HSE201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Glycogenolysis, Anterior Pituitary, Adrenergic Receptor

71 views2 pages
28 Jun 2018
Department
Course
5. Hormones, Exercise & Metabolism
Neural and hormonal processes that control circulating metabolic fuel supplies during exercise
Fuel Sources for exercise
- Intramuscular:
ATP, PCr, Glycogen, Triglycerides
- Extramuscular:
Blood/plasma glucose, FFA, AA,
Adipose Tissue stored triglycerides,
Liver, stored triglycerides and glycogen
Fuel contributions to exercise
- Intensity: light principle fuel is fat (plasma FFA), an increase results in an increase in muscle
glycogen and fat decreases, with an increase in carbohydrates
- Duration: glycogen being the largest source of fuel during exercise, less reliant on fuels from the
circulation as intensity increases, a slight increase in use of plasma FFA as exercise time increases
How is fuel supply controlled?
- Mobilisation
Transport into blood/plasma from: muscle, liver adipose tissue
- Stimulation/Inhibition of
Muscle, liver, adipose tissue
- Breakdown/catabolism of:
Glycogen, triglycerides, proteins
- Synthesis of:
Glycogen, triglycerides, proteins
- Key control: neural and hormonal/endocrine
Actions of the Autonomic Nervous System
- Sympathetic
- Noradrenaline as a neurotransmitter
- Innervate: peripheral tissues, adrenal gland, enhances action by releasing catecholamines
(adrenaline/noradrenaline
- Parasympathetic
- Acetylcholine as neurotransmitter
- Less diverse
- Innervates peripheral tissues, a lot less important during exercise
- Activity goes down with exercise
Are intensity dependant
Hormones that control fuel delivery & fuel use by contracting muscle
Insulin & Glucagon (pancreas) FAST
- Insulin: secreted by B cells of the pancreatic islets of Langerhans
- Promotes tissue storage/uptake of glucose, amino acids and fat
- Decreases during exercise
- Decreases to prevent rapid global systemic uptake of glucose by non-active tissues & spares blood
glucose for contracting muscle if other mechanisms can enhance muscle glucose uptake
Unlock document

This preview shows half of the first page of the document.
Unlock all 2 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in

Document Summary

Neural and hormonal processes that control circulating metabolic fuel supplies during exercise: hormones, exercise & metabolism. Intensity: light principle fuel is fat (plasma ffa), an increase results in an increase in muscle glycogen and fat decreases, with an increase in carbohydrates. Duration: glycogen being the largest source of fuel during exercise, less reliant on fuels from the circulation as intensity increases, a slight increase in use of plasma ffa as exercise time increases. Transport into blood/plasma from: muscle, liver adipose tissue. Innervate: peripheral tissues, adrenal gland, enhances action by releasing catecholamines (adrenaline/noradrenaline. Innervates peripheral tissues, a lot less important during exercise. Hormones that control fuel delivery & fuel use by contracting muscle. Insulin: secreted by b cells of the pancreatic islets of langerhans. Promotes tissue storage/uptake of glucose, amino acids and fat. Decreases to prevent rapid global systemic uptake of glucose by non-active tissues & spares blood glucose for contracting muscle if other mechanisms can enhance muscle glucose uptake.

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers
Class+
$30 USD/m
Billed monthly
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
7 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions