Glycogen Synthesis and Regulation

Description

Nutrition and Metabolism Quiz on Glycogen Synthesis and Regulation, created by Charlotte Jakes on 30/12/2019.
Charlotte Jakes
Quiz by Charlotte Jakes, updated more than 1 year ago
Charlotte Jakes
Created by Charlotte Jakes over 4 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Why is there glycogen in the liver?
Answer
  • Glucose homeostasis
  • The liver's only source of glucose
  • Gluconeogenesis
  • Gives structural support to hepatocyte membranes

Question 2

Question
Which is correct of glycogen in the liver?
Answer
  • Anabolism initiated by insulin Catabolism initiated by glucagon
  • Anabolism initiated by glucagon Catabolism initiated by insulin

Question 3

Question
The only source of glucose to supply the muscles is the glycogen.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 4

Question
Which linkages occur between adjacent glucose monomers in glycogen?
Answer
  • a-1,4 links
  • a-1,6 links

Question 5

Question
Which linkages occur between glucose monomers and their neighbouring molecules in branches in glycogen?
Answer
  • a-1,4 links
  • a-1,6 links

Question 6

Question
The enzymes at the beginning and/or end of a biosynthetic pathway will be tightly regulated.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 7

Question
Why, in biosynthetic pathways, is at least one enzymatic reaction irreversible?
Answer
  • To prevent accumulation of metabolites
  • More finer degree of control
  • To prevent unwanted by-products
  • To increase the rate of the pathway

Question 8

Question
What is the first reaction in the synthesis of glycogen?
Answer
  • Phosphorylation of glucose
  • Formation of UDP glucose
  • Addition of protein primer
  • Addition of UDP glucose

Question 9

Question
Where is hexokinase present?
Answer
  • All tissues
  • The liver only
  • The liver and pancreatic B cells
  • The liver and pancreatic a cells

Question 10

Question
Glucokinase is present in the liver and pancreatic B cells only.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 11

Question
Phosphorylation of glucose to glucose-6-phosphate is carried out by which enzyme(s)?
Answer
  • Glucokinase or hexokinase
  • Glucose phosphorylase
  • Glucokinase only
  • Hexokinase only

Question 12

Question
What is the role of phosphoglucomutase in glycogen synthesis?
Answer
  • Isomerisation of glucose 6-phosphate to glucose 1-phosphate
  • Phosphorylation of glucose to glucose 6-phosphate
  • Phosphorylation of glucose to glucose 1-phosphate
  • Addition of UTP to glucose

Question 13

Question
Which enzyme catalyses the formation of UDP glucose from UTP and glucose 1-phosphate?
Answer
  • UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase
  • UDP-glucose pyrophosphatase
  • UDP-glucose synthase
  • Gluco-UTPase

Question 14

Question
What is the structure of uridine triphosphate (UTP)?
Answer
  • Ribose, uracil and three phosphates
  • Deoxyribose, uracil and three phosphates
  • Ribose, uracil and two phosphates
  • Ribose, adenine and three phosphates

Question 15

Question
What is a co-product of UDP glucose formation?
Answer
  • PPi
  • Pi
  • UTP
  • ADP

Question 16

Question
What does UTP react with on glucose 1-phosphate to form UDP glucose?
Answer
  • The phosphate group of glucose 1-phosphate
  • The hydroxyl group of the 6th carbon
  • The hydroxyl group of the 2nd carbon
  • The hydrogen of the 3rd carbon

Question 17

Question
What amino acid does glycogenin bind to in the protein primer?
Answer
  • Tyrosine
  • Phenylalanine
  • Threonine
  • Glutamate

Question 18

Question
Which carbon of UDP-glucose does tyrosine bind to in the protein primer?
Answer
  • 1st
  • 2nd
  • 3rd
  • 6th

Question 19

Question
When the tyrosine-glycogenin protein primer binds to UDP-glucose, UDP is cleaved off.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 20

Question
Which enzyme catalyses the addition of the tyrosine-glycogenin primer to UDP-glucose causing the cleavage of UDP?
Answer
  • Glucosyltransferase
  • Tyrosine transferase
  • Glycogenin synthase
  • UDP hydrolase

Question 21

Question
How does the chain extend from glucose once it has been bound to the tyrosine-glycogenin primer?
Answer
  • 1,4 linkages between primed glucose and UDP-glucose
  • 1,6 linkages between primed glucose and UDP-glucose
  • 1,4 linkages between primed glucose and primed UDP-glucose
  • 1,6 linkages between primed glucose and primed UDP-glucose

Question 22

Question
Which statement is true of branching in glycogen?
Answer
  • A portion of the long chain is moved to branch up and form 1,6 linkages
  • An initial 1,6 linkage is formed off the core chain and 1,4 linkages are formed from that
  • Branching requires another primed UDP-glucose molecule
  • Branching does not require UDP glucose, only regular glucose

Question 23

Question
Fill in the blanks below to summarise the synthesis of glycogen. 1. First, [blank_start]glucose[blank_end] is phosphorylated to [blank_start]glucose-6-phosphate[blank_end]. This is catalysed by [blank_start]hexokinase[blank_end] or [blank_start]glucokinase[blank_end] in the liver. 2. Then, [blank_start]glucose 6-phosphate[blank_end] is isomerised to [blank_start]glucose 1-phosphate[blank_end]. This is catalysed by [blank_start]phosphoglucomutase[blank_end]. 3. [blank_start]Glucose 1-phosphate[blank_end] reacts with [blank_start]UTP[blank_end] to form [blank_start]UDP-glucose[blank_end], releasing [blank_start]PPi[blank_end] in the process. This reaction is catalysed by [blank_start]UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase[blank_end]. 4. The enzyme [blank_start]glucosyltransferase[blank_end] binds a protein primer in the form of the amino acid [blank_start]tyrosine[blank_end] bound to [blank_start]glycogenin[blank_end] to the 1st carbon of [blank_start]UDP glucose[blank_end]. This causes the cleavage of [blank_start]UDP[blank_end]. 5. Additional [blank_start]UDP-glucose[blank_end] monomers join via [blank_start]a-1,4[blank_end] linkages in reactions catalysed by [blank_start]glycogen synthase[blank_end]. 6. This process repeats to form a chain. 7. Portions of the core chain are transferred to form [blank_start]a-1,6[blank_end] linkages with the chain itself to form branches.
Answer
  • glucose-6-phosphate
  • glucose
  • hexokinase
  • glucokinase
  • glucose 6-phosphate
  • glucose 1-phosphate
  • phosphoglucomutase
  • Glucose 1-phosphate
  • UTP
  • UDP-glucose
  • PPi
  • UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase
  • glucosyltransferase
  • tyrosine
  • glycogenin
  • UDP glucose
  • UDP
  • UDP-glucose
  • a-1,4
  • glycogen synthase
  • a-1,6

Question 24

Question
The active form of glycogen synthase is what?
Answer
  • Not phosphorylated
  • Phosphorylated

Question 25

Question
What enzyme do we require to activate glycogen synthase?
Answer
  • Protein phosphatase
  • Protein kinase

Question 26

Question
Insulin activates a protein phosphatase which dephosphorylates glycogen synthase to activate it.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 27

Question
What happens first in glycogen breakdown?
Answer
  • Phosphorylation of glycogen to release glucose 1-phosphate monomers
  • Phosphorylation of glycogen to release glucose 6-phosphate monomers
  • Transfer of branches onto the core chain
  • Cleavage of a-1,6 linkages

Question 28

Question
What enzyme carries out the phosphorylation of glucose monomers in glycogen during breakdown?
Answer
  • Glycogen phosphorylase
  • Glycogen phosphatase
  • Hexokinase
  • Glycogen hydrolase

Question 29

Question
What does glycogen transferase do?
Answer
  • Transfers glycogen chains onto the core chain leaving behind 1 branched monomer with a a-1,6 linkage
  • Transfers glycogen chains entirely onto the core chain
  • Isomerises glucose 1-phosphate to glucose 6-phosphate
  • Catalyses the hydrolysis of a-1,6 linkages

Question 30

Question
Which enzyme cleaves a-1,6 linkages on glycogen?
Answer
  • a-1,6-glucosidase
  • a-1,6-kinase
  • a-1,6-hydratase
  • a-1,6-catalase

Question 31

Question
Glucose 1-phosphate from the breakdown of glycogen is converted to glucose 6-phosphate by phosphoglucomutase
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 32

Question
Glucose-6-phosphate is only converted to glucose in the liver
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 33

Question
Fill in the blanks below to describe glycogen breakdown. 1. First, an [blank_start]inorganic source[blank_end] phosphorylates glucose monomers to break their [blank_start]a-1,4[blank_end] linkages and release them. This is catalysed by [blank_start]glycogen phosphorylase[blank_end]. 2. Then, glycogen [blank_start]branches[blank_end] are removed and added to the core chain by [blank_start]glycogen transferase[blank_end]. This leaves behind a single branched glucose monomer with an [blank_start]a-1,6[blank_end] linkage. 3. This [blank_start]a-1,6[blank_end] linkage is broken by [blank_start]a-1,6-glucosidase[blank_end]. 4. [blank_start]Glucose 1-phosphate[blank_end] is isomerised to [blank_start]glucose 6-phosphate[blank_end] by [blank_start]phosphoglucomutase[blank_end]. 5. In the liver, [blank_start]glucose 6-phosphate[blank_end] is converted to [blank_start]glucose[blank_end] by the [blank_start]glucose 6-phosphatase[blank_end] enzyme. The muscle does not have this enzyme, so its [blank_start]glucose 6-phosphate[blank_end] enters the [blank_start]glycolysis[blank_end] pathway.
Answer
  • inorganic source
  • a-1,4
  • glycogen phosphorylase
  • branches
  • glycogen transferase
  • a-1,6
  • a-1,6
  • a-1,6-glucosidase
  • Glucose 1-phosphate
  • glucose 6-phosphate
  • phosphoglucomutase
  • glucose 6-phosphate
  • glucose
  • glucose 6-phosphatase
  • glucose 6-phosphate
  • glycolysis

Question 34

Question
The active form of glycogen phosphorylase is what?
Answer
  • Phosphorylated
  • Not phosphorylated

Question 35

Question
What enzyme do we require to activate glycogen phosphorylase?
Answer
  • Protein kinase
  • Protein phosphatase

Question 36

Question
By what mechanism is glycogen protein kinase activated?
Answer
  • Secondary messenger with cAMP signalling
  • Secondary messenger with IP3 signalling
  • Increase in cytosolic Ca2+
  • Cytosolic receptor signalling

Question 37

Question
Adrenaline activates glycogen breakdown in the [blank_start]muscle[blank_end]. Glucagon activates glycogen breakdown in the [blank_start]liver[blank_end]. Insulin activates glycogen breakdown in [blank_start]both[blank_end].
Answer
  • muscle
  • liver
  • both

Question 38

Question
Where does calcium released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum bind on glycogen phosphorylase kinase?
Answer
  • Calmodulin domain
  • Histidine residues
  • Active site
  • Tyrosine residues

Question 39

Question
What effect does calcium in muscle cells have on glycogen breakdown?
Answer
  • Activates glycogen phosphorylase kinase to activate glycogen phosphorylase to initiate glycogen breakdown
  • Activates glycogen phosphorylase phosphatase to deactivate glycogen phosphorylase and prevent glycogen breakdown

Question 40

Question
Why is it important that calcium can regulate glycogen breakdown in the muscles?
Answer
  • Our muscles need energy to contract but we don't always need adrenaline and our blood glucose isn't always low
  • Provides more powerful contraction
  • Provides more resistance to fatigue
  • In case glycogen concentration is low

Question 41

Question
What effect does AMP have on glycogen phosphorylase?
Answer
  • Allosteric activation
  • Allosteric inhibiton
  • Competitive inhibition
  • Covalent activation

Question 42

Question
Why is it important that AMP concentration regulates glycogen breakdown?
Answer
  • High AMP indicates low ATP so glycogen breakdown is necessary
  • Provides more powerful contraction
  • AMP is present in all cells all the time
  • AMP can cross the cell membrane

Question 43

Question
ATP is an allosteric inhibitor of glycogen phosphorylase.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 44

Question
Fill in the blanks to describe each glycogen storage disease. [blank_start]Von Gierke's[blank_end] disease is caused by defective glucose 6-phosphatase. [blank_start]Pompe's[blank_end] disease is caused by defective lysosomal glycosidase. [blank_start]McArdle's[blank_end] disease is caused by defective glycogen phosphorylase.
Answer
  • Von Gierke's
  • Pompe's
  • McArdle's

Question 45

Question
Which of the following are logical symptoms of Von Gierke's disease?
Answer
  • Hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, enlarged liver
  • Accumulation of glycogen in lysosomes, muscle weakness, cardiac failure
  • Exercise intolerance, red/brown urine following excercise

Question 46

Question
Which of the following are logical symptoms of Pompe's disease?
Answer
  • Accumulation of glycogen in lysosomes, muscle weakness, cardiac failure
  • Hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, enlarged liver
  • Exercise intolerance, red/brown urine following exercise

Question 47

Question
Which of the following are logical symptoms of McArdle's disease?
Answer
  • Exercise intolerance, red/brown urine following exercise
  • Accumulation of glycogen in lysosomes, muscle weakness, cardiac failure
  • Hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, enlarged liver

Question 48

Question
What causes red/brown urine following exercise in those with McArdle's disease?
Answer
  • Myoglobin excretion due to muscle breakdown
  • Haemoglobin excretion due to vessel rupture in muscles
  • Myoglobin excretion due to use in respiration
  • Myoglobin excretion due to use in removal of lactate
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