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Chapter 25 Nitrogen Acquisition and Amino Acid Metabolism Biochemistry by Reginald Garrett and Charles Grisham Essential Question • What are the biochemical pathways that form ammonium from inorganic nitrogen compounds prevalent in the inanimate environment? • How is ammonium incorporated into organic compounds? • How are amino acids synthesized and degraded? Outline 1. Which Metabolic Pathways Allow Organisms to Live on Inorganic Forms of Nitrogen? 2. What Is The Metabolic Fate of Ammonium? 3. What Regulatory Mechanisms Act on Escherichia coli Glutamine Synthetase? 4. How Do Organisms Synthesize Amino Acids? 5. How Does Amino Acid Catabolism Lead into Pathways of Energy Production? 25.1 – Which Metabolic Pathways Allow Organisms to Live on Inorganic Forms of Nitrogen? Nitrogen is cycled between organisms and inanimate enviroment • The principal inorganic forms of N are in an oxidized state – As N2 in the atmosphere – As nitrate (NO3-) in the soils and ocean • All biological compounds contain N in a reduced form (NH4+) • Thus, Nitrogen acquisition must involve 1. The Reduction of the oxidized forms (N2 and NO3-) to NH4+ 2. The incorporation of NH4+ into organic linkage as amino or amido groups • The reduction occurs in microorganisms and green plants. But animals gain N through diet. (+3) (+5) (-3) (+2) (+1) (0) The nitrogen cycle Figure 25.1 The nitrogen cycle. Organic nitrogenous compounds are formed by the incorporation of NH4+ into carbon skeletons. Ammonium can be formed from oxidized inorganic percursors by reductive reactions: nitrogen fixation reduces N2 to NH4+; nitrate assimilation reduces NO3- to NH4+. Nitrifying bacteria can oxidize NH4+ back to NO3- and obtain energy for growth in the process of nitrification. Denitrification is a form of bacterial respiration whereby nitrogen oxides serve as electron acceptors in the place of O2 under anaerobic conditions. The reduction of Nitrogen Nitrogen assimilation and nitrogen fixation 1. Nitrate assimilation occurs in two steps: – – • 2e- reduction of nitrate to nitrite 6e- reduction of nitrite to ammonium (fig 25.1) Nitrate assimilation accounts for 99% of N acquisition by the biosphere 2. Nitrogen fixation involves reduction of N2 in prokaryotes by nitrogenase Nitrate Assimilation • Two steps: 1. Nitrate reductase NO3- + 2 H+ + 2 e- → NO2- + H2O 2. Nitrite reductase NO2- + 8 H+ + 6 e- → NH4+ + 2 H2O • Electrons are transferred from NADH to nitrate Nitrate reductase • • • Pathway involves -SH of enzyme, FAD, cytochrome b and Molybdenm cofactor - all protein-bound Nitrate reductases are cytosolic 220 kD dimeric protein MoCo required both for reductase activity and for assembly of enzyme subunits to active dimer NO3- NADH [-SH →FAD→cytochrome b557 →MoCo] NADH+ NO2- Figure 25.2 The novel prosthetic groups of nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. (a) The molybdenum cofactor of nitrate reductase. The molybdenum-free version of this compound is a pterin derivative called molybdopterin. (b) Siroheme, a uroporphyrin derivative, is a member of the isobacteriochlorin class of hemes, a group of porphyrins in which adjacent pyrrole rings are reduced. Siroheme is novel in having eight carboxylate-containing side chains. These carboxylate groups may act as H+ donors during the reduction of NO2- to NH4+. Nitrite Reductase Light drives reduction of ferredoxins and electrons flow to 4Fe-4S and siroheme and then to nitrite • Nitrite is reduced to ammonium while still bound to siroheme • In higher plants, nitrite reductase is in chloroplasts, but nitrate reductase is cytosolic Light → 6 Fdred NO2[(4Fe-4S → siroheme] 6 Fdox NH4+ Figure 25.3 Domain organization within the enzymes of nitrate assimilation. The numbers denote residue number along the amino acid sequence of the proteins. The numbering for nitrate reductase is that from the green plant Arabidopsis thaliana; the plant nitrite reductase sequence shown here is spinach; the fungal nitrite reductase is Neurospora crassa. (Adapted in part from Campbell & Kinghorn, 1990. Trends in Biochemical Sciences 15:315-319.) Nitrogen fixation • • • • N2 + 10 H+ + 8 e- → 2 NH4+ + H2 Only occurs in certain prokaryotes Rhizobia fix nitrogen in symbiotic association with leguminous plants Rhizobia fix N for the plant and plant provides Rhizobia with carbon substrates Fundamental requirements: 1. 