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Metabolism

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Metabolism Chapter 19 The Action of Leptin Leptin crosses the BBB To affect NTs released by neurons in the arcuate nucleus Influences other hypothalamic nuclei Which ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Metabolism


1
Metabolism
  • Chapter 19

2
Objectives for Chapter 19
  • To understand the regulation of body growth and
    metabolism by
  • Adipocyte hormones
  • Pancreatic hormones
  • Suprarenal hormones
  • Thyroid hormones

3
Nutritional Requirements
  • Living tissue maintained by constant
    expenditure of energy (ATP)
  • ATP derived from glucose, fatty acids, ketones,
    amino acids, and others
  • Energy of food is commonly measured in
    kilocalories (1 kcal 1000 calories)
  • Carbohydrates and proteins yield 4kcal/gm
    fats-9kcal/gm

4
Metabolic Rate and Caloric Requirements
  • Metabolic rate (MR) total rate of body
    metabolism
  • amount of O2 consumed by body/min
  • Basal metabolic rate (BMR) MR of awake relaxed
    person 1214 hrs after eating
  • and at a comfortable temperature
  • BMR depends on age, sex, body surface area,
    activity level
  • Strongly influenced by thyroid hormone levels
  • Hyperthyroidism high BMR
  • Hypothyroidism low BMR

5
Metabolism
  • All chemical reactions occurring in the body
  • Includes synthesis and energy storage reactions
    (anabolism)
  • and energy liberating reactions (catabolism)
  • Anabolic Requirements
  • Anabolic reactions synthesize DNA and RNA,
    proteins, fats, and carbohydrates
  • Must occur constantly to replace molecules that
    are hydrolyzed in catabolic reactions

6
Turnover Rate
  • Rate at which a molecule is broken down and
    re-synthesized
  • Average turnover
  • Carbs 250 g/day
  • Some glucose reused so net need 150 g/day
  • Protein 150 g/day
  • Some reused for protein synthesis so net need 35
    g/day
  • 9 essential amino acids must be supplied in diet
    (cannot be synthesized)
  • Fats 100 g/day
  • Little required in diet can be synthesized from
    Carbs
  • 2 essential fatty acids must be supplied in diet

7
Vitamins
  • Small organic molecules serve as coenzymes
  • in metabolism or have highly specific functions
  • Must be obtained in diet because
  • body does not produce them, or does in
    insufficient amounts
  • Placed in 2 classes
  • Fat-solubles include A, D, E, and K
  • Water-solubles include B1, B2, B3, B6, B12,
    pantothenic acid, biotin, folic acid, and vitamin
    C
  • Serve as coenzymes in metabolism

8
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9
Minerals (Elements)
  • Needed as cofactors for specific enzymes and
    other critical functions
  • Daily requirements Sodium, potassium,
    magnesium, calcium, phosphate, and chloride
  • Trace elements required in small amounts/day
    Iron, zinc, manganese, fluorine, copper,
    molybdenum, chromium, and selenium

10
Free Radicals
  • Highly reactive and oxidize or reduce other atoms
  • Because of an unpaired electron in their outer
    orbital
  • Major free radicals reactive oxygen or reactive
    nitrogen species
  • contain oxygen or nitrogen with an unpaired
    electron
  • NO radical, superoxide radical, and hydroxyl
    radical
  • Serve important physiological functions
  • Help to destroy bacteria
  • Can produce vasodilation
  • Can stimulate cell proliferation

11
Free Radicals
  • In excess exerts oxidative stress contributes
    to disease states
  • Can damage lipids, proteins, and DNA
  • Promote apoptosis, aging, inflammatory disease,
    degenerative, and other diseases and malignant
    growth
  • Underlying cause widespread production of
    superoxide radicals by mitochondria
  • Bodys protection against oxidative stress
  • Enzymes that neutralize free radicals
    superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase, and
    glutathione peroxidase
  • Nonenzymes that react with free radicals by
    picking up unpaired electrons glutathione,
    vitamins A, C, E

12
Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Production and
Defense
13
Flow Chart of Energy Pathways in the Body
  • In the top and bottom molecules found within
    cells
  • Blood contains
  • glucose, fatty acids, amino acids, and others
    that can be used for energy
  • circulating energy substrates from digestion or
    energy reserves (glycogen, protein, or fat)

