amino acid catabolism Flashcards

1
Q

what are the intracellular stages of metabolism

A

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2
Q

amino acid degradation

A

> amino acids which are not used as building blocks are degraded - there is no storage for amino acids
liver is the major site of amino acid degradation
absorption
protein turnover

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3
Q

absorption

A

proteolytic enzymes in stomach and intestine produce single amino acids and di and ti peptides , these are then absorbed into intestinal cells and released into blood for absorption by other tissues

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4
Q

protein turnover

A

tightly regulated
takes place at different rates
-important for rapid changes
-damaged proteins have to be removed

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5
Q

amino acids contain nitrogen

A

some also contain nitrogen in the side chain
>amino acid breakdown produces ammonia and ammonium ions
>ammonium ions are toxic at high concentrations
>build up of these can lead to severe problems
>need a safe way of excreting excess nitrogen

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6
Q

what are some of the major nitrogen-containing excretory molecules

A

urea
uric acid
creatinine
ammonium ions

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7
Q

describe the synthesis of urea

A

there are three steps -
transamination
de-amination
urea cycle

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8
Q

transamination

A

aminotransferase move the amino group from alpha amino acids to alpha keto acids
-usually an alpha hetoglutarate - a TCA intermediate, gives glutamate, occurs in all tissues
>for transport to the liver … the amino group of glutamate is transferred to pyruvate, giving alanine or glutamine synthase adds ammonium ions to glutamate giving glutamine
>alanine and glutamine are major carriers of nitrogen in the blood to liver

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9
Q

deamination/urea cycle

A

> occurs in the liver
amino group of glutamate is converted to free ammonium ion
urea is synthesised in a complex series of reactions
-urea/ornithine cycle
-one nitrogen from free ammonium, the other from aspartic acid
-carbon from carbon dioxide

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10
Q

synthesis of urea

A

simplified image

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11
Q

urea cycle stoichiometry

A

CO2 + NH4+ + 3 ATP + aspartate + 2 H2O
»»» urea + 2 ADP + 2 Pi + AMP + PPi + fumarate

Fumarate is generated as an end-product in the cytosol.

Its conversion to malate enables its carbon to be transported back to the mitochondrial matrix via the malate-aspartate shuttle.

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12
Q

degradation of carbon skeletons

A

after removal of alpha amino group the remaining carbon skeletons are converted into major metabolic intermediates
Can be converted to glucose or oxidised in the TCA cycle
>Ketogenic amino acids:
degraded to acetyl-CoA or acetoacetyl-CoA
can give rise to ketone bodies or fatty acids
>Glucogenic amino acids:
degraded to pyruvate or TCA cycle intermediates
can be converted into phosphoenolpyruvate and then into glucose

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13
Q

glucogenic and ketogenic amino acids

A

… this slide again

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14
Q

inherited disorders and amino acid degradation

A

alcaptonuria
maple syrup urine disease
phenylketonuria

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15
Q

alcaptonuria

A

degradation of phenylalanine and tyrosine is blocked

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16
Q

maple syrup urine disease

A

degradation of valine, isoleucine and leucine is blocked

  • urine smells like maple syrup
  • mental and physical retardation
  • prevented by appropriate diet
17
Q

phenylketonuria

A

phenylalanine accumulates in all body fluids

  • leads to severe mental retardation if untreated
  • therapy - low phenylalanine diet
18
Q

urea cycle disorders

A

defect in a urea cycle enzyme …
so there could be an accumulation of urea cycle intermediates which leads to increased levels of glutamine levels in the circulation, alpha-ketoglurarate is no longer regenerated,
alpha-ketoglurarate levels become too low to fix more free ammonium ion
…and elevated levels of ammonium in the blood are toxic for the nervous system

> treatment is with low protein diet and drugs which remove nitrogen
ie forming complexes with amino acids which are excreted - gene therapy in hepatocytes