16 - Regulating Protein Function Flashcards

1
Q

How is protein (enzyme) activity regulated?

A

SHORT TERM

  • Change in substrate or product concentration (fast)
  • Change in protein conformation (longer) :

- Proteolytic cleavage (irreversible)

- Covalent Modification (e.g phosphorylation)

- Allosteric regulation

LONG TERM

  • Changing rate of protein degradation (ubiquitin-proteasome pathway)
  • Changing rate of protein synthesis (enzyme induction)
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2
Q

What are isoenzymes?

A

Enzymes that catalyse the same reaction but have different kinetic properties, e.g hexokinase and glucokinase

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3
Q

What is the difference between hexokinase and glucokinase?

A
  • Glucokinase has a higher Km, so lower affinity, so pathway only activated when blood glucose levels are high
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4
Q

What is product inhibition?

A

Accumulation of a product leads to inhibition of the forward reaction.

e.g glucose-6-phosphate inhibits hexokinase activity

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5
Q

What is one of the main differences between a multisubunit (allosteric) enzyme and a single subunit enzyme?

A
  • Allosteric show sigmoidal relationship
  • Simple show rectangular parabola
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6
Q

Draw a graph to show the relationship between substrate concentration and reaction rate in an allosteric enzyme?

A

Substrate binding to one subunit causes a conformtational change, making subsequent binding easier

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7
Q

What is an allosteric activator and inhibitor?

A

Bind to enzyme at a site that is not the active site, which induces a conformational change

- Activator: Stabilises R state

- Inhibitor: Stabilises T state, e.g 2,3 BPG, products of pathway

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8
Q

Draw a graph of Vi/Vmax against [Substrate], with and without an allosteric activator.

A
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9
Q

What is the role of phospho-fructokinase and what are the allosteric activators and inhibitors?

A
  • Allosterically regulated to set the pace of glycolysis

Activators: AMP, Fructose 2,6-Bisphosphate

Inhibitors: ATP, Citrate, H+

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10
Q

Draw a graph of reaction velocity against [phosphofructokinase]

A
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11
Q

What are some covalent modifications that can affect enzyne activity?

A
  • Acetylation
  • Carboxylation
  • Phosphorylation
  • Sulfation
  • Ubiquitination
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12
Q

What enzymes are involved in phosphorylation/dephosphorylation?

A

Protein Kinases - Add terminal phosphate from ATP to OH groups on Ser, Thr, Tyr

Protein Phosphatases - Hydrolysis reactions to remove phosphate

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13
Q

How does phosphorylating an enzyme affect its activity?

A
  • Adds 2 negative charges
  • Phosphate can form H bonds
  • Conformational change, especially if near the active site
  • Links energy status to metabolism, using ATP
  • Allows for amplification affects, e.g PKA
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14
Q

What is reciprocal regulation?

A

e.g Glycogenolysis and Glycogenesis

When one path way is active, the other is inhibited

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15
Q

Explain how proteolytic cleavage can affect enzyme activity?

A
  • Digestive enzymes synthesised as zymogens (inactive as active site blocked)
  • Cleavage
  • Fully active protein
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16
Q

Give some examples of zymogens/

A

Apoptosis mediated by captases, that were initially procaptases

17
Q

What is the proteolytic cleavage of chymotrypsinogen?

A
18
Q

How is proteolytic cleavage activated?

A

Trypsin is a protease and cleaves zymogens

19
Q

If proteolytic cleavage is irreversible, how is the enzyme switched off?

A
  • Degradation
  • Irreversible binding of inhibitors to active site, especially active site of trypsin
20
Q

How can trypsin inhibitors lead to disease?

A
  • Deficiency of a1antitrypsin
  • Can’t switch off trypsin and therefore other proteases
  • Elastase destroys alveolar walls
21
Q

Why are cascades important?

A

Allow amplification of regulatory signals

22
Q

What are the key features of regulation?

