chapter 22
What causes type I diabetes?
Antibodies and leukocytes destroy beta cells.
Insulin is produced by the ________ cells of the pancreas.
beta
Which pathway is the opposite of lipogenesis?
beta-oxidation
type 1 diabetes
body cannot produce insulin
type 2 diabetes
cell does not respond to insulin, from birth
During aerobic metabolism of glucose, most ATP is produced during which group of chemical reactions?
electron transport (yielding 26-28 molecules of ATP per molecule of glucose)
The production of glucose from smaller products like lactate and amino acids
Gluconeogenesis
A process by which excess glucose is linked together and stored as glycogen in muscle and liver
Glycogenesis
The breakdown of glycogen stores from the liver to produce glucose
Glycogenolysis
The metabolic pathway that breaks down glucose into two pyruvate molecules
Glycolysis
Insulin plays a vital role in carbohydrate metabolism. What is its role?
Insulin is needed for cells to pick up glucose from the blood; without insulin, more glucose will remain in the blood.
Why is glucose present in the urine of people with diabetes mellitus?
Insulin target cells are unable to take in the glucose from the blood, resulting in hyperglycemia and saturation of kidney glucose transporters.
How does binding of insulin to its receptor cause glucose uptake from the bloodstream?
It causes insertion of GLUT4 transporters in the membrane.
The breakdown of triglycerides using lipases
Lipolysis
Body cells that respond to insulin include
Liver cells, as well as most other cells of the body.
When blood glucose levels are low
The pancreas releases glucagon, which eventually causes blood glucose levels to increase.
When blood glucose levels are high
The pancreas releases insulin.
The time between meals when the body is performing catabolic reactions in order to maintain blood glucose levels
fasted state
The time occurring right after a meal when the body is absorbing macronutrients
fed state
Which is the best example of negative feedback?
Thyroid hormone (TH) secreted into the bloodstream causes increased cellular metabolism and increased body temperature, and increased TH levels inhibit TH release.
Which hormone stimulates the breakdown of polymerized glucose?
glucagon
Which function is NOT associated with a glucagon-dominated metabolic state?
glucose oxidation
Glucose is stored in the human body as _______.
glycogen
The body's tendency to maintain relatively constant internal conditions is called
homeostasis
What happens to excess glucose in the body?
it undergoes lipogenesis
What cells in the body respond to glucagon by breaking down glycogen and releasing glucose?
liver cells
What are the products of glycolysis?
2 pyruvate molecules, 2 ATP molecules, and 2 NADH molecules
Glucose remains in the bloodstream as a result of _______.
type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus
A liver cell responds to insulin by
taking in glucose and converting it to glycogen.
Excess glucose can be found in the urine _______.
when the transport maximum for reabsorption in the kidney tubules is exceeded, as a result of type 1 diabetes or as a result of type 2 diabetes