11. Heme Synthesis Flashcards

1
Q

What is heme made of?

A

Each heme subunit is made of a porphyrin ring and an iron.

(Porphyrin rings are made up of four pyrrole rings)

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2
Q

Where do the three stages of heme synthesis occur generally? (Organs)

Where does each of the three steps occur?

A

Primarily in the liver and erythroid cells of the bone marrow

  1. Mintochondria
  2. Cytosol
  3. Mitochondria again
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3
Q

What happens overall in phase 1 of heme synthesis?

A

Glycine + Succinyl CoA form delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA)

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4
Q

What vitamin does the first phase of heme synthesis need to continue?

What happens if it doesn’t get this?

A

B6 - Pyridoxal phosphate

Heme synthesis is diminished, red blood cells look pale and iron stores back up and become elevated.

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5
Q

What are the players in heme synthesis’s feedback inhibition to phase 1?

A

Heme itself blocks ALA synthase in step one

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6
Q

What heme synthesis enzymes do lead inactivate?

What does this cause?

A

Inactivates ALA dehydratase (phase 2) and ferrochelatase (phase 3 / final step)

Backup of Protoporphoryn IX and ALA as well as Anemia

(This also will impact energy production by disabling synthesis of cytochromes)

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7
Q

What enzyme defect is associated with:

Acute Intermittent Porphyria?

Is this Hepatic or Erythropoietic?

A

Porphobillinogen Deaminase

Bill is known for being unreliable, so his porphyria is intermittent

Hepatic

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8
Q

What enzyme defect is associated with:

Congenital Erythropoietic Porphyria?

Is this Hepatic or Erythropoietic?

A

Uroporphyrinogen III Cosynthase

Congenital defects happen as a child is being made, so the porphyria is a cosynthase

Erythropoietic

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9
Q

What enzyme defect is associated with:

Porphyria Cutanea Tarda

Is this Hepatic or Erythropoietic?

A

Uroporphyrinogen Decarboxylase

Most common in America - Americans could eat less carbs - de_carb_oxylase

Hepatoerythropoietic

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10
Q

What enzyme defect is associated with:

Variegate Porphyria

Is this Hepatic or Erythropoietic?

A

Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase

Variegate means “different colors”, oxides are often different colors than their precursors: protoporphyrinogen oxidase

Hepatic

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11
Q

Which of the porphyrias is most common in the US, and what enzyme deficiency causes it?

A

Porphyria Cutania Tarda (PCT)

Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase

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12
Q

What does a deficiency in uroporphyrinogen III synthase cause a buildup of?

A

Uroporphyrinogen I and it’s product, Uroporphyrin I

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13
Q

What system handles the breakdown of hemoglobin?

A

The Reticulo-Endothelial system

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14
Q

What enzyme breaks down heme’s bridges?

A

Heme oxygenase

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15
Q

What toxic compound does heme oxygenase release?

A

Carbon monoxide

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16
Q

What enzyme converts Biliverdin into Bilirubin?

A

Biliverdin Reductase

17
Q

What carries insoluable billirubin through the bloodstream?

A

Albumen

18
Q

Where is billirubin taken up?

What keeps it soluable in those cells?

What do we call the complex?

A

The liver (mediated by a protien carrier)

Glucuronic acid

Conjugated / Direct Billirubin

19
Q

What enzyme takes UDP-Glucose and makes UDP-glucuronate?

Why does it do this?

A

UDP-Glucose dehydrogenase

It is the first step of billirubin conjugation.

20
Q

What enzyme takes ready-to-go UDP-glucuronate and attatches it to bilirubin?

What does the glucuronate become when attached to bilirubin?

What does the enzyme do next?

A

Bilirubin UDP glucuronyltransferase

UDP-glucuronic acid

It attaches another one. (Monoglucuronide bilirubin → Diuronide bilirubin)

21
Q

When bilirubin is conjugated in the liver, where is it sent?

What will it do there?

A

Gall bladder (as bile)

Be secreted into the small intestine in response to food.

22
Q

After bilirubin is secreted into the small intestine, what does it become?

What two paths can it take from there?

A

Urobilinogen (microbes reduce it for us)

It can become Urobilin in the urine

or it can become stercobilin in the feces

23
Q

What might be a cause of pre-hepatic jaundice?

A

Hemolytic anemia

Internal hemorrhage

Reduced capacity of liver to conjugate bilirubin

Erythroblastosis fetalis

24
Q

What might you find clinically in pre-hepatic jaundice?

A

Elevated production of unconjugated BR

Normal levels of ALT and AST

Normal levels of conjugated bilirubin

Direct bilirubin absent in urine (normal)

25
Q

How might Glucose 6 Phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency cause jaundice?

What kind of jaundice would it cause?

A

Decreased replenishment of glutathione means more ROS - which can cause hemolytic anemia

Pre-hepatic jaundice

26
Q

What can cause Intra-Hepatic Jaundice?

A

Deficiency in liver uptake of bilirubin, conjugation of bilirubin, or release of conjugated bilirubin. (Basically all of the things the liver does)

Examples: Liver trauma, hepatitis, cirrosis,

Criggler-Najjar syndrome

Gilbert Syndrome

27
Q

Clinically, what will you see in intra-hepatic jaundice?

A

Either unconjugated or conjugated bilirubin will be elevated, depending on the issue.

Increase in serum AST and ALT!

Urobilinogen levels are still normal, because nothing is affecting that area.

28
Q

What is the common factor for post hepatic jaundice?

A

Problems with conjugated bilirubin secretion

29
Q

What are the clinical findings for post-hepatic jaundice?

A

Elevated blood levels of conjugated bilirubin

Conjugated bilirubin is present in urine (dark)

Sercobilin is absent from feces (pale)

30
Q

What gene is absent in Type 1 Crigler-Najjar Syndrome?

What are affected individuals unable to do?

A

UDP-Glucuronyltransferase

Conjugate bilirubin

31
Q

What are the symptoms of Type 1 Crigler-Najjar syndrome?

A

Jaundice

Kernicturus (jaundice related brain damage and encephalopathy)

32
Q

What is physiological jaundice in newborns?

What is the treatment?

A

Jaundice related to the conversion of fetal hemoglobin to adult hemoglobin

Phototherapy and possibly injection of tin-mesoporphyrin

33
Q

What is Gilbert syndrome?

When might someone see symptoms?

A

Benign disorder reflecting a reduced UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase