Topics:
Animal Physiology, Animal Refresher
Major Gluconeogenic Substrate
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Question (English)
The major substrate of glucose in gluconeogenesis-
- Propionate ✓ Correct
- Lactate
- Glucogenic Amino acid
- None
Explanation:
Correct Answer: Propionate
In ruminants, the major substrate for gluconeogenesis (hepatic glucose synthesis) is Propionate — a 3-carbon VFA produced during ruminal fermentation of carbohydrates.
Why Propionate is Critical for Ruminants?
- Ruminants absorb very little dietary glucose (most carbohydrate is fermented to VFAs in rumen)
- The liver must synthesize nearly ALL of the animal's glucose requirement via gluconeogenesis
- Propionate (3C) → Propionyl-CoA → Succinyl-CoA (requires Vitamin B₁₂) → enters Krebs cycle → Oxaloacetate → Glucose
- Vitamin B₁₂ deficiency → impaired propionate utilization → glucose deficiency → ketosis
Gluconeogenic Substrates by Importance (Ruminants)
- Propionate > Lactate > Glucogenic amino acids > Glycerol
Important Precursors Summary
- Glucose (ruminants): Propionate
- Cholesterol: Acetyl-CoA
- Steroid hormones + Vitamin D: Cholesterol
- Prostaglandins: Arachidonic acid
- Thyroxin + Catecholamines: Tyrosine
- Niacin: Tryptophan
- Vitamin C: Hexose sugar
📚 About this Topic — Animal Physiology
This multiple choice question is from Animal Physiology, Animal Refresher. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Physiology to strengthen your preparation.