BCHM 3P01 Lecture Notes - Glycogen, Hydrolysis, Phosphorylase

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Alpha-1,4 makes the straight chain and alpha-1,6 makes the branching. Vertebrates use this because we have a high metabolic rate. Non-reducing end has the hydroxyl group at carbon 1 occupied. The more of these ends the more that glucose can be mobilized. Dynamically changing (minute by minute) to match energetic needs of organism. 4 enzymes required for breakdown of glycogen: glycogen phosphorylase. Catalyzes bond cleavage in the glycogen molecule by substitution of a phosphate group to a single glucose molecule. Although reaction is reversible, the [] of pi is very high compared to g1p, so the reaction is driven to the right . essentially making this an irreversible reaction. Reaction occurs at non-reducing ends of glycogen chains (ie: ends without a c1-oh) Glucose subunits must be no more than 5 residues away from a branch point in glycogen for this reaction to occur via glycogen phosphorylase. Hydrolyzes phosphate bond causing release of glucose across cell membrane into the blood.

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