1 / 60

Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice

Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice. Chapter 25 The Organic Chemistry of the Coenzymes, Compounds Derived from Vitamins. Many enzymes catalyze a reaction with the help of a cofactor. Cofactors can be metal ions or organic molecules.

anthea
Télécharger la présentation

Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice

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. Organic Chemistry 6th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice Chapter 25 The Organic Chemistry of the Coenzymes, Compounds Derived from Vitamins

  2. Many enzymes catalyze a reaction with the help of a • cofactor. • Cofactors can be metal ions or organic molecules. • An enzyme that has a tightly bound metal ion is called a metalloenzyme. • Cofactors that are organic molecules are coenzymes. • Coenzymes are derived from vitamins.

  3. The Pyridine Nucleotide Coenzyme Is Needed for Many Redox Reactions • NAD(P)+ are oxidizing agents. • NAD(P)H are reducing agents.

  4. NAD+ is composed of two nucleotides linked together through their phosphate groups The adenine nucleotide portion of NAD+ is derived from ATP

  5. Many enzymes that catalyze oxidation reactions are called dehydrogenase: NAD+ and NADH are catabolic coenzymes, whereas NADP+ and NADPH are anabolic coenzymes

  6. Mechanisms for the pyridine nucleotide coenzymes: All the chemistry of the pyridine nucleotide coenzymes takes place at the 4-position of the pyridine ring

  7. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase uses NAD+ as an oxidizing coenzyme:

  8. The mechanism for reduction by NAD or by NADPH: NADH and NADPH are hydride donors

  9. The structural complexity of a coenzyme is needed for • enzyme recognition. • Molecular recognition allows the enzyme to bind the • substrate and the coenzyme in the proper orientation for reaction. • Biological redox reactions are equilibrium reactions driven in the appropriate direction by the removal of reaction products.

  10. A Biological Redox Reaction Is Highly Selective

  11. A reducing enzyme can distinguish between the two hydrogens at the 4-position of the nicotinamide ring:

  12. FAD and FMN are coenzymes used to oxidize substrates A flavoprotein is an enzyme that contains either FAD or FMN

  13. The structure of the oxidized FMN cofactor:

  14. Biological Redox Reactions Involving FAD or FMN

  15. FAD and FMN are oxidizing agents, whereas FADH2 and FMNH2 are reducing agents:

  16. Two-electron transfer to the flavin ring Thiolate addition to 4aposition Mechanism for dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase:

  17. Mechanism for D- or L-amino acid oxidase:

  18. Unlike NAD+ and NADH, FAD and FADH2 do not dissociate from the enzyme: But NAD+ is required to reoxidize the reduced cofactor

  19. Thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) is the coenzyme required by enzymes that catalyze the transfer of a two-carbon fragment:

  20. The enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase requires thiamine pyrophosphate (TTP) as a coenzyme: TTP affords a nucleophilic ylide carbanion that facilitates decarboxylation:

  21. Enamine intermediate Mechanism for pyruvate decarboxylase:

  22. The conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA requires coenzymes TPP, lipoate, coenzyme A, FAD, and NAD+

  23. Mechanism for acetyl-CoA formation:

  24. Biotin is required by enzymes that catalyze the carboxylation of a carbon adjacent to a carbonyl group:

  25. Enzymatic reactions utilizing the biotin coenzyme:

  26. In addition to requiring bicarbonate, biotin-requiring enzymes require Mg2+ and ATP:

  27. Mechanism for carboxylation of acetyl-CoA by acetyl-CoA carboxylase:

  28. Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) is required by enzymes that catalyze certain transformations of amino acids:

  29. Amino Acid Transformations That Require PLP Coenzyme

  30. The first step of the reactions involves the breakage of the bond attached to Ca

  31. Mechanism for transimination:

  32. Mechanism for PLP-catalyzed decarboxylation of an amino acid:

  33. Mechanism for PLP-catalyzed racemization of an L-amino acid:

  34. Mechanism for PLP-catalyzed transamination of an amino acid:

  35. Mechanism for PLP-catalyzed Ca—Cb bond cleavage:

  36. The bond cleaved in the first step depends on the conformation of the enzyme-bound amino acid

  37. Enzymes that catalyze certain rearrangement reactions require coenzyme B12

  38. Enzymatic Reactions Requiring B12

  39. In a coenzyme B12–requiring reaction, a group (Y) bonded to one carbon changes places with a hydrogen bonded to an adjacent carbon:

  40. Mechanism for a coenzyme B12–requiring enzyme-catalyzed reaction:

  41. Tetrahydrofolate (THF) is the coenzyme required for one-carbon transfer reactions:

  42. The Six Different THF-Coenzymes

  43. GAR transformylase is an example of an enzyme that requires a THF-coenzyme:

More Related