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Carbohydrate Disposal

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Title: Carbohydrate Disposal


1
Carbohydrate Disposal
  • This version is quite information dense to save
    paper.

2
Sources of Dietary Carbs
  • Starch polymer of glucose
  • Amylose
  • linear, forms helices, difficult to digest,
    flatulence
  • Amylopectin
  • branched, easy to digest

3
Sources of Dietary Carbs
  • Disaccharides
  • Lactose
  • galactose and glucose
  • consequences of lactase deficiency lactose
    intolerance
  • Sucrose
  • fructose and glucose
  • Maltose
  • glucose and glucose
  • Monosaccharides
  • Glucose
  • Fructose
  • especially these days with high fructose corn
    syrup

4
Glucose responses
Results of consuming a standard 50 g glucose load
10
Intolerant
Blood Glucose (mM)
Tolerant
5
0
1
2
Time (h)
5
Consequences of Intolerance
  • Post-prandial hyperglycemia is a problem
  • If occurs after each meal and persists for
    several hours then there will be problems
  • The person will rarely be euglycemic!
  • Leads to complications of hyperglycemia
  • Protein glycosylation
  • Root cause may be insulin resistance
  • Impaired ability of tissues to respond to insulin
  • Underlies Type II Diabetes
  • Control of glucose intolerance
  • Consumption of slowly absorbed starches

6
Starch Digestion
10
Different Glycemic Responses
Amylopectin
Blood Glucose (mM)
Amylose
5
0
1
2
Time (h)
7
The Glycemic Index
  • Describes the post-prandial glucose response
  • Area under the test food glucose curve divided
    by
  • Area under a reference food glucose curve
  • Reference food is normally 50 g gluocse
  • Test food given in an amount that will give 50 g
    digestible carbohydrate
  • Expressed as a
  • GI of modern, processed, amylopectin foods gt80
  • GI of legumes lt 30

8
The Glycemic Index
  • Useful knowledge for controlling blood glucose
  • Especial relevance to diabetes
  • QUALITY of carbohydrate (GI) as important as
    total amount of carbohydrate

9
GI critics say..
  • Area under slowly absorbed may be the same as
    quickly absorbed
  • Look closely at previous figure
  • The GI should not apply to foods other than
    starches
  • Sugary foods are low GI
  • Because half the carbohydrate is fructose
  • Similarly, fructose containing foods are low GI
  • Dairy foods are low GI
  • Because half the carbohydrate is galactose
  • And protein elicits insulin secretion ?
    lipogenesis

10
GI critics say..
  • Some Low GI values
  • Due to inaccurate estimation of digestible
    carbohydrate portion
  • Claims of slow burning energy ??
  • What regulates energy expenditure and supply of
    substrates?
  • Even if supply was important, the classic
    persistently but subtly raised post-prandial
    glucose response is hardly ever seen

11
Muscle WAT Glucose Uptake
glucose
GLUTs
GLYCOGENESIS
GS glycogen synthase
glucose
G6P
PFK phosphofructokinase
GLYCOLYSIS
glucose
Translocation
Vesicles in Golgi
insulin
12
Hexose Metabolism
P
hexokinase
Using UTP Releases PP PP hydrolysis pulls
reaction to completion
P
Using ATP
glucose
glucose 1-phosphate
glucose 6-phosphate
P
P
P
U
UDP glucose
fructose 6-phosphate
P
P
Activated Glucose
PFK
Pyrophosphate hydrolyses to two phosphates Pulls
UDP-glucose conversion over
fructose 1,6-bisphosphate
13
Glycogen Synthesis
P
P
Glycogen
U
UDP glucose
P
P
Glycogen with one more glucose
U
Note synthesis is C1? C4 C1 end of glycogen
attached to glycogenin
UDP
UDP needs to be made back into UTP Use ATP for
this UDP ATP ? UTP ADP
14
Glycogen Synthase
  • Catalyses the addition of activated glucose
    onto an existing glycogen molecule
  • UDP-glucose glycogenn? UDP glycogenn1
  • Regulated by reversible phosphorylation (covalent
    modification)
  • Active when dephosphorylated, inactive when
    phosphorylated
  • Phosphorylation happens on a serine residue
  • Dephosphorylation catalysed by phosphatases
    (specifically protein phosphatase I, PPI)
  • Phosphorylation catalysed by kinases
    (specifically glycogen synthase kinase)
  • Insulin stimulates PPI
  • And so causes GS to be dephosphorylated and
    active
  • So insulin effectively stimulates GS

15
Phosphofructokinase
  • Catalyses the second energy investment stage of
    glycolysis
  • F6P ATP ? fructose 1,6 bisphosphate ADP
  • Regulated allosterically
  • Simulated by low energy charge
  • Energy charge is balance of ATP, ADP AMP
  • An increase in ADP/AMP and a decrease in ATP
  • These molecules bind at a site away from the
    active site the allosteric binding sites.
  • Small change in ATP/ADP causes large change in
    AMP via adenylate kinase reaction
  • Many other molecules affect PFK allosterically
    but all are effectively indicators of energy
    charge

16
Coupling (again!)
  • The stimulation of glycogen synthesis by insulin
    creates an energy demand
  • Glycogenesis is anabolic
  • The activation of glucose requires ATP
  • This drops the cellular ATP and increases the
    ADP AMP
  • Drop in energy charge is stimulates PFK
  • Anabolic pathway requires catabolic pathway
  • Insulin has indirectly stimulated PFK and
    glucose oxidation
  • So signals to store fuels also cause fuels to be
    burnt

17
Liver Glucose Uptake
  • GLUT-2 used to take up glucose from bloodstream
  • Very high activity and very abundant
  • Glucose blood Glucose liver
  • Glucokinase
  • Rapidly converts G?G6P
  • Not inhibited by build up of G6P
  • High Km (10 mM) for glucose not saturated by
    high levels of liver glucose
  • So G6P rapidly increases as blood glucose
    rises
  • G6P can stimulate inactive GS
  • Even phosphorylated GS
  • Glucose itself also stimulates the
    dephosphorylation of GS
  • Via a slightly complex process that involves
    other kinases and phosphatases which we neednt
    go into right now ?

18
Glycogenesis
  • In liver
  • The push mechanism
  • Glycogenesis responds to blood glucose without
    the need of insulin
  • Although insulin WILL stimulate glycogenesis
    further
  • In muscle
  • G6P never gets high enough to stimulate GS
  • Push method doesnt happen in muscle
  • More of a pull as insulin stimulates GS

19
Glycogenesis
  • In both liver and muscle
  • 2 ATPs required for the incorporation of a
    glucose into glycogen chain
  • G?G6P and UDP?UTP
  • Branching enzyme needed to introduce a1?6 branch
    points
  • Transfers a segment from one chain to another
  • Limit to the size of glycogen molecule
  • Branches become too crowded, even if they become
    progressively shorter
  • Glycogen synthase may need to interact with
    glycogenin to be fully active

20
Hexokinases
  • Glucokinase (GK)
  • Only works on glucose
  • High Km for glucose (10mM)
  • Not inhibited by G6P
  • Only presents in liver, beta-cells
  • Responsive to changes in glucose blood
  • Hexokinase (HK)
  • Works on any 6C sugar
  • Km for glucose 0.1mM
  • Strongly inhibited by its product G6P
  • Present in all other tissues
  • If G6P is not used immediately, its build up and
    inhibits hexokinase
  • Easily saturated with glucose

21
Lipogenesis Overview
glucose
Fat
ESTERIFICATION
GLUT-4
No GS
X
fatty acids
glucose
G6P
Consumes reductant and ATP
GLYCOLYSIS
PPP
LIPOGENESIS
Produces reductant
pyruvate
acetyl-CoA
acetyl-CoA
pyruvate
PDH
Key steps (eg, GLUT-4, PDH, lipogenesis) are
stimulated when insulin binds to its receptor on
the cell surface
KREBS CYCLE
NADH release ultimately produces ATP
CO2
22
Pyruvate Dehydrogenase
  • Pyruvate CoA NAD ? acetyl-CoA NADH CO2
  • Irreversible in vivo
  • No pathways in humans to make acetate into
    gluconeogenic precursors
  • Cant make glucose from acetyl-CoA
  • No way of going back once the PDH reaction has
    happened
  • Key watershed between carbohydrate and fat
    metabolism

23
PDH Control
  • Regulated by reversible phosphorylation
  • Active when dephosphorylated
  • Inactivated by PDH kinase
  • Activated by PDH phosphatase
  • Insulin stimulates PDH phosphatase
  • Insulin thus stimulates dephosphorylation and
    activation of PDH

24
Fate of Acetyl-CoA
  • Burnt in the Krebs Cycle
  • Carbon atoms fully oxidised to CO2
  • Lots of NADH produced to generate ATP
  • Lipogenesis
  • Moved out into the cytoplasm
  • Activated for fat synthesis
  • In both cases the first step is citrate formation
  • Condensation of acetyl-CoA with oxaloacetate
  • Regenerates Coenzyme A
  • Transport or Oxidation
  • The fate will depend on the need for energy
    (ATP/energy charge) and the stimulus driving
    lipogenesis

25
ATP-Citrate Lyase
  • Once in the cytoplasm, the citrate is cleaved
  • By ATP-Citrate Lyase (ACL)
  • Using CoA to generate acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate
  • Reaction requires ATP ? ADP phosphate
  • ACL is inhibited by hydroxy-citrate (OHCit)
  • OHCit is found in the Brindleberry
  • Sold as a fat synthesis inhibitor
  • Would we expect it to prevent the formation of
    fatty acids
  • And, if so, would that actually help us lose
    weight?

26
The Carrier
  • Oxaloacetate produced by ACL needs to return to
    the matrix
  • Otherwise the mitochondrial oxaloacetate pool
    becomes depleted
  • Remember, oxaloacetate is really just a carrier
    of acetates
  • Both in the Krebs's cycle and in the transport of
    acetyl-CoAs into the cytoplasm
  • Oxaloacetate cannot cross the inner mitochondrial
    membrane
  • Some interesting inter-conversions occur to get
    it back in!

27
Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase
  • Activates acetyl-CoA and primes it for
    lipogenesis
  • Unusual in that it fixes carbon dioxide
  • In the form of bicarbonate
  • A carboxylation reaction
  • Acetyl-CoA CO2 ? malonyl-CoA
  • Reaction requires ATP ? ADP phosphate
  • Participation of the cofactor, biotin
  • Biotin is involved in other carboxylation
    reactions

28
ACC Control
  • ACC is stimulated by insulin
  • Malonyl-CoA is committed to lipogenesis
  • Reversible Phosphorlyation
  • Stimulated allosterically by citrate
    (polymerisation)
  • Inhibited allosterically by long-chain fatty
    acyl-CoAs

29
Malonyl-CoA
  • Activated acetyl-CoA
  • Tagged and primed for lipogenesis
  • But also a key regulator of fatty acid oxidation
  • ACC is not only present in lipogenic tissues
  • Also present in tissues that need to produce
    malonyl-CoA in regulatory amounts
  • Malonyl-CoA inhibits carnitine acyl transferase I
  • An essential step in fatty acid oxidation
  • Only way of getting long chain fatty acyl-CoAs
    into the mitochondria

30
Malonyl-CoA
  • So when ACC is active in, say, muscle
  • Malonyl-CoA concentration rises
  • CPT-1 is inhibited
  • Fatty acid oxidation stops
  • Cell must use carbohydrate instead
  • Therefore insulin, by stimulating acetyl-CoA
    carboxylase, encourages carbohydrate oxidation
    and inhibits fatty acid oxidation

31
Fatty Acyl Synthase
32
FAS - simplified
33
FAS
  • Fatty acyl synthase (FAS) is multi-functional
  • Lots of different enzyme activities in the
    complex
  • Can you count them all?
  • Bringing in acetyl and malonyl groups, catalysing
    the reaction between the decarboxylated malonyl
    and the growing fatty acid chain, the
    reduction/dehydration/reduction steps, moving the
    fatty acid to the right site and finally
    releasing it as FA-CoA
  • Two free -SH groups on an acyl-carring protein
  • Keeps the intermediates in exactly the right
    position for interaction with the right active
    sites
  • Each new 2C unit is added onto the carboxy-end

34
Addition Sequence
  • Each round of 2C addition requires
  • 2 molecules of NADPH but No ATP (!!)
  • The release of the carbon dioxide that went on
    during the production of malonyl-CoA
  • Thus the carboxylation of acetyl-CoA does not
    result in fixing CO2
  • FAs start getting released as FA-CoA when chain
    length is C14
  • Desaturation is done AFTER FAS

35
Pentose Phosphate Pathway
  • Provides NADPH for lipogenesis
  • NADPH - A form of NADH involved in anabolic
    reactions
  • Rate of NADPH production by PPP is proportional
    to demand for NADPH
  • Key regulatory enzyme is G6PDH
  • Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase
  • G6P NADP ? 6-phosphogluconolactone NADPH
  • The gluconolactone is further oxidised to give
    more NADPH
  • Decarboxylation to give a 5-carbon sugar
    phosphate (ribulose 5-phosphate)

36
Pentose Phosphate Pathway
  • Need to put the 5-C sugar back into glycolysis
  • Accomplished by rearranging and exchanging carbon
    atoms between 5C molecules
  • Catalysed by enzymes called transaldolases and
    transketolases
  • So, 5C 5C ? C7 C3 by a transketolase (2C unit
    transferred)
  • Then C7 C3 ? C6 C4 by a transaldolase (3C
    unit transferred)
  • Then C4 C5 ? C6 C3 by a transketolase (2C
    unit transferred)
  • The C6 and C3 sugars can go back into glycolysis
  • Alternatively, PPP used to make ribose
    5-phosphate
  • Important in nucleotide pathways
  • Or generate NADPH as an anti-oxidant
  • Red blood cells - deficiency in G6PDH can cause
    anemia

37
Esterification
  • Formation of Fat
  • Glycerol needs to be glycerol 3-phosphate
  • From reduction of glycolytic glyceraldehyde
    3-phosphate
  • Glycolysis important both for production of
    acetyl-CoA and glycerol!
  • Esterification enzyme uses FA-CoA
  • Not just FAs
  • FAs added one at a time
  • Both esterification enzyme and FAS are
    unregulated by insulin
  • Gene expression and protein synthesis
  • FAS is downregulated when lots of fat around
  • As in a Western diet!!

38
Regulatory Overview
Fat
glucose
ESTERIFICATION
GLUT-4
No GS
X
fatty acids
glucose
G6P
G6PDH
glycerol 3-P
FAS
LIPOGENESIS
GLYCOLYSIS
ACC
pyruvate
acetyl-CoA
Acetyl-CoA transport stimulated by increased
production of citrate
acetyl-CoA
pyruvate
PDH
citrate
G6PDH stimulated by demand for NADP
KREBS CYCLE
Insulin stimulates GLUT-4. PDH and ACC. Also
switches on the genes for FAS and esterification
enzyme.
CO2
Krebs cycle will be stimulated by demand for ATP
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