizers

- Inc efficacy of insulin in liver
- biguanides

Peripheral insulin sensitizers

- Inc efficacy of insulin in glucose uptake in skeletal muscle
- TZDs

Insulin secretagogues

- Stim secretion of insulin from beta cells
- Sulfonylureas & meglitnides

Alpha glucosidase inhibitors (AGIs)
- Inhibit enzymes in gut that are responsible for carb digestion; so slows down absorption of carbs from gut

Insulin - After years

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15
Q

Primary Complications of Type 2 Diabetes

A

Non-enzymatic glycosylation of proteins (leads to AGE formation in vessels after long time) AND form HbA1c in RBCs (not alive long enough to form AGE)

Activation of polyol pathway - converted to sorbitol via aldol reductase (retinopathy, cataracts, Schwann cell damage –> neuropathy)

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16
Q

Treating Classical v Atypical PKU

A
  • Classic- low PHE diet w/ protein supplements

- Atypical- give BH4 supplement

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17
Q

PKU Inheritance and Incidence

A
  • Auto recessive

- Incidence is 1/10,000 (most common error of inborn metabolism)

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18
Q

Maple Syrup Urine Disease Inheritance and Incidence

A
  • Auto recessive
    • Incidence is 1/200,000
    • More common in PA old order mennonite and amish
      • PA Old Order Mennonite …1/170 and carriers 1 in 8
19
Q

MSUD Diet

A
  • BCAA restricted diet (no isoleucine, leucine or valine)
    • Formula
    • Need small amounts for growth
  • Later in life do not eat natural proteins
20
Q

4 Subtypes of MSUD

A
  • Classic- little or no enzyme
    • Intermediate- 3 to 8% of normal enzyme activity
    • Intermittent - 8 to 15% of normal enzyme activity
    • Thiamine-responsive - enzyme activity restored by giving thiamine
21
Q

Obesity Definition and Classes

A
  • BMI of 30+
  • Types
    • Normal - 18.5- 24.9 BMI
    • Overweight - 25-29.9 BMI
    • Obese class I - 30-34.9 BMI
    • Obese class II 35-39.9 BMI
    • Obese class III - 40+ BMI
22
Q

Obesity Prevalence/Trends

A
  • Inc in US and worldwide
    • 1/3 of US adults are obese
    • As of 2005, 25% of world population was overweight
  • Higher among blacks&raquo_space; hispanics&raquo_space; whites
  • Higher in children too
    • 17% of children in US are obese
23
Q

Health Consequences of Obesity (9)

A
  • Skeletal muscle insulin resistance and development of Type II diabetes
  • Diabetes-linked end stage renal disease
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Neuro/psych issues like AD
  • Pulmonary disease (ex- sleep apnea)
  • Reproductive issues (infertility and gestational diabetes)
  • GI (NAFLD, colon cancer, gallstones)
  • Inc skin infections
  • Orthopedic issues (osteoarthritis from weight bearing)
24
Q

Obesity Treatment Options

A
  • 1st- lifestyle - low calorie and inc exercise; started first
  • 2nd- pharm- alter nutrient absorption, inc satiety, appetite suppression; used once overweight
    • Ex) Serotonin receptor agonists, GLP1 antagonist, lipase inhibitor, orlistat
  • 3rd- surgery - indicated if class II or class III
    • Ex) gastric band, bypass, etc
25
Q

Energy Balance

A

If intake > expenditure…weight gain (pos energy balance) AND if intake &laquo_space;expenditure …weight loss (neg energy balance)

26
Q

Hunger and Satiety Signals

A
  • Signal satiety - insulin, leptin (normally proportional to amount of adipose), PYY, GLP-1
  • Signal appetite/hunger - ghrelin
27
Q

Substrate Oxidation in Fast v Fed

A
  • FASTED…use FAs …lower RQ

- FED…switch to glucose …higher RQ

28
Q

Obesity Substrate Dis-regulation

A
  • In obese ppl, lower oxidation of fats to begin with and then have a hard time switching over to glucose oxidation once fed (metabolic inflexibility)
    • Less fat oxidation associated w/ lower insulin sensitivity
    • Insulin resistance —> fatt accumulation, dec in muscle glucose uptake and dec in muscle’s mito content (mito can be improved by exercise)
29
Q

Physio Effects of Acute Exercise (4)

A
  • Inc heart rate (due to input from chemoreceptors and proprioceptors)
  • Inc stroke volume (b/c inc venous return - Starling mechanism)
  • Inc cardiac output
    • HR x SV = CO
  • Inc blood flow to muscle
30
Q

Physio Effects of Chronic Exercise

A

Dec heart rate and same cardiac output so must have inc stroke volume

31
Q

Substrates in short term v long term exercise

A
  • Seconds- ATP and creatine phosphate initially activated and depleted
  • Minutes- Anaerobic glycolysis (glucose —> lactic acid)
    • LOW ATP YIELD
  • Hours- aerobic glycolysis (Use FAs or glucose —> H20 and CO2)
    • HIGH ATP YIELD
32
Q

Substrate in low, moderate and intense exercise

A
  • Low- plasma FAs
  • Moderate-more fuels including muscle glycogen
  • High- glycogen is primary source
33
Q

3 Types Skeletal Muscle Fibers + Location

A
  • Type I- slow-twitch oxidative (SO) posture musc
    • high oxidiative/mito density, inc lipid stores, resist fatigue
  • Type IIa- fast-twitch oxidative glycolytic (FOG) lower limb
    • lower mito, lower lipid stores; fatigue more easily; higher glycogen stores
  • Type 2x- fast-twitch glycolytic (FG) upper limb
    • lowest aerobic capacity and highest anaerobic capacity; fatigues most; highest glycogen
34
Q

How does exercise affect skeletal muscle glucose metabolism?

A
  • Act AMPK —> release Ca++ —> … eventually recruits GLUT 4 to membrane to inc uptake
  • Exercise has an “insulin-like” effect on glucose transport
    so exercise can improve insulin insensitivity
35
Q

VO2 Max

A
  • Max capacity to transport and utilize oxygen during max exercise (AKA aerobic capacity)
  • Gold std of physical fitnes
    • Avg is 45 male and 38 female
    • Elite athletes can be 75-95
  • Higher VO2 Max means greater ability to burn fat
36
Q

Metabolic Response to Chronic Exercise

A
  • Inc # mito and mito enzymes
  • Inc capillary density in muscles
  • Inc uptake and utilization of FAs
37
Q

Lactate Threshold + How to Inc It + Measure it

A
  • Pt when rate of lactate production exceeds rate of clearance
  • You can inc lactate threshold by chronic exercise - inc aerobic capacity so more energy comes from aerobic means and less from anaerobic means (which is what makes the lactate)
  • Meas by lactic acid levels in blood during exercise
38
Q

Warburg Effect

A
  • Warburg Effect- alternate way cancer cells metabolize glucose; “aerobic glycolysis”
  • Glucose –> pyruvate –> lactate instead of TCA cycle despite presence of O2
  • Less ATP made per glucose so need to inc glucose uptake
39
Q

Why is the Warburg Effect favorable to cancer cells?

A
  • Can use metabolites –> molecules needed for proliferation
  • AAs, nucleic acids (DNA), FAs (membranes)
  • Also shunt to PPP - needed for reactive oxygen species and NADPH for synthesis reactions and ribose for nucleotides
40
Q

Detection of Cancer Cells

A

Inc glucose uptake by cancer cells = PET scans picks up flurodeoxyglucose

41
Q

How are drugs that target metabolism used to treat cancer?

A
  • Target the enzymes that are up-regulated in cancer metabolism
    • Ex) inhibit GLUT transporters (dec glucose uptake)
    • Inhibit glucose trapping (hexokinase)
    • Inhibit lactate DH (pyruvate –> lactate)
    • Inhibit ASCT2 - glutamine transporter into cell
    • Inhibit FA Synthase
42
Q

What processes are up-regulated in cancer cells?

A
  • anaerobic glycolysis
  • nucleotide synthesis
  • AA synthesis
  • FA synthesis
  • Protein synthesis
  • Pentose Phos Path
43
Q

What processes are down-regulated in cancer cells?

A
  • Gluconeogenesis
  • Glycogen synthesis
  • Glucose oxidation
  • AA oxidation
  • FA oxidation