Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Fasting State Metabolism

Fasting State Metabolism

Fasting State Metabolism

On this page

Hormonal Orchestra - Fasting's Conductors

  • Primary Goal: Maintain blood glucose; mobilize stored fuel.
  • ↓ Insulin/Glucagon Ratio: The critical switch activating fasting pathways.
  • Key Hormones & Actions:
    • Glucagon (from pancreatic α-cells): Master regulator.
      • ↑ Hepatic Glycogenolysis (early fasting)
      • ↑ Hepatic Gluconeogenesis (primary source later)
      • ↑ Adipose Lipolysis (provides FFAs, glycerol)
      • ↑ Hepatic Ketogenesis (alternative fuel)
    • Epinephrine (Adrenal Medulla): Rapid, stress-induced response.
      • ↑ Glycogenolysis (liver, muscle)
      • ↑ Lipolysis
      • Stimulates glucagon secretion, inhibits insulin secretion.
    • Cortisol (Adrenal Cortex): Slower, permissive & prolonged effect.
      • ↑ Gluconeogenic enzyme synthesis (liver)
      • ↑ Muscle proteolysis (provides amino acids for gluconeogenesis)
      • ↑ Lipolysis
    • Growth Hormone (GH; Pituitary): Glucose-sparing.
      • ↓ Peripheral glucose uptake by tissues
      • ↑ Lipolysis

⭐ Glucagon is the primary counter-regulatory hormone in early fasting, stimulating both glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis. Metabolic pathways in fed, fasting, and starvation states

Fuel Factory Frenzy - Tapping the Reserves

  • Primary Goal: Mobilize stored energy (glycogen, triglycerides) to maintain blood glucose & fuel vital organs.

  • Key Hormonal Shift: ↓Insulin, ↑Glucagon, ↑Epinephrine.

  • Fuel Sources Mobilized:

    • Liver Glycogen:
      • Glycogenolysis $→$ Glucose.
      • Sustains blood glucose for ~12-18 hours.
    • Adipose Triglycerides (Lipolysis):
      • Triglycerides $→$ Fatty Acids (FAs) + Glycerol.
      • FAs: β-oxidation in liver/muscle for ATP.
      • Glycerol: Gluconeogenic substrate in liver.
    • Muscle Protein (Prolonged Fasting):
      • Proteolysis $→$ Amino Acids (e.g., Alanine).
      • Alanine $→$ Liver for gluconeogenesis (Glucose-Alanine cycle).

⭐ Hormone-Sensitive Lipase (HSL) is key for lipolysis in adipose tissue, activated by epinephrine and glucagon (via cAMP) and inhibited by insulin.

Fuel mobilization during fasting

Liver's Labors - Central Processing Unit

  • Core Functions: Maintain blood glucose; supply ketone bodies (alternative fuel).
  • Glucose Output:
    • Glycogenolysis (early fasting, 12-24 hrs): Glycogen → Glucose. Key: Glycogen Phosphorylase.
    • Gluconeogenesis (GNG) (sustained): De novo glucose from Lactate, Alanine, Glycerol. Liver = major site.
      • Essential for brain, RBCs. Reg: ↑ Glucagon, ↑ Cortisol; ↓ Insulin.
  • Ketogenesis (active GNG):
    • Excess Acetyl-CoA (from FA β-oxidation) → Ketone bodies (Acetoacetate, β-Hydroxybutyrate).
    • Fuel for brain, muscle, heart; glucose-sparing. Key: HMG-CoA Lyase.
  • Fatty Acid β-Oxidation:
    • Fuels GNG (ATP); provides Acetyl-CoA for ketogenesis.
  • Urea Cycle:
    • Manages $NH_3$ from AA catabolism (AAs for GNG). Excretes N as Urea.

⭐ The key regulatory enzymes of gluconeogenesis are Pyruvate Carboxylase, PEP Carboxykinase, Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, and Glucose-6-phosphatase. (📌 Mnemonic: Pathway Produces Fresh Glucose)

Peripheral Power‑Play - Organs Adapting

  • Muscle:
    • Initial: Own glycogen (lasts hours).
    • Switches to fatty acid oxidation (from adipose) as primary fuel.
    • Prolonged fast: ↑ Ketone body uptake.
    • Proteolysis → Alanine & Glutamine to liver for gluconeogenesis.
  • Adipose Tissue:
    • HSL activation (↓Insulin, ↑Glucagon, ↑Epinephrine).
    • Lipolysis: Triglycerides → FFAs + Glycerol.
    • FFAs (bound to albumin) fuel liver, muscle; Glycerol → liver gluconeogenesis.
  • Brain:
    • Early fast: Glucose-dependent.

    ⭐ During prolonged starvation (>2-3 days), brain adapts to use ketone bodies for up to 70% of its energy needs, sparing glucose & protein.

  • RBCs: Obligate glucose users (anaerobic glycolysis).
  • Kidney:
    • Gluconeogenesis (significant in prolonged fast, up to 50% of total).
    • Excretes excess H⁺ (from ketogenesis), NH₄⁺ (from glutamine). Fasting Metabolism: Liver, Brain, Peripheral Tissues

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • ↓Insulin & ↑Glucagon drive fasting metabolism, prioritizing blood glucose homeostasis.
  • Liver initially performs glycogenolysis, then shifts to gluconeogenesis using lactate, alanine, glycerol.
  • Adipose tissue lipolysis releases FFAs (energy for most tissues) and glycerol (gluconeogenic).
  • Muscle protein breakdown supplies amino acids (especially alanine) for hepatic gluconeogenesis.
  • Prolonged fasting activates hepatic ketogenesis; ketone bodies become crucial fuel for brain and muscle.
  • Tissues utilize FFAs/ketones, sparing glucose for brain & RBCs.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE