Section V. Carbohydrate metabolism
V. Glucose is central to all metabolism
• 3 major paths: glycolysis, glycogen synthesis and pentose phosphate (generates NADPH, 5-C sugars) (V.2)
• Major diet carbohydrates (starch, sucrose, lactose) are digested to glucose, fructose and galactose (V.1)
• Fructose and galactose are converted to intermediates in glucose metabolism (V.3)
• Glycolysis plus TCA, ETC; anerobic glycolysis (V.4)
• Intermediates in glycolysis, TCA serve biosynthesis of amino acids, fatty acids, glycerol (V.5)
Section V cont.
• Pentose phosphate path takes glucose to pyruvate: forms NADPH (use for biosynthesis, antioxidant) forms 5-C sugars used for nucleotides (v.6)
• UDP-glucose is used in synthesis of glycogen, UDP-galactose, also glycoproteins, glycolipids (V.7)
• Glycogenolysis degrades glycogen → glucose• Gluconeogenesis → glucose from glycerol (V.8)
• Overview of major paths of glucose metabolism (V.9)
• Hormonal control: glucagon vs. insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis (V.10)
Insulin vs. glucagon V.10
V.10 Pathways regulated by glucagon vs. insulin in response to blood glucose (tissue-specific also)
Blood glucose decrease → Glucagon release →
↑glycogenolysis ↑gluconeogenesis
↑lipolysis ↓liver glycolysis
Blood glucose increase → Insulin release →
↑glycogen synthesis ↑fatty acid synthesis
↑triglyceride synthesis ↑liver glycolysis
Chapt. 26 hormone regulation
Ch. 26 Regulation by Insulin, glucagon and other hormones
Student Learning Outcomes:• Describe mechanisms of major hormones insulin and
glucagon to control glucose homeostasis• Explain that Homeostasis is balance of fuel mobility
and storage: keep glucose 80-100 mg/dL (~5 mM)• Regulate carbohydrate, lipid, aa metabolism
• Describe counteracting influences of insulin and glucagon and other counter-regulatory hormones
Insulin vs glucagon and others
Fig. 2
Homeostasis requires glucose control:
Insulin is anabolic hormone:• from -cells of pancreas• Glucose entry into tissues• Glucose storage, growth
Glucagon counters:• Degradation of glycogen• Gluconeogeneis• Mobilize fatty acids• Stress hormones counter:
• Epinephrine, • Cortisol (glucocorticoid)
Glucagon mobilizes glucose from tissues
Fig. 1, 3
Glucagon activates pathways for glucose mobilization:
• Counteracts insulin
• Pancreas -cell
• Acts via G-protein-coupled receptor,cAMP, PKA
Fuel homeostasis
Fig. 4
Fuel homeostasis requires balance:• Substrate availability and need• Concentration nutrients in blood affects storage• Hormonal messages to target tissue• Neuronal signals
homoeostatis
Glucose homeostasis is critical:• Multiple signals• Insulin vs. glucagon• Stress hormones
• Epinephrine• Cortisol
Fig. 5
Insulin is anabolic
Fig. 6; + stimulated by insulin; -, inhibited
Insulin is major anabolic hormone for fuel storage:• Storage as glycogen• Synthesis of fatty acids• Triacylglycerol storage• Protein synthesis
• Tissues of action
Glucagon is fuel metabolism
Glucagon is major hormone for fuel metabolism:• Maintain fuel in absence of dietary glucose• Glycogenolysis in liver• Gluconeogenesis in liver• Fatty acids from adipocytes
• Tissues of action
Fig. 7; + stimulated by glucagon; -, inhibited
Pancreas
Pancreas has and cells cells make insulin; cells make glucagon
High-carbohydrate meal
High-carbohydrate meal:
• Rapid increase of glucose• 80 → >120 mg/dL
• Rapid increase of insulin• 5 → >120 U/mL
• Decrease of glucagon• 110 → 90 pg/mL
Fig. 8 Blood levels after meal
Table 1 Insulin and counterregulatory hormones
Hormone functions major metabolic paths
Insulin promotes storage stimulate glucose storage inmuscle, liver
promotes growth stimulates protein synthesis, fatty acid synthesis
Glucagon mobilizes fuels activates gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis
maintains blood activates fatty acid release glucose in fasting
Epinphrine mobilizes fuels stimulate glycogenolysis in acute stress stimulate fatty acid release
Cortisol changing long term amino acid mobilizationgluconeogenesis
Insulin counterregulatory hormones
Fig. 9
Major insulin counterregulatory hormones:
Stress of low glucose:• Neuronal signals release hormones:
• ACTH from pituitary→• Cortisol from adrenal cortex
• Epinephrine from adrenal medulla• Norepinephrine from nerves
• Minor role release glucagon
III. Synthesis and release of insulin and glucagon
Fig. 10insulin
Insulin is polypeptide of 51 amino acids:• and chains, cross-linked• Synthesized as preproinsulin, cleaved in RER to proinsulin• Passed through Golgi, into storage vesicles (also Zinc)• Final protease cleavages forms active insulin• Exocytosis into blood is stimulated
by increased glucose in blood
around -cells
Release of insulin by -cells
Release of insulin by -cells:• Stimulated by increased glucose in blood around -cells• Glucose enters through transporters (GLUT 2)• Hexokinase phosphorylates, TCA, ETC• ATP ↑; inhibit ATP-dep K+ channel• Membrane depolarization • Ca2+ channel opens• [Ca2+] stimulate vesicle fusion
Fig. 11 release of insulin in response to increased blood glucose
Table 26.2 Regulators of insulin release
Regulators of insulin release:
Major regulators: Effect:
Glucose +
threshhold ~80 mg/dL, increase proportional to ~300 mg/dL
Insulin is removed from blood and degraded in liver
New synthesis of insulin occurs in -cells after release
Minor regulators: Amino acids + Neural input + Gut hormones + (chapt. 43)
Table 26.3 Regulators of Glucagon release
Regulators of glucagon release:Major regulators: Effect:
Glucose - Insulin -
Amino acids +
Minor regulators: Cortisol + Neural input (stress) + Epinephrine +
Glucagon is 160-aa preproglucagon in -cells; converted to proglucagon in RER; mature 29-aa glucagon in vesicles;
Rapid half-life of glucagon in plasma
Effect of high-protein meal
Fig. 12 high protein meal
High-protein meal:• Stimulates glucagon release• Not much insulin• Blood glucose not change
Mixed meals:
get some of each hormone
Mechanisms of hormone actions
IV. Mechanisms of hormone actionsRecall from Chapt. 11, that hormones can affect
activities of enzymes or transport proteins:• Change conformation of enzyme (as phosphorylation),
Change amount of protein (induce or repress synthesis), Change allosteric effector concentration
• Signal transduction pathways of hormones:• Intracellular receptors (cortisol, thyroid hormone)• Plasma membrane receptors:
• G-protein coupled receptors (adenylyl cyclase, cAMP)• Receptor tyrosine kinases and Ras/Raf, MAPK• PIP2, DAG signaling from both
Plasma membrane hormone receptors
2 major plasma membrane hormone receptors:• G-protein coupled heptahelical - glucagon• Tyrosine kinase receptors - insulin
Figs. 11.9, 11.10
RTK Insulin receptor has several signaling paths
Fig. 11.13 Insulin signaling:PLC - phospholipasePIP – phosphatidyl inositol formsPI 3-kinase signals through protein kinase B (Fig. 11.14)
* Insulin receptor signals through several paths:• Binding of hormone causes autophosphorylation• Binds IRS (insulin receptor substrates), PO4 those:
• Grb2 can signal through Ras and MAPK path•Other proteins bind, interact with PIPs in membrane
Signal transduction by insulin
Signal transduction by insulin:
5 categories of tissue specific responses:• Reverses glucagon-stimulated phosphorylation• Phosphorylation cascade stimulates
phosphorylation of several enzymes• Induces and represses synthesis of some enzymes• Growth factor, stimulation of protein synthesis• Stimulates glucose and amino acid transport into
cells
Signal transduction by glucagon
Signal transduction by glucagon:• Glucagon receptor is G-protein coupled (Gs)• Activate adenylyl cyclase → cAMP → activate PKA• PKA phosphorylates enzymes on ser:
• Activates some enzymes, inhibits others • Especially affects kinases, phosphatases
• cAMP rapidly degraded to AMP
• Hormone signal terminated by phosphatases remove the PO4 from enzymes
• Skeletal muscle does not have glucagon receptor, but liver and other tissues do
Signal transduction by cortisol, intracellular receptors
Cortisol and thyroid hormone bind intracellular receptors:
• Binding of hormone causes hormone-receptor complex to bind specific DNA sequences, increase transcription from target genes.
Figs. 11.7,8
Signal transduction by epinephrine, norepinephrine
Fig. 13
Epinephrine, norepinephrine are catecholamines• Neurotransmitters or hormones• Stress hormones increase fuel mobilization
• Adrenergic receptors (autonomic)• 9 different receptors: 6, 3 receptors work through G-protein coupled, adenylyl cyclase, cAMP, PKA• Different receptors on tissues• Mobilize fuels • Stimulate muscle contractions
Key concepts
Key concepts:• Glucose homeostasis maintains blood glucose levels• Insulin and glucagon are two major hormones regulating
levels of glucose – opposing effects• Excess fuel is stored as glycogen or fat; stored fuels are
mobilized when demanded• Insulin promote glucose utilization, storage; secretion
regulated by blood glucose levels• Insulin binds to RTK receptor• Glucagon promotes glucose production, mobilization of
glycogen, gluconeogenesis• Glucagon binds G-protein coupled receptor, cAMP
Review questions
Review question:
2. Caffeine is a potent inhibitor of the enzyme cAMP phosphodiesterase. Which of the following consequences would you expect to occur in the liver after drinking two cups of strong espresso coffee?
a.A prolonged response to insulin
b.A prolonged response to glucagon
c.An inhibition of protein kinase A
d.An enhancement of glycolytic activity
e.A reduced rate of glucose export to circulation