2. 3. 4. Nitrogenase A strong reductant (reduced ferredoxin) ATP O-free conditions Nitrogenase Complex Two metalloprotein components: nitrogenase reductase and nitrogenase • Nitrogenase reductase – Fe-protein – is a 60 kD homodimer with a single 4Fe-4S cluster • Very oxygen-sensitive • Binds MgATP and hydrolyzes 2 ATPs per electron transferred • Reduction of N2 to 2NH3 + H2 requires 4 pairs of electrons, so 16 ATP are consumed per N2 Figure 25.4 The triple bond in N2 must be broken during nitrogen fixation. A substantial energy input is needed to overcome this thermodynamic barrier, even though the overall free energy change (DG°‘)for biological N2 reduction is negative. • N2 reduction to ammonia is thermodynamically favorable • However, the activation barrier for breaking the N-N triple bond is enormous • 16 ATP provide the needed activation energy Nitrogenase • MoFe-protein • A 220 kD a2b2 heterotetramer • Two types of metal centers (fig 25.5) – P-cluster: 8Fe-7S – FeMo-cofactor; 7Fe-1Mo-9S • Nitrogenase is slow enzyme – 12 e- pairs per second, i.e., only three molecules of N2 per second – As much as 5% of cellular protein may be nitrogenase Figure 25.5 Structures of the two types of metal clusters found in nitrogenase. (a) The P-cluster. Two Fe4S3 clusters share a fourth S and are bridged by two thiol ligands from the protein (Cysa88 and Cysb95). (b) The FeMo-cofactor. This novel molybdenum-containing Fe-S complex contains 1 Mo, 7 Fe, and 9 S atoms; it is liganded to the protein via a Cysa275-S linkage to an Fe atom and a Hisa442-N linkage to the Mo atom. Homocitrate provides two oxo ligands to the Mo atom. (Adapted from Leigh, G. J., 1995. The mechanism of dinitrogen reduction by molybdenum nitrogenases. European Journal of Biochemistry 229:14-20.) Figure 25.6 The nitrogenase reaction. Depending on the bacterium, electrons for N2 reduction may come from light, NADH, hydrogen gas, or pyruvate. The primary e- donor for the nitrogenase system is reduced ferredoxin. Reduced ferredoxin passes electrons directly to nitrogenase reductase. A total of six electrons is required to reduce N2 to 2 NH4+, and another two electrons are consumed in the obligatory reduction of 2 H+ to H2. Nitrogenase reductase transfers e- to nitrogenase one electron at a time. N2 is bound at the critical FeMoCo prosthetic group of nitrogenase until all electrons and protons are added; no free intermediates such as HN=NH or H2N-NH2 are detectable. The regulation of nitrogen Fixation • 1. 2. • Two regulatory controls ADP inhibits the activity of nitrogease NH4+ represses the expression of nif genes Some organism, ADP-ribosylation of nitrogenase reductase Figure 25.8 Regulation of nitrogen fixation. (a) ADP inhibits nitrogenase activity. (b) NH4+ represses nif gene expression. (c) In some organisms, the nitrogenase complex is regulated by covalent modification. ADPribosylation of nitrogenase reductase leads to its inactivation. Nitrogenase reductase is a distant relative of the signaltransducing Gprotein superfamily. 25.2 – What Is The Metabolic Fate of Ammonium? Ammonium enters organic linkage via three major reactions in all cells 1. 2. 3. • Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (CPS) Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) Glutamine synthetase (GS) Asparagine synthetase (some microorganisms) Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (CPS) NH4+ + HCO3- + 2 ATP → carbamoyl phosphate + 2 ADP + Pi + 2 H+ • Two ATP required – one to activate bicarbonate – one to phosphorylate carbamate • N-acetylglutamate is an essential allosteric activator Glutamate dehydrogenase NH4+ + a-ketoglutarate + NADPH + 2 H+ → glutamate + NADP+ + H2O • Reductive amination of a-ketoglutarate to form glutamate Glutamine synthetase NH4+ + glutamate + ATP → glutamine + ADP + Pi • ATP-dependent amidation of g-carboxyl of glutamate to glutamine • Glutamine is a major N donor in the biosynthesis of many organic N compounds, therefore GS activity is tightly regulated Figure 25.10 (a) The enzymatic reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase. (b) The reaction proceeds by (a) activation of the g-carboxyl group of Glu by ATP, followed by (b) amidation by NH4+. The major pathways of Ammonium Assimilation Two principal pathways 1. Principal route: GDH/GS in organisms rich in N • See Figure 25.11 - both steps assimilate N The major pathways of Ammonium Assimilation Two principal pathways 1. Principal route: GDH/GS in organisms rich in N 2. Secondary route: GS/GOGAT in organisms confronting N limitation • GOGAT is glutamate synthase or glutamate:oxo-glutarate amino transferase • See Figures 25.12 and 25.13 Figure 25.12 The glutamate synthase reaction, showing the reductants exploited by different organisms in this reductive amination reaction. Figure 25.11 The GDH/GS pathway of ammonium assimilation. Figure 25.13 The GS/GOGAT pathway of ammonium assimilation. The sum of these reactions results in the conversion of 1 a-ketoglutarate to 1 glutamine at the expense of 2 ATP and 1 NADPH. 25.3 – What Regulatory Mechanisms Act on Glutamine Synthetase • GS in E. coli is regulated in three ways: 1. Feedback inhibition 2. Covalent modification (interconverts between inactive and active forms) 3. Regulation of gene expression and protein synthesis control the amount of GS in cells • But no such regulation occurs in eukaryotic versions of GS Figure 25.14 The subunit organization of bacterial glutamine synthetase. (a) Diagram showing its dodecameric structure as a stack of two hexagons. (b) Molecular structure of glutamine synthetase from Salmonella typhimurium (a close relative of E.coli), as revealed by X-ray crystallographic analysis. (From Almassy, R. J., Janson, C. A., Hamlin, R., Xuong, N.-H., and Eisenberg, D., 1986. Novel subunitsubunit interactions in the structure of glutamine synthetase.Nature 323:304. Photos courtesy of S.-H. Liaw and D. Eisenberg.) Allosteric Regulation of Glutamine Synthetase • Nine different feedback inhibitors: Gly, Ala, Ser, His, Trp, CTP, AMP, carbamoyl-P and glucosamine-6-P • Gly, Ala, Ser are indicators of amino acid metabolism in cells • Other six are end products of a biochemical pathway • This effectively controls glutamine’s contributions to metabolism Figure 25.15 The allosteric regulation of glutamine synthetase activity by feedback inhibition. Covalent Modification of Glutamine Synthetase • Each subunit is adenylylated at Tyr-397 • Adenylylation inactivates GS by adenylyl transferase • Adenylyl transferase catalyzes both the adenylylation and deadenylylation – PII (regulatory protein) controls these • AT:PIIA catalyzes adenylylation • AT:PIID catalyzes deadenylylation • a-Ketoglutarate and Gln also affect Figure 25.16 Covalent modification of GS: Adenylylation of Tyr397 in the glutamine synthetase polypeptide via an ATP-dependent reaction catalyzed by the converter enzyme adenylyl transferase (AT). From 1 through 12 GS monomers in the GS holoenzyme can be modified, with progressive inactivation as the ratio of [modified]/[unmodified] GS subunits increases. Figure 25.17 The