Glucose

Glucose

Glucose is a simple monosaccharide (C₆H₁₂O₆) and the principal energy substrate for nearly all living organisms. As the most abundant monosaccharide in nature, it is synthesized by plants through photosynthesis and predominantly exists in cyclic α- and β-anomeric forms. In humans, glucose serves as the essential metabolic fuel for the brain and central nervous system, making precise regulation of blood glucose levels critical for maintaining normal physiological function.

Key Functions and Regulatory Mechanisms

Glucose generates cellular energy through glycolysis followed by oxidative phosphorylation, producing approximately 36–38 ATP molecules per glucose molecule under aerobic conditions. Beyond energy metabolism, glucose functions as a key precursor for the biosynthesis of amino acids, nucleotides, and lipids. Excess glucose is stored as glycogen in the liver and skeletal muscle or converted into triglycerides within adipose tissue for long-term energy storage.

Blood glucose homeostasis is tightly controlled by multiple hormones. Insulin, secreted by pancreatic β-cells, promotes glucose uptake, utilization, and storage, whereas glucagon, released from pancreatic α-cells, increases blood glucose through glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis. Additional hormones, including cortisol and epinephrine, contribute to glucose regulation during metabolic stress. Cellular glucose uptake is mediated by tissue-specific glucose transporters (GLUT1–GLUT4).

Research Applications and Clinical Significance

  • Metabolic analysis: Glucose metabolism is commonly investigated using enzymatic assays such as glucose oxidase and hexokinase methods, providing accurate quantification in biological samples.
  • Advanced research tools: Radiolabeled glucose tracers (e.g., [¹⁴C]-glucose), fluorescent glucose analogs such as 2-NBDG, and metabolomic platforms based on mass spectrometry (MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) enable detailed investigation of glucose transport and metabolic pathways.
  • Clinical relevance: Dysregulated glucose metabolism is associated with diabetes mellitus (Type 1 and Type 2), hypoglycemia, and prediabetes. Clinical assessment relies on fasting plasma glucose, oral glucose tolerance testing (OGTT), and glycated hemoglobin (HbA₁c) measurements for long-term monitoring of glycemic control.

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NB-58-0068
 50ml 
30621031-2
 250mL 
30621031-1
 100mL