Glucose Homeostasis

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Glucose Homeostasis. brain has high consumption of glucose uses ~20% of RMR 1 ° fuel for energy during exercise, working muscle competes with brain for glucose many redundant systems for maintaining glucose homeostasis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Glucose Homeostasis

Page 1: Glucose Homeostasis
Page 2: Glucose Homeostasis

Glucose Homeostasis

brain has high consumption of glucose– uses ~20% of RMR– 1° fuel for energy

during exercise, working muscle competes with brain for glucose

many redundant systems for maintaining glucose homeostasis– hepatic glucose production (glycogen, lactate,

pyruvate, glycerol, alanine)– pancreatic hormones (insulin, glucagon) – sympathoadrenal stimulation (epinephrine)

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Claude Bernard (1813-1878)

Discovery of new function of liver--glucose secretion into blood (1848)– Previously thought

that only plants could produce sugar

– Sugar must be taken in by diet

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Glucose ProductionDuring Exercise

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Maintenance of Blood Glucose

glucose needed for CNS, ATP synthesis, Kreb’s cycle intermediates

muscle glucose uptake (Rd) matched by liver glucose release (Ra)– glucose pool = ~5 g (~20 kcal)– dependent upon exercise intensity and duration

endurance exercise may need CHO ingestion to maintain blood [glucose]

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Cori Cycle

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Liver Gluconeogenesis

uses pyruvate & lactate (Cori cycle), glycerol, and alanine (glucose-alanine cycle) as substrates

liver contains glucose 6-phosphatase and other enzymes that allow reversal of glycolysis and release of glucose

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Gluconeogenic amino acids

urea formation from excreted N in amino acid degradation

C skeletons are degraded into:– glucose– ketone acetoacetate or acetyl Co-A

during fasting, starvation, and prolonged exercise, AA supply most of C used in gluconeogenesis– glucose-alanine cycle

AA metabolism contributes 10-15% of total substrates used during exercise

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Glucose-alanine cycle

Leucine is 1° BCAA that provides N for alanine formation. This model may not operate when glucose & glycogen is low

leucine

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Interrelationship of leucine catabolism and alanine formation

Rate of appearance (Ra) of alanine (a) and leucine N transfer to alanine (b) at rest and during exercise

Wolf et al., 1982, 1984

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Regulation of liver glucose output

glucose threshold stimulates liver glucose output– hypoglycemia stimulates hormonal response (EPI,

glucagon, cortisol, GH)– glucose threshold is dynamic

like blood, glucose uptake is shunted to active tissue– skeletal muscle GLUT transporters

• GLUT1 is 1º transporter at rest• GLUT4 is 1º transporter during exercise

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Endocrine Regulation of Glucose Homeostasis

Insulin—secreted from pancreatic islet ß cells– released regulated by blood [glucose] (glycemic threshold)– stimulates glucose oxidation & storage and inhibits glucose

production• stimulates glycogen synthase• inhibits phosphorylase• inhibits gluconeogenesis• stimulates glucose transport into adipocytes, which is then

converted into TG• inhibits hormone-sensitive lipase (HPL) ( cAMP) and

lipoprotein lipase• activates GLUT1

– release inhibited by EPI and NE– obesity increases and training decreases insulin secretion

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Endocrine Regulation of Glucose Homeostasis

Glucagon—secreted from pancreatic islet cells– promotes liver mobilization of fuels– stimulates cAMP– released regulated by blood [glucose] (glycemic

threshold)– Activates phosphorylase– Stimulates gluconeogenesis

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Endocrine Regulation of Glucose Homeostasis

Epinephrine—secreted from adrenal medulla– released in response to exercise and

decreased blood [glucose]• stimulates liver and muscle phosphorylase a

and PFK• increases liver glucose output and muscle

glucose metabolism

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Glucose HomeostasisDuring Exercise

Effect of CHO feeding during exercise on glucose homeostasis

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Hepatic glucose output (HGP) and glucose uptake

(Rd) w/ and w/out CHO feedings during prolonged exercise (~70% of VO2max)

McConell et al., JAP, 1994

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CHO Feeding during Prolonged Exercise

blood glucose maintains CHO oxidation rate time to exhaustion/performance conserves liver glycogen muscle glucose uptake no effect on muscle glycogen utilization

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Effects of Prolonged Exercise on Blood Glucose

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Muscle Glucose Uptake

0.0

0.5

1.0

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0 30 60 90 120 150 180

Time (min)

Glu

co

se

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tak

e (

mm

ol/m

in)

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Blood Glucose

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Liver Glycogen

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Gly

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Liver Glucose Output

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Blood Glucagon

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Glu

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Blood Insulin

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Blood Epinephrine

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Ep

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rin

e (

ng

/ml)

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Liver glucose output from gluconeogenesis (GNG) and glycogenolysis (GLY) during prolonged exercise at 30% of VO2max

Effect of exercise intensity on liver glucose output

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Effects of Incremental Exercise on Blood Glucose

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Blood Glucose

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Blood Epinephrine

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Blood Insulin

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Liver glucose output from gluconeogenesis (GNG) and glycogenolysis (GLY) during prolonged exercise at 30% of VO2max

Effect of exercise intensity on liver glucose output

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And now a contest:

Why women live longer than men.Why women live

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6th place

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5th place

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4th place

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3rd place

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2nd place

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And the winner is:

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and the winner of the husband of the year is:  

   

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Focus on Research

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Scientific Process

What is truth? How is truth determined? Scientific process

– research question & hypothesis– experimental design– data analysis, interpretation, & conclusion– communication of results

• peer-reviewed paper• presentation