cyclic cascade system regulating the covalent modification of GS. Gene Expression regulates GS • Gene GlnA is actively transcribed only if transcriptional enhancer NRI is in its phosphorylated form, NRI-P • NRI is phosphorylated by NRII, a protein kinase • If NRII is complexed with PIIA it acts as a phosphatase, not a kinase Figure 25.18 Transcriptional regulation of GlnA expression through the reversible phosphorylation of NRI, as controlled by NRII and its association with PIIA. (kinase) (phosphatase) 25.4 – Amino Acid Biosynthesis • Plants and microorganisms can make all 20 amino acids and all other needed N metabolites • In these organisms, glutamate is the source of N, via transamination (aminotransferase) reactions • Mammals can make only 10 of the 20 aas • The others are classed as "essential" amino acids and must be obtained in the diet Amino acids are formed from aketo acids by transamination Amino acid1 + a-keto acid2 → a-keto acid1 + Amino acid2 • Transamination (aminotransferase) reactions • Named according their amino acid substrate – Glutamate-asparate aminotransferase Figure 25.19 Glutamatedependent transamination of a-keto acid carbon skeletons is a primary mechanism for amino acid synthesis. The generic transamination aminotransferase reaction involves the transfer of the a-amino group of glutamate to an a-keto acid acceptor (see Figure 13.23). The transamination of oxaloacetate by glutamate to yield aspartate and a-ketoglutarate is a prime example. The mechanism of PLP-catalyzed transamination reactions. Amino Acid Biosynthesis can be organized into families • According to the intermediates that they are made from The a-Ketoglutarate Family • • • • • Glu, Gln, Pro, Arg, and sometimes Lys Transamination of a-Ketoglutarate gives glutamate Amidation of glutamate gives glutamine Proline is derived from glutamate (Figure 25.20) Arginine are part of the urea cycle Ornithine is also derived from glutamate – the similarity to the proline pathway (1) g-glutamyl kinase, (2) glutamate-5-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (4) D1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase Figure 25.20 The pathway of proline biosynthesis from glutamate. The enzymes are (1) g-glutamyl kinase, (2) glutamate-5-semialdehyde dehydrogenase, and (4) D1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase; reaction (3) occurs nonenzymatically. Figure 25.21 The bacterial pathway of ornithine biosynthesis from glutamate. The enzymes are (1) Nacetylglutamate synthase, (2) Nacetylglutamate kinase, (3) Nacetylglutamate-5semialdehyde dehydrogenase, (4) N-acetylornithine daminotransferase, and (5) Nacetylornithine deacetylase. In mammals, ornithine is synthesized directly from glutamate-5semialdehyde by a pathway that does not involve an Nacetyl block. (1) N-acetylglutamate synthase (2) N-acetylglutamate kinase (3) N-acetylglutamate-5semialdehyde dehydrogenase (4) N-acetylornithine d-aminotransferase (5) N-acetylornithine deacetylase The a-Ketoglutarate Family • Ornithine has three metabolic roles 1. To serve as precursor to arginine 2. To function as an intermediate in the urea cycle 3. To act as an intermediate in arginine degradation Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I • Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I (CPS-I) – NH3-dependent mitochondrial CPS isozyme 1. HCO3- is activated via an ATP-dependent phosphorylation 2. Ammonia attacks the carbonyl carbon of carbonyl-P, displacing Pi to form carbamate 3. Carbamate is phosphorylated via a second ATP to give carbamoyl-P Figure 25.22 The mechanism of action of CPS-I, the NH3-dependent mitochondrial CPS isozyme. (1) HCO3- is activated via an ATPdependent phosphorylation. (2) Ammonia attacks the carbonyl carbon of carbonyl-P, displacing Pi to form carbamate. (3) Carbamate is phosphorylated via a second ATP to give carbamoyl-P. Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I • CPS-I represents the committed step in urea cycle • Activated by N-acetylglutamate – Because N-acetylglutamate is a precursor to orinithine synthesis and essential to the operation of the urea cycle Increase amino acid catabolism Elevate glutamate level (N-acetylglutamate) Stimulate CPS-I Raise overall Urea cycle activity The Urea Cycle • The carbon skeleton of arginine is derived from a-ketoglutarate • N and C in the guanidino group of Arg come from NH4+, HCO3- (carbamoyl-P), and the a-NH2 of Glu and Asp • Breakdown of Arg in the urea cycle releases two N and one C as urea & ornithine • Important N excretion mechanism in livers of terrestrial vertebrates • Urea cycle is linked to TCA by fumarate The Urea Cycle 1. 2. 3. 4. Ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTCase) Argininosuccinate synthetase Argininosuccinase Arginase Figure 25.23 The urea cycle series of reactions: Transfer of the carbamoyl group of carbamoyl-P to ornithine by ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTCase, reaction 1) yields citrulline. The citrulline ureido group is then activated by reaction with ATP to give a citrullyl-AMP intermediate (reaction 2a); AMP is then displaced by aspartate, which is linked to the carbon framework of citrulline via its aamino group (reaction 2b). The course of reaction 2 was verified using 18O-labeled citrulline. The 18O label (indicated by the asterisk, *) was recovered in AMP. Citrulline and AMP are joined via the ureido *O atom. The product of this reaction is argininosuccinate; the enzyme catalyzing the two steps of reaction 2 is argininosuccinate synthetase. The next step (reaction 3) is carried out by argininosuccinase, which catalyzes the nonhydrolytic removal of fumarate from argininosuccinate to give arginine. Hydrolysis of Arg by arginase (reaction 4) yields urea and ornithine, completing the urea cycle. Lysine Biosynthesis • Two pathways: 1. a-aminoadipate pathway 2. diaminopimelate pathway • Lysine derived from a-ketoglutarate – – • • • • Reactions 1 through 4 are reminiscent of the first four reactions in the citric acid cycle a-ketooadipate Transamination gives a-aminoadipate Adenylylation activates the d-COOH for reduction Reductive amination give saccharopine Oxidative cleavage yields lysine Figure 25.24 Lysine biosynthesis in certain fungi and Euglena: the a-aminoadipic acid pathway. Reactions 1 through 4 are reminiscent of the first four reactions in the citric acid cycle, except that the product a-ketoadipate has an additional CH2 unit. Reaction 5 is catalyzed by a glutamate-dependent aminotransferase; reaction 6 is the adenylylation of the d-carboxyl of aaminoadipate to give the 6-adenylyl derivative. Reductive deadenylylation by an NADPH-dependent dehydrogenase in reaction 7 gives aaminoadipic-6-semialdehyde, which in reaction 8 is coupled with glutamate via its amino group by a second NADPH-dependent dehydrogenase. Oxidative removal of the aketoglutarate moiety by NAD+dependent saccharopine dehydrogenase in reaction 9 leaves this amino group as the e-NH3+ of lysine. The Aspartate Family Asp, Asn, Lys, Met, Thr, Ile • Transamination of Oxaloaceate gives Aspartate (aspartate aminotransferase) • Amidation of Asp gives Asparagine ( asparagine synthetase) • Met, Thr and Lys are made from Aspartate • b-Aspartyl semialdehyde and homoserine are branch points • Isoleucine, four of its six carbons derived from Asp (via Thr) and two come from pyruvate Figure 25.25 Aspartate biosynthesis via transamination of oxaloacetate by glutamate. The enzyme responsible is PLP-dependent glutamate: aspartate aminotransferase. Figure 25.26 Asparagine biosynthesis from Asp, Gln, and ATP. b-Aspartyladenylate is an enzymebound intermediate of asparagine synthetase; Asn, Glu, AMP, and PPi are products. (Step A) Asp + ATP [b-aspartyladenylate] + PPi. (Step B) [b-Aspartyladenylate] + Gln + H2O Asn + Glu + AMP. Figure 25.27 Biosynthesis of threonine, methionine, and lysine, members of the aspartate family of amino acids. b-Aspartyl-semialdehyde is a common precursor to all three. It is formed by aspartokinase (reaction 1) and b-aspartylsemialdehyde dehydrogenase (reaction 2). • In E. coli – Three isozymes of aspartokinase – Uniquely controlled by one of the three endproducts Figure 25.27 Biosynthesis of threonine, methionine, and lysine, members of the aspartate family of amino acids. b-Aspartyl-semialdehyde is a common precursor to all three. It is formed by aspartokinase (reaction 1) and b-aspartylsemialdehyde dehydrogenase (reaction 2). • Role of methionine – in methylations via S-adenosylmethionine (SAM; S-AdoMet) – polyamine biosynthesis Figure 25.28 The synthesis of Sadenosylmethionine (SAM) from methionine plus ATP, and the role of SAM as a substrate of methyltransferases in methyl donor reactions and in propylamine transfer reactions, as in the synthesis of polyamines. The Pyruvate Family Ala, Val, Leu, and Ile • Transamination of pyruvate gives Alanine • Valine is derived from pyruvate • Ile synthesis from Thr mimics Val synthesis from pyruvate (Fig. 25.29) – Threonine deaminase (also called threonine dehydratase or serine dehydratase) is sensitive to Ile – Ile and val pathway employ the same set of enzymes Figure 25.29 Biosynthesis of valine and isoleucine. The enzymes are (1) threonine deaminase, (2) acetohydroxy acid synthase, (3) acetohydroxy acid isomeroreductase, (4) dihydroxy acid dehydratase, and (5) glutamate-dependent aminotransferase. Feedback inhibition regulates this pathway: enzyme 1 is isoleucinesensitive, and enzyme 2 is valinesensitive. Threonine deaminase Acetohydroxy acid synthase Acetohydroxy acid isomeroreductase Dihydroxy acid dehydratase Leucine Glutamate-dependent aminotransferase The Pyruvate Family Ala, Val, Leu, and Ile • Transamination of pyruvate gives Alanine • Valine is derived from pyruvate • Ile synthesis from Thr mimics Val synthesis from pyruvate (Fig. 25.29) • Leu synthesis begins with an a-keto isovalerate – Isopropylmalate synthase is sensitive to Leu Figure 25.30 Biosynthesis of leucine. The enzymes are (1) aisopropylmalate synthase, (2) aisopropylmalate dehydratase, (3) isopropylmalate dehydrogenase, and (4) leucine aminotransferase. Enzyme 1 is feedback-inhibited by leucine. isopropylmalate synthase isopropylmalate dehydratase isopropylmalate dehydrogenase leucine aminotransferase 3-Phosphoglycerate Family Ser, Gly, Cys 1. 3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase diverts 3-PG from glycolysis to aa paths (3phosphohydroxypyruvate) 2. Transamination by Glu gives 3phosphoserine (3-phosphoserine aminotransferase) 3. Phosphoserine phosphatase yields serine • Serine hydroxymethylase (PLP) transfers the b-carbon of Ser to THF to make glycine Figure 25.32 Biosynthesis of glycine from serine (a) via serine hydroxymethyltransferase and (b) via glycine oxidase. • A PLP-dependent enzyme makes Cys • A PLP-dependent enzyme makes Cys Some bacteria most microorganism and plants Figure 25.33 Cysteine biosynthesis. (a) Direct sulfhydrylation of serine by H2S. (b) H2S-dependent sulfhydrylation of O-acetylserine. Figure 25.34 Sulfate assimilation and the generation of sulfide for synthesis of organic S compounds. In reaction 1, ATP sulfurylase catalyzes the formation of adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (APS) + PPi. In reaction 2, adenosine-5'phosphosulfate 3'-phosphokinase catalyzes the reaction of adenosine 5'phosphosulfate with a second ATP to form 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'phosphosulfate (PAPS) + ADP. Both enzymes are Mg2+-dependent. In reaction 3, PAPS is reduced to sulfite (SO32-) in a thioredoxin-dependent reaction. Thioredoxin is a small (12-kD) protein that functions in a number of biological reductions (see Chapter 26). In reaction 4, sulfite reductase catalyzes the six-electron reduction of sulfite to sulfide. NADPH is the electron donor. Sulfite reductase possesses siroheme as a prosthetic group, the same heme found in nitrite reductase (Figure 25.2), which also catalyzes a six-electron transfer reaction. Aromatic Amino Acids Phe, Tyr, Trp, His • Chorismate as a branch point in this pathway (Figs. 25.35) • Chorismate is synthesized from PEP and erythrose-4-P • Via shikimate pathway • The side chain of chorismate is derived from a second PEP Figure 25.35 Some of the aromatic compounds derived from chorismate. (1) 2-keto-3-deoxy-Darabinoheptulosonate-7-P synthase (2) dehydroquinate synthase (note that the coenzyme NAD+ is not altered in this reaction) (3) 5-dehydroquinate dehydratase (4) shikimate dehydrogenase (5) shikimate kinase (6) 3-enolpyruvylshikimate-5phosphate synthase (7) chorismate synthase. Figure 25.36 The shikimate pathway leading to the synthesis of chorismate. The starting substrates are phosphoenolpyruvate and erythrose-4-phosphate. The biosynthesis of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan • At chorismate, the pathway separates into three branches, each leading to one of the aromatic amino acids • Mammals can synthesize tyr from phe by phenylalanine hydroxylase (Phenylalanine4-monooxygenase) Figure 25.37 The biosynthesis of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan from chorismate. (1) chorismate mutase (2) prephenate dehydratase (3) phenylalanine aminotransferase (4) prephenate dehydrogenase (5) tyrosine aminotransferase (6) anthranilate synthase (7) anthranilate-phosphoribosyl transferase (8) N-(5'-phosphoribosyl)anthranilate isomerase (9) indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase (10) tryptophan synthase (asubunit) (11) tryptophan synthase (bsubunit). Figure 25.38 The formation of tyrosine from phenylalanine. This reaction is normally the first step in phenylalanine degradation in most organisms; in mammals, however, it provides a route for the biosynthesis of Tyr from Phe. (Phenylalanine-4-monooxygenase is also known as phenylalanine hydroxylase.) Figure 25.39 Tryptophan synthase is an example of a "channeling" multienzyme complex in which indole, the product of the a-reaction catalyzed by the a-subunit, passes intramolecularly to the b-subunit. In the b-subunit, the hydroxyl of the substrate L-serine is replaced with indole via a complicated pyridoxal phosphate - catalyzed reaction to produce the final product, Ltryptophan. The schematic figure shown here is a ribbon diagram of one a-subunit (blue) and neighboring b-subunit (the Nterminal domain of the b-subunit is in orange, C-terminal domain in red). The tunnel is outlined by the yellow dot surface and is shown with several indole molecules (green) packed in head-to-tail fashion. The labels "IPP" and "PLP" point to the active sites of the aand the b-subunits, respectively, in which a competitive inhibitor (indole propanol phosphate, IPP) and the coenzyme PLP are bound. (Adapted from Hyde, C.C., et al., 1988. Threedimensional structure of the tryptophan synthase multienzyme complex from Salmonella typhimurium. Journal of Biological Chemistry 263:17857-17871.) Hitidine biosynthesis • His synthesis, like that of Trp, shares metabolic intermediates (PRPP) with purine biosynthetic pathway • His operon • Begin from PRPP and ATP • The intermediate 5-aminoimidazole-4carboxamide ribonucleotide (AICAR) is a purine precursor (replenish ATP; Ch 26) Figure 25.40 The pathway of histidine biosynthesis. (1) ATP-phosphoribosyl transferase (2) pyrophosphohydrolase (3) phosphoribosyl-AMP cyclohydrolase (4) phosphoribosylformimino-5aminoimidazole carboxamide ribonucleotide isomerase (5) glutamine amidotransferase (6) imidazole glycerol-P dehydratase (7) L-histidinol phosphate aminotransferase (8) histidinol phosphate phosphatase (9) histidinol dehydrogenase. Amino acid synthesis inhibitors as herbicides (inhibitor of acetohydroxy acid synthase) (inhibitor of 3-enolpyruvyl-shikimate-5phosphate synthase) (fig 25.36) (inhibitor of imidazol glycerol-P dehydrtase) (fig 25.40) (fig 25.29) (inhibitor of glutamine synthetase) 25.5 – Degradation of Amino Acids The 20 amino acids are degraded to produce (mostly) TCA intermediates • Energy requirement – 90% from oxidation of carbohydrates and fats – 10% from oxidation of amino acids • The primary physiological purpose of amino acids is to serve as building blocks for protein synthesis • The classifications of amino acids in Figure 25.41 • Glucogenic and ketogenic Figure 25.41 Metabolic degradation of the common amino acids. The 20 common amino acids can be classified according to their degradation products. Those that give rise to precursors for glucose synthesis, such as a-ketoglutarate, succinyl-CoA, fumarate, oxaloacetate, and pyruvate, are termed glucogenic (shown in pink). Those degraded to acetyl-CoA or acetoacetate are called ketogenic (shown in blue) because they can be converted to fatty acids or ketone bodies. Some amino acids are both glucogenic and ketogenic. C-3 family (pyruvate): Ala, Ser, Cys, Gly, Thr, Trp C-4 family (oxaloaceate & fumarate): Oxaloaceate: Asp, Asn Fumarate: Asp, Phe, Tyr C-5 family (a-ketoglutarate): Glu, Gln, Arg, Pro, His Succinyl-CoA: Ile, Met, Val Acetyl-CoA & acetoacetate Ile, Leu, Thr, Trp Leu, Lys, Phe, Tyr C-3 family: Ala, Ser, Cys, Gly, Thr, Trp Figure 25.42 Formation of pyruvate from alanine, serine, cysteine, glycine, tryptophan, or threonine. ADL page 847 The serine dehydratase reaction mechanism-an example of a PLP-dependent belimination reaction. Figure 25.43 The degradation of the C-5 family of amino acids leads to a-ketoglutarate via glutamate. The histidine carbons, numbered 1 through 5, become carbons 1 through 5 of glutamate, as indicated. Figure 25.44 Valine, isoleucine, and methionine are converted via propionyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA for entry into the citric acid cycle. The shaded carbon atoms of the three amino acids give rise to propionyl-CoA. All three amino acids lose their a-carboxyl group as CO2. Methionine first becomes Sadenosylmethionine, then homocysteine (see Figure 25.28). The terminal two carbons of isoleucine become acetyl-CoA. Figure 25.45 Leucine is degraded to acetyl-CoA and acetoacetate via b-hydroxy-b-methylglutaryl-CoA, which is also the intermediate in ketone body formation from fatty acids (see Chapter 23). Figure 25.46 Lysine degradation via the saccharopine, a-ketoadipate pathway culminates in the formation of acetoacetyl-CoA. Figure 25.47 Phenylalanine and tyrosine degradation. (1) Transamination of Tyr gives phydroxyphenylpyruvate, which (2) is oxidized to homogentisate by p-hydroxy-phenylpyruvate dioxygenase in an ascorbic acid (vitamin C) - dependent reaction. (3) The ring opening of homogentisate by homogentisate dioxygenase gives 4-maleylacetoacetate. (4) 4-Maleylacetoacetate isomerase gives 4-fumarylacetoacetate, which (5) is hydrolyzed by fumarylacetoacetase. Hereditary defects Maple syrup urine disease – After the initial step (deamination) to produce aketo acids – The defect in oxidative decarboxylation of Ile, Leu, and Val (25.44) Phenylketonuria – The defect in phenylalanine hydoxylase (25.38) – Accumulation of phenylpyruvate Alkaptouria – Homogentisate dioxygenase (25.47) Nitrogen excretion Ammonotelic: – Ammonia – Aquatic animals Ureotelic: – Urea – Terrestrial vetebrates Uricotelic: – Uric acid – Birds and reptiles