14
Control of Adipose Tissue Levels
  • Adipostat negative feedback loops to defend
    maintenance of a certain amount of adipose tissue
  • Adipocytes store and release fat under hormonal
    control
  • May release their own hormone(s) influence
    metabolism
  • Adipocytes secrete regulatory hormones
    (adipokines)
  • when their PPAR? (peroxisome proliferator
    activated receptors) are activated
  • Regulate hunger, metabolism, and insulin
    sensitivity
  • e.g., cause muscle to become more responsive to
    insulin
  • Include adiponectin, leptin, resistin, TNF?, and
    retinol-binding protein 4

15
Endocrine Functions of Adipocytes
  • TNF?, resistin, retinol BP4, leptin increased
    in obesity and Type II diabetes
  • All appear to reduce sensitivity of muscle to
    insulin (insulin resistance)
  • Leptin signals the hypothalamus on how much fat
    is stored, thereby regulating hunger and food
    intake
  • Adiponectin decreased in obesity and Type II
    diabetes
  • has an insulin-sensitizing, anti-diabetic effect

16
Low Adiposity Starvation
  • Starvation and malnutrition diminish immune
    function
  • Low adipose levels cause low leptin levels
  • Helper T cells have leptin receptors
  • Low leptin can lead to diminished immune function
  • Leptin may play role in timing of puberty and in
    the amenorrhea of underweight women

17
Obesity
  • Obesity diagnosed by body mass index BMI wh2
  • w weight in kilograms (lbs. 2.2)
  • h height in meters (inches 39.4)
  • Healthy weight is considered to be a BMI between
    19 25
  • Obesity defined as BMI gt 30
  • 60 of pop in US is either overweight (BMIgt25) or
    obese (BMIgt30)
  • Childhood obesity increase in adipocyte size
    and number
  • Weight gain in adulthood is due mainly to
    increase in adipocyte size

18
Regulation of Hunger
  • Partially controlled by hypothalamus
  • Lesions in ventromedial area produce hyperphagia
    and obesity in animals
  • Lesions in lateral area produce hypophagia
  • Involves a number of NTs
  • Endorphins promote overeating
  • Norepinephrine promotes overeating
  • Serotonin suppresses overeating
  • successful diet pills Redux and fen-phen worked
    by elevating brain serotonin (banned because of
    heart valve side effects)

19
Regulation of Hunger
  • Arcuate nucleus (hypothalamus) neurons send
    axons to paraventricular nucleus and lateral
    hypothalamus
  • One neuron type produces MSH which suppresses
    hunger
  • By acting on its receptor, melanocortin 4
    receptor
  • Obesity associated with mutations in this
    receptor that leads to increased hunger and
    decreased energy expenditure
  • Another produces neuropeptide Y and
    agouti-related peptide which increase hunger

20
Hormonal Signals Regulate Feeding / Energy
Expenditures
  • CNS integrates sensory information with other
    information (smell, taste,
  • psychological factors) to help regulate hunger
    and satiety, energy
  • expenditures as well as growth and reproduction

21
Regulation of Hunger Signals from Stomach and SI
  • Involves polypeptide hormones secreted by the
    stomach and SI
  • Ghrelin stimulates hunger via effect in arcuate
    nucleus
  • Secreted by stomach at high levels when stomach
    is empty
  • and low levels when full
  • CCK from SI promotes satiety
  • Levels rise during and immediately after a meal
  • Ghrelin and CCK regulate hunger on short-term,
    meal-to-meal basis
  • PYY secreted by SI in proportion to caloric
    content of food
  • Decreases hunger by signaling arcuate to decrease
    neuropeptide Y and stimulate MSH
  • Seems to serve intermediate level of control
    (injections reduce appetite for 12 hrs)

22
Regulation of Hunger
  • Influenced by leptin a satiety factor secreted
    by adipocytes and involved in long-term
    regulation
  • Secretion increases as stored fat increases
  • Signals body's level of adiposity
  • Stimulates arcuate to suppress Neuropeptide Y and
    agouti-related peptide and stimulate MSH
  • Insulin may play role in satiety
  • Suppresses Neuropeptide Y

