Macleod were awarded the 1923 Nobel Prize in Medicine), changed this formerly fatal disease into a chronic one. At mealtimes, ingested carbohydrate leads to more glucose being available than needed. Insulin helps move this flood of glucose out of the bloodstream into storage for later use. We store this glucose by turning it into glycogen in the liver—a process called glycogenesis. (Genesis means “the creation of,” so this term means the creation of glycogen.) Glucose molecules are strung together in long chains to form glycogen. Insulin is the main stimulus of glycogenesis. We can convert
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