Amino Acid Metabolism Flashcards
List the sources of free amino acids in the body
1) degradation of ingested protein
2) biosynthesis of some, but not all, of the amino acids
3) degradation of endogenous protein
What are free amino acids used for
synthesis of endogenous protein
carbon skeletons
energy production (urea biproduct)
Essential vs non essential amino acids
non essential can be synthesized from precursor molecules in the body.
essential must be supplied in diet
Can synthesis of amino acids be sufficient for synthesis of amino acids when dietary protein is not available.
No because the synthesis of most proteins requires all amino acids
essential amino acids
arginine
histidine
isoleucine
leucine
lysine
methionine
phenylalanine
threonine
tryptophan
valine
non essential amino acids
alanine
asparagine
aspartate
cysteine
glutamate
glutamine
glycine
proline
serine
tyrosine
describe the turnover of endogenous proteins, indicating the range of half lives of endogenous proteins and the amount of protein turned over each day
turnover rates vary based on protein and tissue. Half lives can be from minutes to days. Regulatory proteins are degraded and resynthesized at faster rates.
adults degrade ans resynthesize 2-3% (300g) of their total body protein every day.
**there is no net accumulation of protein, even on a high protein diet, excess amino acids are degraded and not stored **
two primary pathways for protein degradation
ATP dependent ubiquitin proteosome system and the lysosomal pathway
how many grams of protein does the body degrade every day even if dietary protein is not supplied
55g
if you injest less than this you get loss of body protein
if protein intake is greater than 55g the excess amino acids are degraded and not stored
What is the fate of the degraded carbon skeletons
nitrogen of the amino group is incorportated into urea and excreted
The carbons skeletons are converted to compunds that can be either used immediately for energy or stored as glycogen or fat for future energy production
Define nitrogen balance
nitrogen ingested (primarily as protein) - nitrogen excreted (primarily as urea)
predict nitrogen balance status for various physiological situations
normal adult = 0. rate of protein synthesis = rate of degradation
children, pregnancy, body building = positive nitrogen balance. nitrogen injested is greater than excreted. protein synthesis occurs at a higher rate than protein degradation and N accumulates
Starvation, protein malnutrition, trauma, infection, cancer, burn injury, sepsis, surgery = negative nitrogrn balance. the amount of nitrogen excreted it more than injested/synthesized