1 / 12

Plasma Glucose Homeostasis

Plasma Glucose Homeostasis. Glucose metabolism Hormonal Control Disruptions of glucose homeostasis Case Study. Homeostasis of Plasma Glucose Concentration. Normal physiological range: 65-100 mg/dl Set point?

sherwood
Télécharger la présentation

Plasma Glucose Homeostasis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plasma Glucose Homeostasis • Glucose metabolism • Hormonal Control • Disruptions of glucose homeostasis • Case Study

  2. Homeostasis of Plasma Glucose Concentration • Normal physiological range: 65-100 mg/dl • Set point? • Plasma glucose concentration = glucose entering the plasma – glucose leaving the plasma • What are the mechanisms that regulate plasma glucose concentration? • What are the components of the negative feedback loop: • Glucose receptors? • Afferent pathway? • Integrator? • Efferent pathway(s)? • Effector organ(s)? Phases:*absorptive, *post-absorptive, and fasting

  3. =sink Fig. 16.01 Lipoprotein Lipase Absorptive Phase Hepatic Portal System Once inside, glucose is converted to something else, thereby maintaining a concentration gradientfor facilitated diffusion ofglucose into cells.

  4. Fig. 16.02 Special case: Muscle wasting of starvation Glucose Sparing Post-absorptive phase

  5. Major Points • Absorptive phase lasts ~ 4 hours • During absorptive phase, energy needs provided by recently digested food • During absorptive phase, excess is converted to stored fuel • During post-absorptive phase, energy need met by release of stored fuels • Fasting defined as greater than 12 hours after previous meal (some say 24 hrs) • Fasting for several days has little effect on plasma glucose levels

  6. The Issues • How do cells “know” which fuel to “burn?” • How do cells “know” when to synthesize glycogen or lipids and when to break down glycogen or lipid? • What is responsible for the transitions from the absorptive and post-absorptive states?

  7. Islets of Langerhans Hepatic portal system Alpha cells secrete glucagon Beta cells secrete insulin Delta cells secrete somatostatin

  8. Activates some enzymes, inactivates others Exercise via an undescribed mechanism Peptide hormone + GLUT-4 Which cell types have insulin receptors? T1DM =beta cells fail to produce adequate insulin (5%) T2DM = target cells “resistant” (less responsive) to insulin

  9. =sink Fig. 16.01 =GLUT-4 Absorptive Phase Neurons don’t have insulin receptors, but do have Glucose transporters (not GLUT-4)

  10. Fig. 16.04 Absorptive Phase Post-Absorptive Phase

  11. Fig. 16.07 Identify sensors, afferent pathway,integrator,efferent pathway,effectors How is insulin secretion affected if plasma glucose is lower than set point?

More Related