1 / 19

Chapter 17 - Amino Acid Metabolism

Chapter 17 - Amino Acid Metabolism. Metabolism of the 20 common amino acids is considered from the origins and fates of their: (1) Nitrogen atoms (2) Carbon skeletons For mammals: Essential amino acids must be obtained from diet Nonessential amino acids - can be synthesized.

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 17 - Amino Acid Metabolism

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. Chapter 17 - Amino Acid Metabolism • Metabolism of the 20 common amino acids is considered from the origins and fates of their: (1) Nitrogen atoms (2) Carbon skeletons • For mammals: Essential amino acids must be obtained from dietNonessential amino acids - can be synthesized

  2. 17.1 The Nitrogen Cycle and Nitrogen Fixation • Nitrogen is needed for amino acids, nucleotides • Atmospheric N2 is the ultimate source of biological nitrogen • Nitrogen fixation: a few bacteria possess nitrogenase which can reduce N2 to ammonia • Nitrogen is recycled in nature through the nitrogen cycle

  3. Fig 17.1 The Nitrogen cycle

  4. An enzyme present in Rhizobium bacteria that live in root nodules of leguminous plants • Some free-living soil and aquatic bacteria also possess nitrogenase • Nitrogenase reaction: • N2 + 8 H+ + 8 e- + 16 ATP • 2 NH3 + H2 + 16 ADP + 16 Pi Nitrogenase

  5. 17.2 Assimilation of Ammonia • Ammonia generated from N2 is assimilated into low molecular weight metabolites such as glutamate or glutamine • At pH 7 ammonium ion predominates (NH4+) • At enzyme reactive centers unprotonated NH3 is the nucleophilic reactive species

  6. A. Ammonia Is Incorporated into Glutamate • Reductive amination ofa-ketoglutarate by glutamatedehydrogenase occurs in plants, animals and microorganisms • In mammals & plants, located in mitochondria.

  7. B. Glutamine Is a Nitrogen Carrier in Many Biosynthetic Reactions • A second important route in assimilation of ammonia is via glutaminesynthetase

  8. Glutamate synthase transfers a nitrogen to a-ketoglutarate Prokaryotes & plants

  9. Fig 17.3 Alternate amino acid production in prokaryotes Especially used if [NH3] is low. Km of Gln synthetase lower than Km of Glu dehydrogenase.

  10. Box 17.1 How some enzymes transfer ammonia from glutamine • CP synthetase has 3 active sites connected by a tunnel running through the interior • Protects intermediates from being degraded by water

  11. Carbamoyl phosphate synthase backbone structure • Tunnel connecting active sites (blue wire)

  12. C. Regulation of Glutamine Synthetase in E. coli • Glutamine synthetase (GS) plays a critical role in nitrogen metabolism • E. coli enzyme regulated by:(1) Cumulative feedback inhibition (9 allosteric inhibitors with additive effects)(2) Covalent modification(3) Regulation of enzyme synthesis

  13. Fig 17.4 Allosteric inhibition of GS in E. coli

  14. Fig 17.5 Regulation of E. coli GS by covalent modification

  15. Regulation of mammalian GS • Regulation not as extensive as in microorganisms • No covalent regulation • Allosteric inhibitors: glycine, serine, alanine, and carbamoyl phosphate • Allosteric activator:a-ketoglutarate

  16. 17.3 Transamination Reactions • Transfer of an amino group from ana-aminoacid to ana-keto acid • In amino acid biosynthesis, the amino group of glutamate is transferred to variousa-keto acids generatinga-amino acids • In amino acid catabolism, transamination reactions generate glutamate or aspartate

  17. Fig 17.6 Transamination reactions

  18. Fig 17.7 • Ping-pong kinetics of aspartate transaminase (next slide)

  19. Fig 17.7 (cont) (from previous slide)

More Related