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Glycolysis • Glucose → pyruvate (+ ATP, NADH) • Preparatory phase + Payoff phase • Enzymes – Highly regulated (eg. PFK-1 inhibited by ATP) – Form multi-enzyme complexes • Pass products/substrates along: efficiency Overall balance sheet Glucose + 2NAD+ + 2ADP + 2Pi → 2 pyruvate + 2NADH + 2H+ + 2ATP + 2H2O Fermentation pathways Alternate fate of pyruvate • “Fermentation”: carbohydrate metabolism that generates ATP but doesn’t change oxidation state (no O2 used, no net change in NAD+/NADH) • Fermentation of pyruvate to lactate – Cells with no mitochondria (erythrocytes) – anerobic conditions – Regeneration of 2 NAD+ to sustain operation of glycolysis – No net change in oxidation state (glucose vs lactate) • Lactate is recycled to glucose (post-exercise) Fermentation pathways • Fermentation of pyruvate to EtOH – Yeast and microorganisms – No net oxidation (glucose to ethanol) – EtOH and CO2 generated Aerobic respiration of glucose (etc) • Glycolysis: – Start with glucose (6 carbon) – Generate some ATP, some NADH, pyruvate (2 x 3 carbon) • TCA cycle – Start with pyruvate – Generate acetate – Generate CO2 and reduced NADH and FADH2 • Electron transport – Start with NADH/FADH2 – Generate electrochemical H+ gradient • Oxidative phosphorylation – Start with H+ gradient and O2 (and ADP + Pi) – Generate ATP and H2O Aerobic respiration • Stage 1: – Acetyl CoA production • Some ATP and reduced electron carriers (NADH) • Glycolysis (for glucose), pre-TCA • Stage 2: – Acetyl CoA oxidation • Some ATP, lots of reduced e- carriers (NADH/FADH2) • TCA cycle/Krebs cycle/Citric acid cycle • Stage 3: – Electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation • Generate and use H+ electrochemical gradient • Use of reduced e- to generate ATP Fate of pyruvate under aerobic conditions: TCA cycle (Ch. 16) • Oxidation of pyruvate in ‘preTCA cycle’ – Generation of acetyl CoA (2 carbons) – CO2 – NADH • Acetyl CoA → TCA cycle – Generation of ATP, NADH Pre-TCA cycle • Pyruvate acetyl CoA – Via ‘pyruvate dehydrogenase complex’ • 3 enzymes • 5 coenzymes – ~irreversible – 3 steps • Decarboxylation • Oxidation • Transfer of acetyl groups to CoA • Mitochondria – Transport of pyruvate • Coenzymes involved (vitamins) – Catalytic role – Thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP) • Thiamin • decarboxylation – Lipoic acid • 2 thiols disulfide formation • E- carrier and acyl carrier – FAD • Riboflavin • e- carrier – Stoichiometric role – CoA • Pantothenic acid • Thioester formation acyl carrier – NAD+ • Niacin • e- carrier Pre-TCA cycle Pre-TCA cycle • Enzymes involved pyruvate dehydrogenase complex – multiprotein complex – Pyruvate dehydrogenase (24) (E1) • Bound TPP – Dihydrolipoyl transacetylase (60) (E2) • Bound lipoic acid – Dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (12) (E3) • Bound FAD • 2 regulatory proteins – Kinase and phosphatase Pre-TCA cycle • Step 1: – Catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase • Decarboxylation using TPP • C1 is released • C2, C3 attached to TPP as hydroxyethyl Pre-TCA • Step 2 – Hydroxyethyl TPP is oxidized to form acetyl linkedlipoamide – Lipoamide (S-S) is reduced in process – Catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) • Step 3 – Acetyl group is transferred to CoA – Oxidation energy (step 2) drives formation of thioester (acetyl CoA) – Catalyzed by dihydrolipoyl transacetylase (E2) • Step 4 – Dihydrolipoamide is oxidized/regenerated to lipoamide – 2 e- transfer to FAD, then to NAD+ Overall…. • Pyruvate acetyl CoA – Via ‘pyruvate dehydrogenase complex’ – 4 step process • Decarboxylation of pyruvate and link to TPP • Oxidation of hydroxyethyl TPP and reduction/acetylation of lipoamide • Transfer of acetyl group to CoA • Oxidation of lipoamide via FAD (and e- transfer to NAD+) Overall…. • Pyruvate acetyl CoA – Via ‘pyruvate dehydrogenase complex’ – 4 step process • Decarboxylation of pyruvate and link to TPP • Oxidation of hydroxyethyl TPP and reduction/acetylation of lipoamide • Transfer of acetyl group to CoA • Oxidation of lipoamide via FAD (and e- transfer to NAD+) Pre-TCA • Substrate channeling – Multi enzyme complex – rxn rate • Facilitated by E2 – ‘swinging’ lipoamide – accept e- and acetyl from E1 and transfer to E3 • Pathology: mutations in complex/thiamin deficiency Regulation of pre-TCA • PDH complex – Inhibited by • Acetyl CoA, ATP, NADH, fatty acids – Activated by • CoA, AMP, NAD+ – Phosphorylation • Serine in E1 phosphorylated by kinase – Inactive E1 – Kinase activated by ATP, NADH, acetyl CoA… • Regulatory phosphatase hydrolyzes the phosphoryl – Activates E1 – Ca2+ and insulin stimulate TCA cycle • Aerobic process – “Generates” energy – Occurs in mitochondria – 8 step process • 4 are oxidations • Energy ‘conserved’ in formation of NADH and FADH2 – Regenerated via oxidative phosphorylation – Acetyl group → 2 CO2 • Not the C from the acetyl group – Oxaloacetate required in ‘catalytic’ amounts – Some intermediates • Other biological purposes • Step 1: condensation of oxaloacetate with acetyl CoA citrate • Via citrate synthase TCA cycle – Conformational change upon binding – Oxaloacetate binds 1st • Conf change to create acetyl CoA site • Citrate synthase – Conformational changes upon binding of oxaloacetate unbound bound TCA cycle • Mechanism of citrate synthase • 2 His and 1 Asp • 2 reactions – 1st rxn (condensation) • 2 steps • Highly unfavorable because of low oxaloacetate – 2nd rxn (hydrolysis) • Highly favorable because of thioester cleavage • Drives 1st rxn forward • CoA is recycled back to the pre TCA cycle