23
The Action of Leptin
  • Leptin crosses the BBB
  • To affect NTs released by neurons in the arcuate
    nucleus
  • Influences other hypothalamic nuclei
  • Which in turn reduce appetite and increase
    metabolic rate
  • Insulin stimulates adipose cells to secrete
    leptin
  • And is able to cross the BBB acts similar to
    leptin

24
Calorie Expenditure of Body
  • Has 3 components
  • Number of calories used at BMR makes up 60 of
    total
  • Number used in response to temperature changes
    and during digestion/absorption (adaptive
    thermogenesis) make-up 10 of total
  • Starvation can lower MR 40
  • Eating raises MR 25-40 (thermic effect of food)
  • Number used during physical activity depends on
    type and intensity

25
Absorptive and Postabsorptive States
  • Absorptive state 4 hour period after eating
  • Energy substrates from digestion are used and
    deposited in storage forms (anabolism)
  • Postabsorptive or fasting state follows
    absorptive state
  • Energy is withdrawn from storage (catabolism)

26
Hormonal Regulation of Metabolism
  • Balance between anabolism and catabolism
  • depends on levels of insulin, glucagon, GH,
    thyroxine, and others

27
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28
Hormonal Interactions in Metabolic Regulation
  • Different hormones may work together
    synergistically or
  • May have antagonistic effects on metabolism

29
Pancreatic Islets of Langerhans
  • Contain 2 cell types involved in energy
    homeostasis
  • a cells secrete glucagon when glucose levels are
    low
  • By stimulating glycogenolysis in liver
  • ß cells secrete insulin when glucose levels are
    high
  • By promoting glucose uptake by tissues
  • Normal fasting glucose level 65105 mg/dl
  • Insulin and glucagon prevent levels from rising
    above 170mg/dl after meals
  • Or falling below 50mg/dl between meals

30
Insulin
  • Overall effect is to promote anabolism
  • Promotes storage of digestion products
  • Inhibits breakdown of fat and protein
  • Inhibits secretion of glucagon
  • Stimulates insertion of GLUT4 transporters in
    cell membrane of skeletal muscle, liver, and fat
  • Transports by facilitated diffusion

31
Insulin Secretion
  • Rise in blood glucose causes more glucose to
    enter ?-cells results in
  • Increased ATP production
  • Closes K channels, so that K cannot leave the
    cell
  • Produces a depolarization which
  • Opens VG Ca2 channels, allowing entry of Ca2
  • Ca2 stimulates vesicles containing insulin to
    undergo exocytosis

32
Insulin Secretion
  • Rise in plasma glucose concentration acts on
    ?-cells
  • leads to opening of K channels producing
    depolarization
  • Depolarization opens voltage-gated Ca2 channels
  • promoting exocytosis of vesicles containing
    insulin
  • A rise in plasma glucose leads to rise in insulin
    secretion
  • At the same time, inhibits glucagon from ?-cells

33
Glucagon
  • Maintains blood glucose concentration above
    50mg/dl
  • Stimulates glycogenolysis in liver
  • Stimulates gluconeogenesis, lipolysis, and
    ketogenesis
  • Skeletal muscle, heart, liver, kidneys use fatty
    acids for energy

34
Catabolism During Fasting
  • Increased glucagon secretion and decreased
    insulin secretion during fasting favors
    catabolism. Hormonal changes promote release of
    glucose, fatty acids, ketone bodies, and amino
    acids into blood (liver secretes glucose derived
    both from glycogen breakdown and conversion of
    amino acids in gluconeogenesis

35
Effects of ANS on Insulin and Glucagon
  • ANS innervates islets
  • Parasympathetic division activated during meals
  • stimulates both GI function and secretion of
    insulin
  • Sympathetic division inhibits insulin secretion
  • stimulates glucagon secretion
  • Glucagon and epinephrine work together to produce
    a stress hyperglycemia
  • when the sympathoadrenal system is activated

36
Effects of Intestinal Hormones
  • Insulin levels increase more after glucose
    ingestion than after intravenous glucose infusion
  • Due to hormones secreted by SI after meals "in
    anticipation" of glucose rise
  • GIP and GLP-1 from SI are powerful stimulators of
    insulin secretion

37
Effect of Feeding and Fasting on Metabolism
  • Metabolic balance
  • tilted toward anabolism by feeding (absorption)
  • Toward catabolism by fasting
  • Inverse relationship between insulin and glucagon
    secretion
  • Insulin secretion rises, glucagon falls during
    food absorption
  • Opposite occurs during fasting

