U01.01.124 Glycogen

Learning Objectives

  • Distinguish between \alpha-(1,4) and \alpha-(1,6) bonds in glycogen structure.
  • Compare the metabolic fates of glycogen in skeletal muscle versus hepatocytes.
  • Master the steps of debranching, specifically the roles of transferase and glucosidase.
  • Identify the definition of a Limit Dextrin.

1. Glycogen Structure

Glycogen is a highly branched polymer of glucose. The arrangement of these glucose units is defined by two types of glycosidic linkages:

  • Linear Linkages: Composed of \alpha-(1,4) bonds. These make up the bulk of the chain.
  • Branch Points: Composed of \alpha-(1,6) bonds. These allow for the rapid mobilization of glucose from multiple ends simultaneously.


2. Tissue-Specific Glycogenolysis

The “purpose” of glycogen depends entirely on where it is stored:

Tissue Primary Goal Metabolic Pathway
Skeletal Muscle Local energy for contraction. Glycogen → G1P → G6P → Glycolysis.
Hepatocytes (Liver) Maintain systemic blood glucose. Glycogen → G1P → G6P → Free Glucose (via G6-Phosphatase).

3. The Process of Debranching

Degrading a branched molecule requires a coordinated effort between several enzymes:

  1. Glycogen Phosphorylase: Cleaves \alpha-(1,4) bonds, liberating glucose-1-phosphate (G1P). It stops when 4 glucose units remain on a branch. This “shortened” branch is called a Limit Dextrin.
  2. 4-\alpha-D-glucanotransferase (Debranching Enzyme): Moves the outer 3 of those 4 glucose units from the branch to a nearby linear chain.
  3. \alpha-1,6-glucosidase (Debranching Enzyme): Cleaves the final remaining glucose residue at the branch point, liberating free glucose.


Activity


Memory Hook: 1,4 is the Line; 1,6 is the Branch. Debranching involves Moving (transferase) and then Cleaving (glucosidase).

Clinical Notes & Corrections:

  • McArdle Disease: This is a deficiency in Skeletal Muscle Glycogen Phosphorylase. Patients experience muscle cramps and myoglobinuria during exercise because they cannot access their muscle energy stores.
  • Free Glucose: Note that the majority of glycogen is converted to G1P, but the debranching enzyme (\alpha-1,6-glucosidase) specifically releases free glucose. This accounts for roughly 10% of the glucose released from glycogen.

Activity