december 7-8, 2011 amino acid metabolism i,ii,iii lecturer: eileen m. lafer

101
December 7-8, 2011 AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III Lecturer: Eileen M. Lafer Reading: Stryer Edition 6: Chapters 23 and 24 OBJECTIVES: 1. Understand the fates and sources of the amino acids in general terms. 2. Understand the general features of lysosomal protein degradation, including what types of proteins are degraded in lysosomes. 3. Understand how "controlled proteolysis" is effected in cells. This includes an understanding of the mechanism of selection and attachment of ubiquitin to target proteins, as well as where and how ubiquitinated proteins are degraded. 4. Understand the common pathways for the removal of the -amino group from an -amino acid during amino acid

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December 7-8, 2011 AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III Lecturer: Eileen M. Lafer Reading: Stryer Edition 6: Chapters 23 and 24 OBJECTIVES: 1.Understand the fates and sources of the amino acids in general terms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

December 7-8, 2011 AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III Lecturer: Eileen M. Lafer

Reading: Stryer Edition 6: Chapters 23 and 24

OBJECTIVES:

1. Understand the fates and sources of the amino acids in general terms.2. Understand the general features of lysosomal protein degradation, including what types of proteins are degraded in lysosomes.3. Understand how "controlled proteolysis" is effected in cells. This includes an understanding of the mechanism of selection and attachment of ubiquitin to target proteins, as well as where and how ubiquitinated proteins are degraded.4. Understand the common pathways for the removal of the -amino group from an -amino acid during amino acid catabolism.5. Understand how the fate of the ammonium ions generated during amino acid degradation differs in the liver versus the peripheral tissues.

Page 2: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

6. Understand the fundamentals of the urea cycle and how it is regulated. Understand how defective urea cycle enzymes can lead to disease, and how those diseases are treated.7. Understand which -amino acid carbon skeletons feed into which major metabolic intermediates during amino acid catabolism.8. Know which amino acids are solely ketogenic, solely glucogenic, and both ketogenic and glucogenic.9. Know which steps in amino acid degradation lead to the following diseases: methyl-malonic acedemia, homocystinuria, maple syrup disease, phenylketonuria, tyrosinemia I, II and III, and alkaptonuria. For each disease, you should know the name of the defective enzyme, the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme, and the pathway in which the enzyme functions. 10. Know which amino acids are essential and which are non-essential in humans.11. Know in humans, which major metabolic intermediates are able to serve as carbon skeletons for the biosynthesis of which amino acids.12. Know which amino acids can act as neurotransmitters.13. Know which amino acids can be used for the synthesis of which neurotransmitters.14. Understand in general terms the biosynthesis of spermine, spermidine, creatine and phosphocreatine.

Page 3: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Reminder: to download movies used in my lectures go to my web page:

http://www.biochem.uthscsa.edu/~lafer/

(aleternativly go to uthscsa biochem dept., click on faculty, etc. to find above link)

Click on links, for a mirror of the ppt files on blackboard, as well as the movie files that are not permitted on blackboard due to size limitations.

Page 4: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 5: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

AMINO ACID POOL

Proteolysis of dietary proteins in the stomach and lumen of the small intestine releases free amino acids into the bloodstream.

Proteolysis of proteins that move through the endocytic pathway takes place in the lysosomes of all cells.

Controlled proteolysis of ubiquitin-tagged intracellular proteins takes place in the proteasomes of all cells.

PROTEIN CATABOLISM

Page 6: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

LYSOSOMAL DEGRADATION1. Lysosomes degrade proteins taken up by endocytosis, or proteins that traffic within the endocytic pathway.

2. Lysosomes contain ~50 hydrolytic enzymes (proteases). Their pH optima is acidic.

3. The pH of the lysosome is ~5.

4. In well-nourished cells, lysosomal protein degradation is non-selective.

5. In starving cells, there is a selective pathway that preferentially degrades cytosolic proteins containing the pentapeptide KFERQ (Lys-Phe-Glu-Arg-Gln).

Page 7: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CONTROLLED PROTEOLYSIS

1. Ubiquitin tags proteins for destruction.

2. The proteasome digests the ubiquitin tagged proteins.

3. Protein degradation can be used to regulate biological function.

Page 8: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

UBIQUITIN76 aa polypeptide.

C-terminal gly attaches to the -amino groups of several lys on a protein destined for degradation.

Additional ubiquitin molecules can be added to Lys48.

The Mark of Death

Page 9: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

UBIQUITIN CONJUGATIONE1=Ubiquitin-Activating Enzyme

E2=Ubiquitin-Conjugating EnzymeE3=Ubiquitin-Protein Ligase

Page 10: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

UBIQUITIN IS ATTACHED

TO THE -AMINO GROUP

OF LYSINE RESIDUES ON

TARGET PROTEINS

Page 11: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CLINICAL CORRELATION:

Human papilloma virus (HPV) encodes a protein that activates a specific E3 enzyme. The enzyme ubiquitinates the tumor suppressor p53 and other proteins that control DNA repair, which are then destroyed. The activation of this E3 enzyme is observed in more than 90% of all cervical carcinomas.

Page 12: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

A SINGLE UBIQUITIN MOLECULE IS A POOR SIGNAL FOR DEGRADATION.

CHAINS OF 4 OR MORE UBIQUITINMOLECULES ARE VERY STRONG SIGNALS FOR DEGRADATION.

Page 13: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

WHAT DETERMINES WHETHER A PROTEIN IS UBIQUITINATED?

The substrate specificity of each E3.1. The N-terminal rule: the chemical nature of

the amino-terminal amino acid.

For example, a protein with methionine at it s N terminus has a half life of 20 hours, while a protein with an arginine at its N-terminus has a half life of 2 minutes.

2. Cyclin destructive boxes: specific amino acid sequences that mark cell-cycle proteins for destruction.

3. PEST sequences: proteins rich in proline, glutamic acid, serine and threonine.

Page 14: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

THE 26S PROTEASOME DIGESTS THE UBIQUITIN TAGGED PROTEINS

The Executioner

19S regulatory subunit

20S proteasome (catalytic activity)

19S regulatory subunit

Page 15: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

THE 20S PROTEASOME 1. 700kD, 28 homologous subunits:

14 of type and 14 of type 2. Subunits are arranged in 4 rings of 7

subunits each to form a sealed barrel.

7

7

7

7

Page 16: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

7

7

7

7

PROTEOLYTIC ACTIVITY RESIDES IN THE N-TERMINALTHREONINE

RESIDUES OF THE BETA SUBUNITS

Page 17: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

ACCESS TO THE 20S PROTEASOME IS CONTROLLED BY THE 19S CAPS

The 19S regulatory subunits bind to

polyubiquitin chains.

Page 18: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 19: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

PROTEIN DEGRADATION CAN REGULATE BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES

Dynamically alter the stablity of regulatory proteins.

Page 20: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 21: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

AMINO ACID DEGRADATION1. Any amino acids generated by protein catabolism that are not needed as building blocks for new biomolecular synthetic reactions are degraded to carbon skeletons in the liver.

2. The first step in amino acid degradation is the removal of nitrogen.

Page 22: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

-AMINO GROUPS ARE CONVERTED INTO AMMONIUM

IONS BY OXIDATIVE DEAMINATION OF GLUTAMATE

The -amino group of the -amino acid is transferred to -ketoglutarate to form glutamate, which is oxidatively deaminated to yield ammonium ion.

Page 23: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

1. THE TRANSAMINATION REACTION: Aminotransferases (also called transaminases) catalyze the transfer of an -amino group from an -amino acid to an -keto acid.

These enzymes generally utilize -ketoglutarate as the acceptor.

The enzymes are named after their amino acid substrates, i.e. aspartate transaminase catalyzes the transfer of the -amino group of aspartate to -ketoglutarate, yielding oxaloacetate plus glutamate.

Page 24: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

2. THE OXIDATIVE DEAMINATION REACTION: The nitrogen atom that is transferred to -ketoglutarate in the transamination reaction is converted into free ammonium ion by oxidative deamination.

This reaction is catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase. This reaction takes place in the mitochondria, and is driven by the consumption of ammonia.

Dehydrogenation Hydrolysis

Page 25: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

The sum of the aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions yield ammonium ion:

excreted

urea cycleaminotransferase dehydrogenase

AMINO ACID 1

AMINO ACID 2ALPHA KETOACID 1

ALPHA KETOACID 2

Page 26: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

ALL AMINOTRANSFERASES

CONTAIN THE PROSTHETIC GROUP

PYRIDOXAL PHOSPHATE (PLP)

PLP is derived from Pyridoxine

(Vitamin B6)

Page 27: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

PLP TAUTOMERS:

The pyridine ring is slightly basic, which favors protonation of the pyrimidine N.