38
Diabetes Mellitus
  • Hyperglycemia characterized by chronic high
    blood glucose levels
  • Type I (insulin dependent or IDDM) due to
    insufficient insulin secretion
  • 5 of diabetics are this type
  • Type II (insulin independent or NIDDM) due to
    lack of effect of insulin
  • 95 of diabetics are this type

39
Type I Diabetes
  • Autoimmune disease ß cells progressively
    destroyed by killer T lymphocytes
  • Glucose is unable to enter resting muscle or
    adipose cells
  • Rate of fat synthesis lags behind rate of
    lipolysis
  • Fatty acids are converted to ketone bodies,
    producing ketoacidosis
  • Increased glucagon levels stimulate
    glycogenolysis in liver

40
Type II Diabetes
  • Slow to develop
  • Has multigene inheritance pattern
  • Genetic tendency is increased by obesity
  • Involves insulin resistance
  • Usually accompanied by normal-to-high insulin
    levels
  • Is not usually accompanied by ketoacidosis
  • Treatable by exercise and diet
  • Exercise increases insertion of GLUT4s into
    skeletal muscle

41
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42
Effects of Uncontrolled IDDM can lead to coma
and death
43
Oral Glucose TolerancePrediabetic and Type II
  • Glucose concentrations
  • Insulin values following ingestion of glucose
    normal, Type II, Prediabetic

44
Hypoglycemia
  • Reactive hypoglycemia oversecretion of insulin
    due to an exaggerated response of ? cells to a
    rise in glucose
  • Occurs in people who are genetically predisposed
    to type II diabetes
  • Symptoms include tremors, hunger, weakness,
    blurred vision, and confusion

Idealized oral glucose tolerance test on a person
with reactive hypolgycemia
45
Metabolic Regulation
  • Anabolic effects of insulin are antagonized by
    hormones of adrenals, thyroid, and anterior
    pituitary on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism,
    however
  • Insulin, thyroxine, and GH can act
    synergistically to stimulate protein synthesis

46
Metabolic Effects of Catecholamines
  • Similar to those of glucagon
  • Stimulate glycogenolysis and release of glucose
    from the liver
  • Stimulate lipolysis and release of fatty acids
    from adipose tissue
  • Actions occur in response to glucagon during
    fasting
  • And in response to catecholamines during stress
  • Provides energy substrates in anticipation of
    intense physical activity
  • Glucagon and epinephrine both mediated by cAMP

47
Epinephrine and Glucagon Exert Effects on
Metabolism
  • cAMP 2nd messenger in epinephrine and glucagon
    signaling on liver and adipose tissue metabolism

48
Metabolic Effects of Cortisol
  • Cortisol secreted in response to ACTH
  • Often released in response to stress, including
    fasting and exercise
  • Where it supports effects of glucagon
  • Promotes lipolysis, ketogenesis, and protein
    breakdown
  • Protein breakdown increases amino acid levels for
    use in gluconeogenesis in liver
  • All of these help to compensate for a state of
    prolonged fasting or exercise

49
Metabolic Effects of Glucocortiods
  • Catabolic actions of glucocorticoids
  • help raise the blood concentration of glucose
  • and other energy-carrier moleculses

50
Thyroxine (T4)
  • Thyroid secretes mostly tetraiodothyronine
    (thyroxine) and a little triiodothyronine (T3) in
    response to TSH
  • T3 Active form stimulates the rate of cell
    respiration
  • Thyroxine converted to T3 in target cells due to
    lowering ATP concentrations
  • Sets BMR by regulating cell respiration
  • Necessary for growth and development, especially
    of the CNS
  • Increases metabolic heat (calorigenic effect)
  • Essential for cold adaptation

51
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)
  • 2 components one independent of and one
    regulated by thyroxine action
  • Thyroxine acts to set the BMR
  • BMR used as an index of thyroid function
  • Hypothyroid basal O2 consumption 30 lower
    than normal
  • Hyperthyroid basal O2 up to 50 higher than
    normal
  • Normal thyroxine level required for growth and
    proper development of CNS in children
  • Required to maintain a balance of anabolism and
    catabolism
  • Too low or high protein breakdown and muscle
    wasting
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