Metabolism of glycogen 2

Cards (18)

  • Glycogen
    Storage form of glucose in animals
  • Glycogen
    • Stored in liver (6-8%) and muscle (1-2%)
    • Helps to maintain the blood glucose levels between meals
    • Glycogen stores increase in a well-fed state, depleted during fasting
    • Muscle glycogen serves as a fuel reserve for the supply of ATP during muscle contraction
  • Glycogenesis
    Synthesis of glycogen from glucose which occurs in liver and muscle
  • Glycogenesis
    1. Glucose converted to glucose-6-phosphate
    2. Glucose-1-phosphate formed
    3. UDPG (uridine diphosphate glucose) formed
    4. Glucose from UDPG attached to non-reducing end of glycogen primer
    5. Branching enzyme forms 1,6 linkages
  • Glycogenin
    Protein that can accept glucose from UDPG to initiate glycogen synthesis
  • Glycogenolysis
    Breakdown of glycogen to glucose
  • Glycogenolysis
    1. Phosphorylase splits 1,4 glucosidic bonds
    2. 1,4 glucan transferase transfers glucose residues
    3. Amylo 1,6 glucosidase splits 1,6 linkages
    4. Acid maltase degrades small quantity of glycogen
  • Muscle glycogenolysis
    Glycogen -> Glucose-1-phosphate -> Glucose-6-phosphate -> Glycolysis -> Lactate
  • Glycogen synthase
    Exists in active and inactive forms, dephosphorylated form is active
  • Phosphorylase
    Exists in active and inactive forms, phosphorylated form is active
  • High cAMP level
    Activates phosphorylase, inactivates glycogen synthase
  • Glucose-6-phosphate and ATP
    Allosterically inhibit phosphorylase
  • Glucose
    Acts as inhibitor to phosphorylase
  • Adrenaline and glucagon
    Activate glycogenolysis
  • Insulin
    Activates glycogenesis
  • Glycogen storage diseases
    Genetic diseases with abnormal deposition of glycogen in tissues
  • Types of glycogen storage diseases
    • Type I (Glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency)
    • Type II (Lysosomal α-1,4-glucosidase deficiency)
    • Type III (Debranching enzyme deficiency)
    • Type IV (Branching enzyme deficiency)
    • Type V (Muscle glycogen phosphorylase deficiency)
    • Type VI (Liver glycogen phosphorylase deficiency)
  • Von Gierke's disease (Type I) features include fasting hypoglycemia, lactic acidemia, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, massive liver enlargement, and failure to grow