The phenolic hydroxyl group is slightly acidic, favoring deprotonation.

PHENOLATE

Page 28: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

PLP FORMS SCHIFF BASE INTERMEDIATES IN

AMINOTRANSFERASES

The positively charged schiff-base linkages are stabilized by the negatively charged phenolate group.

(schiff-base linkage with the enzyme) (schiff-base linkage with the substrate)

AMINO ACID 1

Page 29: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

1. The schiff base loses a proton from the -carbon of the amino acid to become a quinonoid intermediate.

1

TRANSAMINATION MECHANISM

2. Reprontonation of the quinonoid at the aldehyde carbon yields a ketimine intermediate.

2

3. The ketimine is then hydrolyzed to an -ketoacid and PMP.

3

ALPHA KETOACID 1

Page 30: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

123

ONCE THE AMINO GROUP HAS BEEN TRANSFERRED TO PMP, PMP TRANSFERS THE AMINO GROUP TO ANOTHER ALPHA-KETOACID BY REVERSING THE REACTION SCHEME WE JUST DISCUSSED (FOLLOW THE RED ARROWS):

ALPHA KETOACID 2(ALPHA KETOGLUTARATE)

4

AMINO ACID 2(GLUTAMATE)

Page 31: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

The sum of the aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions yield ammonium ion:

excreted

urea cycleaminotransferase dehydrogenase

AMINO ACID 1

AMINO ACID 2ALPHA KETOACID 1

ALPHA KETOACID 2

Page 32: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

ASPARTATE AMINOTRANSFERASE

PLP is bound to active site Lys268 by a Schiff-base linkage.

Active site Arg386 helps orient substrates by binding to their -carboxylate groups.

Page 33: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

MECHANISM OF THE AMINOTRANSFERASE REACTION:

MOVIE: Movie file 18-01.avi

Page 34: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

The sum of the aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions yield ammonium ion:

excreted

urea cycleaminotransferase dehydrogenase

AMINO ACID 1

AMINO ACID 2ALPHA KETOACID 1

ALPHA KETOACID 2

Page 35: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

• End of First Lecture

Page 36: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SERINE AND THREONINE CAN BE DIRECTLY

DEAMINATED1. The nitrogen atoms of MOST amino acids are transferred to -ketoglutarate.

2. The -amino groups of serine and threonine can be directly converted into ammonium ion by the action of dehydratases.

Threonine -ketobutyrate + NH4+

Page 37: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

PERIPHERAL TISSUES TRANSPORT NITROGEN TO THE

LIVER BY THE ALANINE CYCLE OR AS GLUTAMINE

If amino acids are produced in tissues that lack the urea cycle, they need a mechanism to release nitrogen in a form that can be absorbed by the liver and converted into urea.

EXAMPLE: Muscle uses amino acids as fuel during prolonged exercise and fasting.

Page 38: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

1. In peripheral tissues,the -amino groups of the amino acids are transferred to glutamate by a transamination reaction, as in the liver.

2. However, rather than oxidatively deaminating glutamate to form ammonium ion, the -amino group is transferred to pyruvate to form alanine.

3. The liver takes up the alanine, and converts it back to pyruvate by another transamination reaction.

4. The pyruvate can be used for gluconeogenesis, and the amino group eventually ends up as urea by the usual pathway.

THE ALANINE CYCLE

pyruvate

-ketoglutarate -ketoglutarate glutamate

Page 39: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

NITROGEN CAN ALSO BE TRANSPORTED AS GLUTAMINE

Glutamine Synthetase:

NH4+ + glutamate + ATP

glutamine + ADP + Pi

Once glutamine is in the liver, it can be metabolized like any other amino acid and the nitrogen can end up in the urea cycle.

Page 40: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 41: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

IN LIVER THE AMMONIUM

IONS GENERATED

DURING AMINO ACID

DEGRADATION FEED INTO THE

UREA CYCLE

Page 42: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle: importance

• NH4+ is a product of the breakdown of amino acids.

• NH4+ is required by cells for synthesis of nitrogen-

containing compounds.• Excess NH4

+ is very toxic. Normal levels in human blood are: [NH4

+] < 70 M.

• Excess NH4+ is converted to urea via the urea cycle and

excreted. The urea cycle accounts of ~80% of the excreted nitrogen.

Page 43: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle: location and source of atoms

• Urea synthesis takes place mostly in the liver.

• One N atom of urea comes from Asp (blue).

• One N atom comes from NH4

+ (green).• One C atom comes from

CO2 (red).• Ornithine acts as a carrier of

various atoms in the process of synthesizing urea.

Page 44: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: carbamoyl phosphate synthetase

• Catalyzes formation of carbamoyl phosphate from H2O, 2 ATPs, CO2 and NH3.

• The positive heterotropic activator, N-acetylglutamate, is required for activity.

• Brings one C atom and one N atom into the urea cycle as a carbamoyl group.

• Catalyzes the critical step in removing NH4+ from the

blood.

Page 45: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: carbamoyl phosphate synthetase

• The reaction is made irreversible by cleaving two ATP molecules to two ADP.

• One molecule of phosphate is released while the second phosphate ends up as part of carbamoyl phosphate.

Page 46: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: carbamoyl phosphate synthetase

• Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is present at very high concentration in the mitochondrial matrix (~1 mM).

• The high enzyme concentration allows the enzyme to work well below the Km ~ 250 M for NH4

+.

• By operating well below Km, a small increase in NH4+

leads to a large increase in the rate of removal of NH4+

insuring that NH4+ remains low.

Page 47: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: ornithine transcarbamoylase

• Catalyzes the formation of citrulline and Pi from ornithine and carbamoyl phosphate.

• Transfer of a carbamoyl group to ornithine is facilitated by rupture of a high energy phosphoanhydride bond.

• Catalyzes introduction of one C atom and one N atom into the urea cycle from carbamoyl phosphate.

Page 48: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: argininosuccinate synthetase

• Catalyzes condensation of citrulline and aspartate to form argininosuccinate.

• Catalyzes the introduction of one N atom into the urea cycle from aspartate.

Page 49: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: argininosuccinase

• Cleaves argininosuccinate to arginine and fumarate.• Completes the transfer of the amino group from aspartate

to make arginine.• Retains the carbon skeleton of aspartate (as a fumarate

molecule).

Page 50: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle reactions: arginase

• Catalyzes hydrolysis of arginine to ornithine and urea.• Ornithine “cycles” back to the first step and picks up

another carbamoyl group from carbamoyl phosphate.

Page 51: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle: overall reaction

• PPi 2 Pi quickly in a reaction catalyzed by pyrophosphotase.

• Overall, four high energy phosphate bonds are broken to synthesize each molecule of urea.

Page 52: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle and the citric acid cycle

• Fumarate production connects the urea cycle and the citric acid cycle (fumarate malate oxaloacetate).

• In the citric acid cycle fumarate is converted to oxaloacetate.• Oxaloacetate is transaminated to aspartate.• Aspartate carries the amino groups of other amino acids into the urea

cycle.

General amino acid catabolism

Page 53: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Compartmentalization of the urea cycle• Takes place in the liver.• Two intracellular locations.• Mitochondrial matrix:

carbamoyl phosphate formation and citrulline synthesis.

• Cytosol: argininosuccinate formation; cleavage of argininosuccinate to arginine and fumarate; hydrolysis of arginine to ornithine and urea.

Page 54: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Regulation of the urea cycle• The urea cycle removes excess NH4

+ which comes from the breakdown of amino acids.

• Overall control of the urea cycle is by enzyme levels, which change by as much as ten-fold depending on the diet.

• The flow of compounds through the urea cycle also depends on the concentrations of cycle intermediates.

• Several reactions convert amino acids into urea cycle intermediates.

• Arginine from the diet can be converted to ornithine.• Glutamate can be converted to ornithine by intestinal

enzymes.

Page 55: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Regulation of the urea cycle

• Fine control of the urea cycle is through regulation of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase.

• N-acetylglutamate is a heterotropic allosteric activator of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. (Heterotropic means an effector molecule that is different from the substrate.)

Page 56: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Regulation of the urea cycle

• N-acetylglutamate acts as a signal for high amino acid concentrations.

• N-acetylglutamate is synthesized in the liver from acetyl-CoA and glutamate in a reaction catalyzed by N-acetylglutamate synthetase.

Page 57: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Regulation of the urea cycle

• The steady state concentration of N-acetylglutamate is determined by two factors.

• Concentrations of substrates: acetyl CoA and glutamate.• Concentration of arginine, which activates N-

acetylglutamate synthetase.

Page 58: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Defective urea cycle enzymes and inherited disease

• High NH4+ is toxic and a complete lack of any urea cycle

enzyme is fatal.• Some diseases are believed to be due to partially active

defective enzymes.• Defective enzymes cause high levels of NH4

+ in the blood.• Sometimes a low protein diet can help. The diet decreases

the amount of NH4+ that needs to be eliminated through

the urea cycle.

Page 59: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Defective enzymes and treatment• Problem: argininosuccinase deficiency.• Treatment: a low protein diet high in

arginine. NOTE THIS IS THE PRODUCT OF THE DEFECTIVE ENZYME

• Result: argininosuccinate is secreted in place of urea to remove ammonium ions that are generated during amino acid catabolism.

X

Page 60: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Defective enzymes and treatment

• Problem: carbamoyl phosphate synthetase or ornithine transcarbamoylase deficiency.

• Result: glycine and glutamine build up (pyruvate and glutamate accept amino groups from ammonium ions).

Page 61: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Defective enzymes and treatment

• Treatment: feed benzoate to remove Gly as hippurate.• Treatment: feed phenylacetate to remove Gln as

phenylacetylglutamine.

Page 62: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

NH4+ toxicity and excess glutamine

• NH4+ toxicity may be due to formation of excess glutamine.

• High glutamine levels are found in the cerebrospinal fluid of those with high NH4

+.• High glutamine and glutamate may lead to brain damage,

possibly by producing osmotic effects that cause brain swelling.

Page 63: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Urea cycle: overall reaction

• PPi 2 Pi quickly in a reaction catalyzed by pyrophosphotase.

• Overall, four high energy phosphate bonds are broken to synthesize each molecule of urea.

Page 64: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

END OF LECTURE 2

Page 65: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 66: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

FATES OF THE CARBON SKELETONS OF THE AMINO ACIDSAll 20 amino acids funnel into only 7 major metabolic intermediates.

Page 67: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

1. The strategy of amino acid degradation is to transform the carbon skeletons into major metabolic intermediates that can be converted into glucose, or oxidized by the citric acid cycle.

2. The carbon skeletons of a diverse set of 20 amino acids are funneled into only 7 molecules: pyruvate, acetyl CoA, acetoacetyl CoA, -ketoglutarate, succinyl CoA, fumarate and oxaloacetate.

Page 68: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

PYRUVATE AS AN ENTRY POINT INTO METABOLISM

3-carbon amino acids ala, ser, cys enter via pyruvate.

Page 69: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

OXALOACETATE AS AN ENTRY POINT INTO METABOLISM

The skeletons of 4-carbon amino acids

enter at oxaloacetate.

Page 70: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

-KETOGLUTARATE AS AN ENTRY POINT INTO METABOLISM

The skeletons of several 5-carbon amino acids enter the TCA cycle at -ketoglutarate. All first transfer their amino groups to glutamate, which is then oxidatively deaminated by glutamate dehydrogenase to yield -ketoglutarate.

Page 71: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SUCCINYL COENZYME A AS AN ENTRY POINT INTO METABOLISM

FOR SEVERAL NON-POLAR AMINO ACIDS

Threonine (in humans)

Page 72: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CLINICAL CORRELATION:methyl-malonic acedemia

methylmalonyl-CoA mutase is defective

Page 73: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CLINICAL CORRELATION:homocystinuriaScoliosis, muscle weakness, mental retardation, thin blond hair

cystathione -synthase is defective

Page 74: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Glucogenic Amino Acids: amino acids (aa) that are converted to metabolites that can be converted to glucose. TCA cycle intermediates and pyruvate can be converted to phosphoenolpyruvate and then glucose.

Ketogenic Amino Acids: aa that give rise to ketone bodies or fatty acids.

Only leucine and lysine are solely ketogenic.

Isoleucine,phenylalanine, tryptophan and tyrosine are both ketogenic and glucogenic.

Remaining 14 amino acids are solely glucogenic.

Page 75: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

WHEN THE BRANCHED CHAIN AMINO ACIDS VALINE, ISOLEUCINE,

AND LEUCINE ARE DEGRADED IN EXTRA-HEPATIC TISSUES THEY

SHARE TWO COMMON ENZYMES:branched-chain aminotransferase

branched-chain -ketoacid dehydrogenase complex

While much of the catabolism of amino acids takes place in the liver, the branched chain amino acids are oxidized as primary fuels in muscle, adipose, kidney, and brain tissues.

Page 76: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CLINICAL CORRELATION: maple syrup disease; Defective branched-chain -keto acid dehydrogenase complex; urine has odor of maple syrup, mental and physical retardation UNLESS patients are placed on a diet low in valine, isoleucine and leucine early in life.

Page 77: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

OXYGENASES ARE REQUIRED FOR THE DEGRADATION OF

AROMATIC AMINO ACIDS

Monooxygenase- one atom of O2 appears in the product and one in H20.

Page 78: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CLINICAL CORRELATION: MUTATIONS IN THE

GENE ENCODING PHENYLALANINE

HYDROXYLASE CAUSE PHENYLKETONURIA

More than 200 mutations have been identified. Mutations effecting the active site, the biopterin binding site, and other regions of the protein are indicated as colored spheres.

Page 79: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

AROMATIC AMINO ACID METABOLISM

Clinical Correlation:

Phenylketonuria-phenylalanine accumulates in body fluids, if untreated, severe mental retardation. Treatment-low phenylalanine diet.

Tyrosinemias-if untreated, weakness, self-mutilation, liver damage, mental retardation. Treatment?

Page 80: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Alkaptonuria-homogentisate accumulates in the urine, and is excreted, which turns dark on standing due to the oxidation of homogentisate.

Harmless.

Page 81: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

TRYPTOPHAN DEGRADATION

Nearly all cleavages of aromatic rings in biological systems are catalyzed by dioxygenases.

Page 82: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SUMMARY OF DEFECTS IN AMINO ACID CATABOLISM THAT

CONTRIBUTE TO HUMAN DISEASE

Page 83: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

FATES OF THE CARBON SKELETONS OF THE AMINO ACIDS

Page 84: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 85: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS1. The nitrogen in amino acids, purines, pyrimidines and other biomolecules ultimately comes from atmospheric N2.

2. This process begins with the reduction of N2 to NH3.

This process is called NITROGEN FIXATION, and is carried out by some bacteria.

3. Since nitrogen fixation does not take place in higher organisms, the source of nitrogen for amino acid biosynthesis in humans are the metabolites of dietary nitrogen.

Page 86: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

AMINO ACIDS ARE MADE FROM METABOLITES OF THE MAJOR

METABOLIC PATHWAYS

Page 87: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

MOST MICROORGANISMS CAN SYNTHESIZE ALL 20 AMINO ACIDS

HUMANS CAN ONLY SYNTHESIZE 11 AMINO ACIDS

The essential amino acids cannot be made by humans and must be obtained in the diet.

Page 88: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer
Page 89: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

1. The synthesis of many of the amino acids is a simple reversal of their degradation, utilizing a transamination reaction.

2. Amino acids skeletons end up as major metabolic intermediates during degradation. Likewise, amino acids are also biosynthesized from major metabolic intermediates.

Page 90: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY

Page 91: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

BIOSYNTHETIC FATES OF THE AMINO ACIDS:

1. Protein synthesis (Dr. Lee)

2. Nucleic acid synthesis (Dr. Lee)

3. Heme synthesis (Dr. Luduena)

5. Neurotransmitter synthesis

4. Thyroid hormone synthesis (Dr. Adamo)

6. Spermine and spermidine

7. Creatine and phosphocreatine

Page 92: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Several amino acids can function as neurotransmitters without any chemical modification:

Glutamate

Glycine

Aspartate

Page 93: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

Tryptophan

* (not directly from an amino acid, from acetyl CoA + choline)

Tyrosine

Tyrosine

Tyrosine

Histidine

Glutamate

*

MOST OF THE SMALL-MOLECULE NEUROTRANSMITTERS ARE

AMINO ACIDS OR THEIR DERIVATIVES

Page 94: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

CATHECHOLAMINEBIOSYNTHESIS

Page 95: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

GABA BIOSYNTHESIS

Page 96: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

HISTAMINE BIOSYNTHESIS

Page 97: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SEROTONIN BIOSYNTHESIS

Page 98: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

BIOSYNTHESIS OF SPERMINE AND SPERMIDINE

Page 99: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

BIOSYNTHESIS OF CREATINE AND

PHOSPHOCREATINE

Page 100: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

BIOSYNTHETIC FATES OF THE AMINO ACIDS:

1. Protein synthesis

2. Nucleic acid synthesis

3. Heme synthesis

5. Neurotransmitter synthesis

4. Thyroid hormone synthesis

6. Spermine and spermidine

7. Creatine and phosphocreatine

Page 101: December 7-8, 2011  AMINO ACID METABOLISM I,II,III       Lecturer:   Eileen M. Lafer

SOURCES AND FATES OF AMINO ACIDS IN THE BODY