Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

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Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry

Transcript of Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Page 1: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki

Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry

Page 2: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Objectives

Insulin structure, synthesis, secretion.

Insulin receptor.

GLUT transporters.

Mechanism of insulin action. Degradation. Regulation.

Clinical manifestations of DKA

Page 3: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Insulin structure

Insulin is protein in nature.

It has Two polypeptide chains.

A Chain has 21 amino acid

B chain has 30 amino acid

Held together by disulphide bonds.

Page 4: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Difference between various Insulin

The Insulin can be derived from animal sources such as cow, pig.

The difference is in the B chain at 30th Amino acid.

Human being has Threonine

Bovine and pig have Alanine

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Insulin

Produced by the Beta Cell of Islet cell of Langerhans in Pancreas

Page 6: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Synthesis of Insulin

Insulin is made as Pre Pro Insulin in the ribosomes. The leader stand is cleaved by proteases in the cell leading to stable ProInsulin.

ProInsulin is stored in the beta cells of Pancreas. ProInsulin is a single polypeptide chain with 86 amino acids.

Active Insulin has missing connecting peptide also know as C-peptide which is released in circulation.

Page 7: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

How do we sense high blood sugar and release Insulin?

The beta cells are permeable to glucose.

The glucose is phosphorylated through Glucokinase.

Increasing blood glucose causes increase in glycolysis, TCA and generation of ATP.

Increased ATP generation inhibits ATP-sensitive K+ Channel causing membrane depolarization of cell membrane.

This causes Increase of Calcium stimulating exocytosis of Insulin.

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Insulin Release

Page 9: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Glucose Transport from Lumen to Intestinal Cell

Page 10: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

SGLuT-1 Transporters

Glucose has specific transporters which are trans membrane proteins.

Glucose Transport from Lumen to Intestinal cells happens because of SGLuT-1 by secondary active transport

Page 11: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Release of Glucose from Intestine to Blood

Page 12: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

SGLuT

The same intestinal cells have a different transport mechanism facing capillaries.

They release glucose to blood stream by mechanism called Glucose transporter type (GluT 2)

This transporter is not dependent on sodium.

It is a uniport facilitated diffusion system.

Page 13: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

GLUT 2 In Kidney

Page 14: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Glucose Transporter 4

Major transporter in skeletal muscles and adipose tissues.

Called GLUT 4

Under control of Insulin

Insulin induces the movement of GLUT4 molecules to the cell surface and Increases Glucose uptake.

Page 15: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

GLuT 4 Mechanism

Page 16: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Glucose Transporters

Tissue Location Function

Facilitative bidirectional transporters

GLUT 1 Brain, Kidney, Colon, erythrocytes

Glucose uptake

GLUT 2 Liver, pancreatic beta cell, small intestine and kidney

Rapid uptake or release of Glucose

GLUT 3 Brain and Kidney Glucose uptake

GLUT 4 Heart and skeletal muscle, adipose tissue

Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake

GLUT 5 Small intestine Absorption of gluocse

Page 17: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Glucagon

Produced by the Alpha Cell of Islet cell of Langerhans in Pancreas

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Tissue response to Insulin and Glucagon

Liver Adipose TissueGlu

Muscle

Increased by Insulin

Fatty acid synthesisGlycogen synthesisProtein synthesis

Glucose uptakeFatty acid synthesis

Glucose uptake

Decreased by Insulin

Ketogenesis Gluconeogenesis

Lipolysis

Increased by Glucagon

GlycogenolysisGluconeogenesisKetogenesis

Lipolysis

Page 19: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

Glucagon opposes the action of Insulin

Secretion is stimulated by hypoglycemia

Effects only the liver.

Has no effect on muscle phosphorylase.

Acts by causing hyperglycemia through glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis.

Page 20: Insulin By Dr. Beenish Zaki Senior Instructor Department of Biochemistry.

DKA