Metabolism 2 Flashcards
what is glycolysis
ATP production from glucose
what are hexokinases
enzymes that phosphorylate hexose sugars
what is the the significance of having hexokinases with different affinities
different affinities are found in specific tissues
high affinity hexokinases= muscle rbc and brain
Low affinity hexokinases = liver
why does glucose need to be phosphorylated
glucose is phosphorylated, it traps glucose within the cell (can no longer diffuse in and out of the cell)
what is anaerobic respiration
respiration in the absence of oxygen (using electron acceptors)
what happens in glycolysis
glucose -> glucose 6P (use 1xatp) -> fructose 6P -> fructose 1,6bP (use 1xATP) -> pyruvate (produce 1x NADH, 2x ATP)
how is pyruvate broken down
lactate dehydrogenase enzyme
NADH-> NAD+
formation of lactic acid
what are two potential pathways fructose
- production of pyruvate
2. production of glycerol 3p (lipogenesis)
what are the three pathways pyruvate can take
- lactate
- oxidation/biosynthesis in mitochondria
- protein production
where does oxidative phosphorylation occur
in the mitochondria
how is the mitochondria adapted to the function it performs
double membraned
outer membrane contains transport proteins that enable the shuttling of pyruvate from the cytosol
inner membrane has electron transport chain and ATP synthase
inner membrane is arranged into folds (cristae) that increase the SA:Vol
what is the general role of NADH and FADH in energy metabolism
carry electrons (reducing power) from catabolic reactions to the site where ATP is synthesised in mitohondria
why do people lose weight when they have cancer
cancer cell types use glucose anaerobically even when oxygen is present (Warburg effect). Because this is an inefficient process, they need to use glucose at a very high rate.
how is acetyl coA formed from carbohydrates
carbohydrates broken down to glucose.
undergoes glycolysis to pyruvate.
pyruvate dehydrogenase catalyses formation of acetyl coA
how is acetyl coA formed from glycerol
undergoes glycolysis to pyruvate. (1xATP and 1xNADH)
pyruvate dehydrogenase catalyses formation of acetyl coA (NADH byproduct)
how is acetyl coA formed from fatty acids
b-oxidation of fatty acids (FADH2 and NADH byproducts) forming either
- pyruvate
- acetyl coA
- directly Citric acid cycle
how is energy produced from proteins
AA broken down (NH3 byproduct) to either
- pyruvate
- acetyl coA
- directly Citric acid cycle
how do acetyl coA and NADH form inside mitochondria
pyruvate cross membrane and into matrix
- carboxyl group removed from pyruvate. (CO2 byproduct). Left w/ two-carbon molecule (called acetyl)
- acetyl bonds ith CoA
what is the role of coA in energy metabolism
CoA is sometimes called a carrier molecule, and its job here is to carry the acetyl group to the citric acid cycle
how is acetyl coA formed from fatty acids
- Activation and membrane transport of free fatty acids by binding tocoenzyme A.
- Oxidation of the beta carbon to a carbonyl group.
- Cleavage of two-carbon segments resulting inacetyl-CoA.
(each cycle of b-oxidation = 1xAcetylCoA and 1x FADH2 and 1x NADH)
why do we need amino acids
synthesis of:
proteins (structural, catalytic, signalling)
peptides (intra- and inter-cellular communication)
why do we metabolise Amino acids
important sources of carbohydrates during fasting, trauma, sepsis
what must happen to amino acids before they can be used for glucose/lipid synthesis
Amino acid needs to be deaminated (though transamination) which is excreted as urea
why is nitrogen excreted as urea more than ammonia
It’s less toxic than ammonia and therefore requires less dilution and fluid excretion
how are amino acids mtabolised
AA + ketoacid -(transaminase)-> ketoacid + AA
(where terminal carbon with the NH2 is attached to the variable group on the ketoacid)
(where terminal COOH on the ketoacid is attached to the variable group on the AA)
ketoacids are then used to produce energy and the amino acid is then used to produce ure .
explain the TCA cycle
- Oxalaocetate (4c) + acetyl coA (2c) -> citrate (6c) with coA as a byproduct. coA can then be recycled reform acetyl coA.
- isomerised to isocitrate
- Isocitrate
dehydrogenase removed CO2 to form Ketoglutarate (1xNADH byproduct) - Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase removed CO2 to form Succinate (4C)
(1xNADH, 1xGTP byproduct) - Succinate (4C) oxidised to oxaloacetate (4C)