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Published byWalter Mills Modified over 9 years ago
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Review PCr
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Review Glycolysis
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Review TCA
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HSL must stimulate the catabolism of triglyceride (glycerol + 3 FAs) insulin (-) lactate (-) epi (+) norepi (+) glucagon (+) GH (+) cortisol (+)
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If in adipose: glycerol may enter circulation, be taken up by liver and phosphorylated to glycerol 3-phosphate make new TGs enter the glycolytic pathway gluconeogenic precursor (via dihydroxyacetone phosphate, DHAP)
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FAs can enter the muscle cell for further catabolization
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Entry into cell no problem; entry into mitochondria for Beta oxidation is similar to facilitated diffusion of glucose: it takes others
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FAs are converted to a CoA derivative by fatty acyl CoA synthase
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Palmitate: 16C FA: Palmitate → palmitoyl CoA via long chain acyl CoA synthase ATP in and AMP out; net cost? now ready for beta oxidation
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Fatty acyl CoA must be transported across the mito. membrane and into the matrix via carnitine shuttle notice the “drop off” of CoA to combine with another fatty acyl CoA
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why supplement carnitine –increased carnitine, shuttle in more fat, more fat catabolism, even at rest –partly b/c exercise causes an increased excretion of carnitine in urine, maybe lowering muscle levels no studies support this contention, need mitochondria for carnitine to help
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NOW, beta oxidation think of it as a merry-go round, dropping off 2 carbons (acetyl CoA)
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Two purposes of Beta Oxidation cleave carbon atoms in pairs (acetyl CoA), degrading the FA produce high energy reducing equivalents, NADH +H and FADH 2
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Process of Beta oxidation most fats are 16 or 18 carbons
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16C Palmitate: 5 ATP/ spin (n/2 - 1) 12 ATP/acetyl CoA (n/2) 7 spins X 5 = 35 ATP 8 acetyl CoA X 12 = 96 ATP 35 + 96 = 131 ATP 2 ATP for activation, 131 - 2 = 129 ATP
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Uneven FAs cleaving of pairs continues until last time, 2 C and a 3C 3C fatty acid is propionyl CoA propionyl CoA is converted to succinyl CoA
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Glycerol catabolism: 19 ATP
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Entire TG 129 X 3 (3 FAs) = 387 387 + 19 (glycerol) = 406 ATP
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Acetyl CoA from Beta Oxidation must interact with OXA to feed the TCA (CHO flame)
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Acetyl CoA may be converted to ketones when not enough OXA (fasting, diabetes, and prolonged exercise)
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Ketones (or ketone bodies) two acetyl CoA condense to acetoacetate acetoacetate reduced to 3-hydroxybutyrate (if NADH:NAD ratio is high in mitochondria) or, acetoacetate spontaneously, slowly undergoes a decarboxylation to acetone
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this occurs in liver ketones may be used for energy, especially by heart and kidneys
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Fat catabolism during low intensity exercise
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low intensity: 5 kcal/min most (72%) derived from fat 3.6 kcal from fat, 0.4 gms of fat
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double intensity: 10 kcal/min 45% of energy is derived from fat 4.5 kcal/min, 0.5 gm of fat
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e.g., 5 kcal/min for 60 min = (5 X 60) = 300 kcals, 24 gm fat
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10 kcal/min for 45 min = 450 kcals, 22.5 gm fat
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Therefore, should you encourage some one to exercise at low intensity to “burn more fat”?????
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Fat facts: fat utilization decreases when exercise follows a high CHO meal (increase in circulating insulin) fat utilization decreases when lactate begins to accumulate ability to use fat as a fuel increases with training
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