Purines and Pyrimidines Flashcards
What are the purines?
- 2 rings
- adenine
- guanine
- xanthine
- hypoxanthine
What are the pyrimidines?
- one ring
- cytosine
- uracil (in RNA)
- thymine
- orotic acid
What are nucleosides?
sugar moiety added to purine or pyrimidine
What are nucleotides?
phosphate group on sugar of nucleoside
What are the important signaling molecules?
- cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)
- guanosine tripohosphate (GTP)
- guanosine diphosphate (GDP)
What are the types of sources of energy in cells?
- GTP -> in protein metabolism
- CTP -> in lipid metabolism
- UTP -> in glucose and galactose activation
- NADH -> electron tranpsort chain
- FADH2 -> redox factor
What 2 things are the stimulatory ingredients in coffee/tea?
caffeine and purines
Where does purine metabolism occur?
in liver -> cytoplasm
Where does pyrimidine metabolism occur?
in liver/other tissues -> cytoplasm and mitochondria
Where do the de novo and salvage pathways occur?
- salvage: extrahepatic tissue
- de novo: in liver
What are the steps of the purine de novo pathway?
- starts from pentose 5-phosphate
- catalyzed by PRPP synthetase to create PRPP
- PRPP catalyzed by glutamine PRPP-amidotransferase to create PRA
- PRA catalyzed by amino acids Gln, Gly, and Asp
- PRA creates IMP -> GMP and AMP
What is the committed step in the purine de novo pathway?
PRPP -> glutamine PRPP-amidotransferase -> PRA; high energy consuming step
What is the first nucleotide formed in purine biosynthesis?
IMP which can create GMP and AMP
How is GMP formed from IMP?
IMP -> IMP dehydrogenase -> XMP -> GMP synthetase with ATP -> GMP
How is AMP formed from IMP?
IMP -> adenylosuccinate synthetase with GTP -> adenylosuccinate sAMP -> adenylosuccinase -> AMP
Where do all purine nitrogens come from?
amino acids glutamine, aspartate, and glycine