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AMINO ACID METABOLISM Jana Novotná Department of the Medical Chemistry and Biochemistry The 2nd Faculty of Medicine, Charles Univ. Amino acid structure The 20 common amino acids of proteins AMINO ACID METABOLISM BODY PROTEINS Proteosynthesis NONPROTEIN DERIVATIVES GLYCOLYSIS KREBS CYCLE UREA Conversion (Carbon skeleton) AMINO ACIDS DIETARY PROTEINS GLUCOSE Degradation 250 – 300 g/day ACETYL CoA NH3 CO2 Porphyrins Purines Pyrimidines Neurotransmitters Hormones Komplex lipids Aminosugars KETONBODIES ENZYMES CLEAVING THE PEPTIDE CHAIN Endopeptidases – hydrolyse the peptide bond inside a chain Pepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin Exopeptidases – split the peptide bond at the end of a protein molecule Aminopeptidase, carboxypeptidases Dipeptidases Pepsin (pH 1.5 – 2.5) – peptide bond derived fromTyr, Phe, bonds between Leu and Glu Trypsin (pH 7.5 – 8.5) – bonds between Lys a Arg Chymotrypsin (pH 7.5 – 8.5) – bonds between Phe a Tyr Essential Amino Acids in Humans Required in diet Humans incapable of forming requisite carbon skeleton Arginine* Histidine* Isoleucine Leucine Valine Lysine Methionine Threonine Phenylalanine Tryptophan *Required to some degree in young growing period and/or sometimes during illness. Non-essential and nonessential amino acids in humans Not required in diet Can be formed from a-keto acids by transamination and subsequent reactions Alanine Asparagine Aspartate Glutamate Glutamine Glycine Proline Serine Cysteine (from Met*) Tyrosine (from Phe*) * Essential amino acids General reactions of amino acids are transamination and deamination of a-amino group Oxidative deamination NH2 R CH a-keto acid Transaminatoin a-keto acid + amino acid COOH Oxidative decarboxylation amin Transamination – the transfer of the amino group to a suitable keto acid acceptor. Oxidative deamination - the amino acid is converted into the corresponding keto acid by the removal of the amine functional group as ammonia and the amine functional group is replaced by the ketone group. The ammonia eventually goes into the urea cycle. Oxidative decarboxylation – the formation of biogenic amines. Transamination reaction The first step in the catabolism of most amino acids is removal of a-amino groups by enzymes aminotransferases or transaminases All aminotransferases have the same prostethic group and the same reaction mechanism. The prostethic group is pyridoxal phosphate (PPL), the coenzyme form of pyridoxine (vitamin B6) Biosynthesis of amino acids: transamination reactions amino acid1 +a-keto acid2 amino acid2 +a-keto acid1 NH3 + - O 2 CCH 2 CH 2 CHCO 2 - Glutamate O R-CCO 2 - + Keto-acid Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)dependent aminotransferase O O 2 CCH 2 CH2 CCO 2 - a-Ketoglutarate + NH2 R-CHCO 2 - Amino acid Active metabolic form of vitamin B6 Mechanism of transamination reaction: PPL complex with enzyme accept an amino group to form pyridoxamine phosphate, which can donate its amio group to an a-keto acid (Aldimine) (Ketimine) Pyridoxal phosphate Schiff base Pyridoxamine phosphate (Aldimin) (Ketimin) Aminotransferases are differ in their specificity for Lamino acids. The enzymes are named for the amino group donor Clinicaly important transaminases Alanine-a-ketoglutarate transferase ALT (also called glutamate-pyruvate transaminase – GPT) Aspartate-a-ketoglutarate transferase AST (also called glutamate-oxalacetate transferase – GOT) Important in the diagnosis of heart and liver damage caused by heart attack, drug toxicity, or infection. Glucose-alanine cycle Alanine plays a special role in transporting amino groups to liver. Ala is the carrier of ammonia and of the carbon skeleton of pyruvate from muscle to liver. The ammonia is excreted and the pyruvate is used to produce glucose, which is returned to the muscle. According to D. L. Nelson, M. M. Cox :LEHNINGER. PRINCIPLES OF BIOCHEMISTRY Fifth edition Glutamate releases its amino group as ammonia in the liver The amino groups from many of the a-amino acids are collected in the liver in the form of the amino group of L-glutamate molecules. • • • • Glutamate undergoes oxidative deamination catalyzed by L-glutamate dehydrogenase. Enzyme is present in mitochondrial matrix. It is the only enzyme that can use either NAD+ or NADP+ as the acceptor of reducing equivalents. Combine action of an aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase referred to as transdeamination. Ammonia transport in the form of glutamine Excess ammonia is added to glutamate to form glutamine. Glutamine synthetase Glutamine enters the liver and NH4+ is liberated in mitochondria by the enzyme glutaminase. Ammonia is remove by urea synthesis. Relationship between glutamate, glutamine and a-ketoglutarate NH3 NH3 glutamate a-ketoglutarate NH3 glutamine NH3 A. Glutamate dehydrogenase glutamate NAD+ + B. Glutamine synthetase glutamate + ATP NH3 + H2O a-ketoglutarate ADP glutamine C. Glutaminase glutamine + H2O glutamate + NH3 + NH3 + NADH Oxidative deamination A. Oxidative deamination Amino acids + FMN •L-amino acid oxidase produces + H2O L-amino acid oxidase a-keto acids + FMNH2 + NH3 O2 ammonia and a-keto acid directly, using FMN as cofactor. •The reduced form of flavin must be regenerated by O2 molecule. •This reaction produces H2O2 molecule which is decompensated by catalase. catalse FMN B. Nonoxidative deamination H2O2 H2O + O2 Is possible only for hydroxy amino acids serine threonine Serin-threonin dehydratase pyruvate + NH3 a-ketoglutate + NH3 Amino acid metabolism and central metabolic pathways 20 amino acids are converted to 7 products: pyruvate acetyl-CoA acetoacetate a-ketoglutarate succynyl-CoA oxalacetate fumarate Glucogenic Amino Acids Yield a-ketoglutarate, pyruvate, oxaloacetate, fumarate, or succinyl-CoA Aspartate Asparagine Arginine Phenylalanine Tyrosine Isoleucine Methionine Valine Glutamine Glutamate Proline Histidine Alanine Serine Cysteine Glycine Threonine Tryptophan Ketogenic Amino Acids Yield acetyl CoA or acetoacetate Lysine Leucine Both glucogenic and ketogenic amino acids Yield a-ketoglutarate, pyruvate, oxaloacetate, fumarate, or succinyl-CoA in addition to acetyl CoA or acetoacetate Isoleucine Threonine Tryptophan Phenylalanine Tyrosine Metabolism of some amino acids Glycine biosynthesis Glycine produced from serine or from the diet can also be oxidized by glycine decarboxylase (also referred to as the glycine cleavage complex, GCC) to yield a second equivalent of N5,N10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate as well as ammonia and CO2. Copy from: http://themedicalbiochemistrypage.org/amino-acid-metabolism.html Serine biosynthesis from glycine Reaction involves the transfer of the hydroxymethyl group from serine to the cofactor tetrahydrofolate (THF), producing glycine and N5,N10-methylene-THF. Copy from: http://themedicalbiochemistrypage.org/amino-acid-metabolism.html Cysteine and methionine biosynthesis The sulfur for cysteine synthesis comes from the essential amino acid methionine. SAM Condensation of ATP and methionine yield S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) SAM serves as a precurosor for numerous methyl transfer reactions (e.g. the conversion of norepinephrine to epinenephrine). Utilization of methionine in the synthesis of cysteine Conversion of homocysteine back to Met. N5methyl-THF is donor of methyl group. * *folate + vit B12 1. Conversion of SAM to homocysteine. 2. Condensation of homocysteine with serine to cystathione. 3. Cystathione is cleavaged to cysteine. Copy from: http://themedicalbiochemistrypage.org/amino-acid-metabolism.html Homocystinuria Genetic defects for both the synthase and the lyase. Missing or impaired cystathionine synthase leads to homocystinuria. High concentration of homocysteine and methionine in the urine. Homocysteine is highly reactive molecule. Disease is often associated with mental retardation, multisystemic disorder of connective tissue, muscle, CNS, and cardiovascular system. Biosynthesis of Tyrosine from Phenylalanine Phenylalanine hydroxylase is a mixed-function oxygenase: one atom of oxygen is incorporated into water and the other into the hydroxyl of tyrosine. The reductant is the tetrahydrofolate-related cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin, which is maintained in the reduced state by the NADH-dependent enzyme dihydropteridine reductase Phenylketonuria Missing or deficient phenylalanine hydroxylase results in hyperphenylalaninemia. Phenylketonuria is the most widely recognized hyperphenylalaninemia (and most severe) It is the genetic disease. The mental retardation is caused by the accumulation of phenylalanine, which becomes a major donor of amino groups in aminotransferase activity and depletes neural tissue of αketoglutarate. Absence of α-ketoglutarate in the brain shuts down the TCA cycle and the associated production of aerobic energy, which is essential to normal brain development. Enzymes which metabolised amino acides containe vitamines as cofactors Vater soluble vitamins B THIAMINE B1 (thiamine diphosphate) oxidative decarboxylation of a-ketoacids RIBOFLAVIN B2 (flavin mononucleotide FMN, flavin adenine dinucleotide FAD) oxidses of a-aminoacids NIACIN B3 – nicotinic acid (nikotinamide adenine dinucleotide NAD+ nikotinamide adenine dinukleotide phosphate NADP+) dehydrogenases, reductase PYRIDOXIN B6 (pyridoxalphosphate) transamination reaction and decarboxylation FOLIC ACID (tetrahydropholate) Meny enzymes of amino acid metabolism Nitrogenous derivatives of amino acids Glycine heme, purine, creatine, conjugation of bile acids Histidine histamine Ornithine a arginin creatine, polyamines (spermidine, spermine) Tryptophan serotonine (melatonine) Tyrosine Epinephrine, norepinephrine Glutamic acid g-aminobutyric acid (GABA) Helpful website http://themedicalbiochemistrypage.org/amino-acid-metabolism.html