What is the phosphorylated form of glucose?
Glucose-6-phosphate (G6P)
How does glucose provide energy to the cell?
Oxidized in glycolysis
Where is glycogen stored?
Liver and striated muscle
How is glucose converted to glycogen?
Step 2 is a two step process, involves:
1. Net hydrolysis of UTP to UDP and Pi
2. Second step catalyzed by glycogen synthase
How are glucose monomers removed from glycogen when glucose is required?
Removed as G1P
* By glycogen phosphorylase
* Phosphate comes from inorganic phosphate dissolved in the cytosol
How does phosphorylation affect glycogen synthase?
How does phosphorylation affect glycogen phosphorylase?
How is the phosphorylated vs. dephosphorylated form concentrations of glycogen synthase/phosphorylase determined?
Hormone signals
* Insulin
* Glucagon
How does insulin work?
Released by pancreas into the bloodstream when blood glucose levels are high
How does glucagon work?
Stimulates glycogen breakdown in liver but not skeletal muscles
* Maintains blood glucose level
What controls glucose levels in skeletal muscles?
Norepinephrine
What is glycogen synthase allosterically activated by?
G6P
What is glycogen phosphorylase allosterically regulated by in:
1. Skeletal muscles
2. Liver
What is glycolysis?
Oxidative process that occurs in the cytoplasm
What is the net reaction of glycolysis and how many steps are there?
10 Steps
Glucose + 2 ADP + 2 Pi + 2 NAD+
–>
2 pyruvate + 2 NADH + 2 ATP
How many electrons are transferred from glucose to NAD+ molecules in glycolysis?
4 electron to 2 NAD+
Which steps of glycolysis are considered irreversible? Why?
Steps 1, 3, 10
* Large, negative value for ΔG
What are the enzymes are will control flux through glycolysis?
Why does fermentation occur even though glycolysis doesn’t use oxygen?
Glycolysis produces NADH, which in the end gives its electrons to oxygen to become NAD+ (regenerating NAD+)
Without oxygen, we cannot regenerate NAD+
So we need another process to regenerate NAD+ in the absence of oxygen
Where does Lactate Fermentation occur?
In many microorganisms, in higher organisms when little oxygen in available
Formation of Lactate
Pyruvate + NADH
–>
Lactate + NAD+
Fermentation of glucose to lactate
Glucose + 2 ADP + 2 PI
–>
2 lactate + 2 ATP
Where does Ethanol Fermentation occur?
Yeast, and several other microorganisms
Formation of ethanol
2 step process:
Step 1
Pyruvate + H+
–>
CO2 + Acetaldehyde
Step 2
Acetaldehyde + NADH
–>
Ethanol + NAD+