A
  • Can be irreversible or reversible
  • Regulation can occur on a range of time scales, seconds to days
23
Q

Summarise the blood clotting cascade and why the cascade is important?

A

Cascade important as normally little factors in the blood

24
Q

What are the key features of the clotting cascade?

A
  • Fast responsive pathway
  • Initial signal amplified by cascade
  • Thrombin produce quickly which activates fibrinogen cleavage
25
Q

What is the structure of prothrombin?

A
  • Kringle: Keep prothrombin inactive
  • Gla domain: Target prothrombin to where damage has occured

(serine protease means active site contains serine)

26
Q

What is a Gla domain?

A
  • G-carboxyglutamate residues
  • Blood clotting factor precursors (2,7,9,10) get extra carboxyl groups added to glutamates during post-translation modification. Lots of -ve charge
  • At site of damage lots of Ca2+, so negative charge on Gla domain attracted to the site, bringing together blood clotting factors and speeding up cascade
27
Q

What is the structure of fibrinogen?

A
  • 2 sets of tripeptides joined by disulphide bonds at N terminus
  • Fibrous, three globular domains joined by roads
  • N terminus (middle), highly negative, stops aggregation of fibrinogen
28
Q

How does a fibrin clot form?

A
  • Thrombin cleaves fibrinopeptides A and B at N-terminus
  • C terminus of B and G globular subunits interact with newly exposed N-terminus, forming clot
  • Clot stabilised by crosslinking
29
Q

How are fibrin clots stabilisied?

A

CROSS LINKING

  • Formation of amide bonds between side chains of glutamine and lysine
  • Catalysed by transglutaminase which is activated from protransglutaminase by thrombin
30
Q

What is classic haemophillia caused by?

A
  • Defect in Factor VIII
  • Factor VIII is a cofactor involved in activating Factor X
  • Without activation of X, no thrombin, fibrin clot cannot be formed
  • Treat by giving recombinant factor VIII
31
Q

Give examples of where there is amplification in the blood clotting cascade?

A
  • Positive feedback
  • Thrombin is feedback activator for clotting factors, by allosteric regulation
32
Q

How do you stop the clotting cascade?

A

1. Dilution and removal of clotting factors by blood and liver

2. Degradation of clotting factors

Protein C degrades Factor Va and VIIIa. Thrombin binds to thrombomodulin (endothelial receotir) causing acitvation of protein C. Defect in protein C leads to thrombotic disease

3. Antithrombin III inhibitors bind to thrombin and stop it working

(AT3 works best when bound to heparin. Doesnt act on thrombomodulin bound thrombin

33
Q

What is fibriniolysis and what is it regulated by?

A

Break down of blood clot (fibrin), tightly regulated

34
Q

Using basic knowledge of fibrinolysis, how can you treat a DVT?

A
  • Give streptokinase or tPA, will cause plasmin to be formed and therefore will activated fibrinolysis
35
Q

Explain the blood clotting cascade very simply.

A
  1. Inactive zymogens present at very low concentrations
  2. Proteolytic activation
  3. Amplification of initial singal by cascade
  4. Clustering of clotting factors at site of damage
  5. Feedback activation by thrombin ensures clotting continues
  6. Termination of clotting by one of three mechanisms
  7. Fibrinolysis controlled by proteolytic activation
36
Q

What are clotting factors?

A

Cofactors or proteases needed for activation of the next step in the clotting cascade

37
Q

What needs to occur to fibrinogen to form a blood clot (fibrin)?

A

Proteolytic activation (cleavage)

38
Q

Why are proteases secreted as zymogens?

A

Prevents them digesting the stomach and pancreas and causing damage to them

39
Q

How does warfarin work?

A
  • Vitamin K analogue
  • G-carboxyglutamates cannot be formed
  • Prevents clotting occurring properly as clotting factors can’t come together.
  • Anti-coagulant