Glycogen Metabolism
Glycogen is the storage form of glucose in animals, equivalent to starch in plants. It is a highly branched polymer of glucose with α-1,4 glycosidic bonds in chains and α-1,6 bonds at branch points. Stored in liver (glucose reservoir for blood sugar) and muscle (fuel for muscle contraction).
Glycogenesis (Synthesis)
Requires UDP-glucose as the activated glucose donor.
- Glucose → G6P (Glucokinase/Hexokinase)
- G6P → G1P (Phosphoglucomutase)
- G1P + UTP → UDP-glucose + PPi (UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase) — driven by pyrophosphatase
- UDP-glucose → added to glycogen chain by Glycogen Synthase (rate-limiting; adds α-1,4 links)
- Branching enzyme: transfers 6–7 residues to C6, creating α-1,6 branch point (every 8–12 residues)
A protein primer (glycogenin) serves as initiator — glycogen synthase cannot start a new chain from scratch.
Glycogenolysis (Breakdown)
- Glycogen Phosphorylase (rate-limiting): Cleaves α-1,4 bonds releasing Glucose-1-phosphate (using inorganic phosphate, not water — phosphorolysis). Cannot pass within 4 residues of branch point.
- Debranching enzyme (bifunctional): Transfers 3 residues to chain end (transferase), then cleaves α-1,6 bond (glucosidase) releasing free glucose (not phosphorylated). Free glucose from branches exits cells; G1P is retained.
- G1P → G6P (Phosphoglucomutase)
- In liver: G6P → Glucose (G6Pase) → exported to blood
- In muscle: G6P → enters glycolysis directly (no G6Pase)
Hormonal Regulation
- Glucagon/Epinephrine (cAMP cascade): Receptor → Gs protein → Adenylyl cyclase → ↑cAMP → PKA → phosphorylates: ① Phosphorylase kinase (active) → phosphorylates Glycogen Phosphorylase → active (phospho-a form) → glycogenolysis ↑ ② Glycogen Synthase (inactive phospho-b form) → glycogenesis ↓
- Insulin: Activates Protein Phosphatase 1 → dephosphorylates Phosphorylase (inactive) and Glycogen Synthase (active) → promotes glycogenesis and stops glycogenolysis.
- AMP (muscle): Directly activates Glycogen Phosphorylase b without phosphorylation (local energy sensor).
Glycogen Storage Diseases (GSDs)
- Type I (Von Gierke): G6Pase deficiency; cannot release glucose from liver
- Type II (Pompe): Lysosomal α-1,4-glucosidase (acid maltase) deficiency; glycogen in all organs; cardiomegaly
- Type III (Cori/Forbes): Debranching enzyme deficiency; abnormal short outer branches
- Type V (McArdle): Muscle Phosphorylase deficiency; exercise intolerance, myoglobinuria
- Type VI (Hers): Liver Phosphorylase deficiency; mild hypoglycemia