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C485 Exam II Fall ‘14 Name___________________ Legible please! Do not use acronyms. Use structures whenever they are asked for, or appropriate. Your explanations should be brief. Overly lengthy answers with irrelevant or erroneous material will receive deductions. GOOD LUCK 1. (15 Pts total) Please answer the following questions about glycogen metabolism. Use chemical structures where indicated. a) 8 pts How many enzymatic activities are required for glycogen synthesis? Briefly explain each one. 4 UDP glucose pyrophosphorylase takes UTP and G1-P to UDP glucose and pyrophosphate Glycogenin makes primers by taking UDP glucose and adding it to a tyrosine residue. It then elongates by three more residues before synthesis can be taken over by glycogen synthase. Glycogen synthase elongates the chain by reaction between the 4-OH of the nonreducing end of the polymer with UDP glucose to make the alpha 1,4 linkage. Branching enzyme transfers blocks of (usually) seven residues to an internal C-6 OH of the chain. Must be at least 4 residues away from an existing branch. Tends to make branches on average of every 10 residues. b) 3 pts What is meant by reciprocal regulation? Give an example associated with glycogen metabolism. When one molecule, or action turns on one pathway, while turning off the pathway that carries out the opposing activity. There are several of these. Protein kinase A is a good example. It activates glycogen degradation by activating phosphorylase kinase, which converts phosphorylase b to phosphorylase a. It also turns off glycogen synthase by phosphorylating it, thus inhibiting glycogen synthesis. c) 4 pts Draw the mechanism of glycogen cleavage catalyzed by the relevant enzyme. Figure 21.7 pg 619 2. (21 pts) Pick a branched chain amino acid. Draw the pathway for its degradation. Draw the mechanisms of the first two steps of this pathway. See branched chain amino acid handout on website. 3. (12 pts) What are the five general steps associated with signal transduction? Briefly describe (a) the hormone process that initiates the breakdown of glycogen; (b) the hormone process that stimulates the synthesis of glycogen and absorption of glucose. A good diagram for each will be useful. Release of primary message Reception of primary message Release/activation of secondary messenger (message) Activation of effector Termination. See figures 21.16 and 14.21 4. (10 Pts) What tag is used to label proteins for degradation? Show the first enzymatic reaction used to activate and form this tag. Comment on the energy requirements for this reaction. Why is this necessary? See figure 23.3. This reaction requires the equivalent of 2 ATP cleavages (ATP goes to AMP and 2Pi) because you are making a thioester bond, which is energetically higher in energy than a phosphate anhydride. If you just used a terminal phosphate to activate, the reaction would be driven backwards by the relatively high [Pi]. Coupling rxn to pyrophosphate hydrolysis makes it functionally irreversible. 5. (18 Pts) List all the enzyme activities (including transport) required to degrade the C14 fatty acid shown below (either show the reaction at least once, or describe it). Calculate the approximate yield in ATP molecules of the complete oxidation of this molecule. (Show how you arrive at this number.) CATI, translocase, CAT II, acyl CoA synthetase, acyl CoA dehydrogenase, enoyl CoA hydratase, hydroxyl Acyl CoA dehydrogenase, thiolase, isomerase. C14, so six round of oxidation and 7 AcCoA. Each round of oxidation makes 4 ATP (2.5/NADH and 1.5 QH2) 10 ATP for each AcCoA. Subtract 1.5 ATP because one double bond already there. Subtract two more for synthesis of thioester. 7X10 +6X4 – 1.5 -2= 90.5 6. (12 pts) What are the differences between fatty acid synthesis and breakdown? Given these differences, how does the cell provide AcCoA for synthesis? How does it produce the required reducing equivalents? Be specific and show relevant reactions (structures). See list on page 657. Figure 22.29. You must use structures for full credit. 7. (6 pts) Describe how allosteric affects are used to regulate glycogen breakdown in muscle. