1 / 22

Tema 7: Homofermentative Pathway

Tema 7: Homofermentative Pathway. Chapter 14 Pages 383 - 402. Acetyl-CoA + CO 2 + NADH 2. Acetyl-CoA + formic acid. Acetyl-CoA + CO 2 + H 2. Anaerobically. Formation of acetyl-CoA from pyruvate. Pyruvate dehydrogenase. pyruvate. Pyruvate Ferredoxin oxidoreductase. Pyruvate

rufina
Télécharger la présentation

Tema 7: Homofermentative Pathway

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tema 7: Homofermentative Pathway • Chapter 14 • Pages 383 - 402

  2. Acetyl-CoA + CO2 + NADH2 Acetyl-CoA + formic acid Acetyl-CoA + CO2 + H2 Anaerobically Formation of acetyl-CoA from pyruvate Pyruvate dehydrogenase pyruvate Pyruvate Ferredoxin oxidoreductase Pyruvate Formate lyase

  3. Pyruvate dehydrogenase • Catalyze an oxidative decarboxylation. • 2) It is found in aerobically grown Bacteria, mitocondria, but • not in Archaea. • 3) The product acetyl-CoA usually goes to the TCA cycle • instead of to acetyl-P HSCoA O O HOOC-C-CH3 CH3CO-SCoA + CO2 NAD NADH2 TCA cycle

  4. Pyruvate Formate lyase • Catalyze an oxidative decarboxylation. • where the electrons remain in the carbonyl group. • 2) The product acetyl-CoA usually goes to acetyl-P. O O HOOC-C-CH3 + CoASH CH3CO-SCoA + CH2O2 Pi Phosphotransacetylase ADP O Mg+ CH3CO-P + HSCoA CH3COOH + ATP Acetate kinase

  5. O O HOOC-C-CH3 + CoASH CH3CO-SCoA + CO2 Fd ox Fd red Pi hydrogenase Phosphotransacetylase • Catalyze an oxidative decarboxylation where ferredoxin • is the Electron acceptor. • 2) It is found typically in clostridia and sulfate reducing bacteria • (SRB) and other anaerobes. • 3) The product acetyl-CoA usually goes to acetyl-P. Pyruvate Ferredoxin oxidoreductase 2H+ 2H2 O ADP Mg+ CH3COOH + ATP CH3CO-P + HSCoA Acetate kinase

  6. O CH3CO-SCoA How is acetyl-CoA made from Acetate? It is typically made as follows O ADP Mg+ CH3COOH + ATP CH3CO-P + HSCoA Acetate kinase or Phosphotransacetylase acetylCoA synthetase Pi OUT IN Carbon and energy

  7. Lactic Acid Bacteria • Characteristics: Gram positive, carbohydrate users, proteolysis rare, nonmotile, non-spore forming • Strict fermentors, • unable to synthesize cytochromes unless heme is added. • catalase negative • oxidase negative • Nutritionally fastidious • All make lactic acid (lactate) as predominant end product

  8. Lactic Acid Bacteria • Types of fermentation • Homofermentative: glucose to 2 lactic acids, 85-95% of glucose carbon in lactate • Heterofermentative: glucose to 1 lactate, 1 ethanol, and 1 carbon dioxide, only 50% or less of glucose carbon in lactate. • Types of products will define the pathway used and ATP made.

  9. Lactic Acid Bacteria • Types of organisms • Streptococcus: homofermentative • Leuconostoc: heterofermentative • Pediococcus homofermentative • Lactobacillus; heterofermentative or homofermentative.

  10. Lactic Acid Bacteria • Streptococcus species: • Enterococcus: gut dwellers • Lactococcus • natural fermentations • Lactic acid production: lowers pH, preserves and precipitates proteins

  11. Lactic acid bacteria • Homofermentative pathway • Uses Glycolytic pathway to make 2 pyruvates from glucose • Overview: • Activation-use 2 ATP • Make ß-carbonyl • C-C bond cleavage • Oxidation/reduction • Substrate-level phosphorylation

  12. Lactate dehydrogenase

  13. Isomerization Reaction: Creates an electron attracting keto group at the # 2 carbon • H dissociates from C2 • 2 electrons shift to form cis enediol • H from hydroxyl group dissociates • 2 electrons shift to form keto group. • Forces electrons in enol bond to shift to C1.

  14. C-C bond cleavage: Aldolase Reaction H dissociates from C4; 2 electrons shift to form cis enediol H from hydroxyl group (C4) dissociates 2 electrons shift to form keto group. Forces electrons in enol bond to shift to C1.

  15. Coenzymes (cofactors)/Vitamins • Some are bound to enzyme • Apoenzyme + cofactor give holoenzyme • Metal ion, organic cofactors • Some are soluble • Act as co-substrate • Pyruvate + NADH + H+ --> lactate + NAD+ • Vitamins: • Portion of cofactor that cell can’t make, must be in diet • “Vital amine”

  16. Vitamin forms: Niacin Nutritional disease: pellagra

  17. Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide

  18. NAD functions • Function: oxidation reduction reaction, accepts hydride anion (H-): one proton and two electrons • That’s why we write NADH + H + • Biosynthesis uses NADP+ most often • Catabolism uses NAD+ most often.

  19. In conclusion Streptococcus • Uses glycolysis to degrade glucose to 2 pyruvates • NADH’s made in pathway are reoxidized by reducing pyruvate to lactate • NADH is key cofactor in oxidation reduction reactions • ATP made solely by substrate level phosphorylation.

More Related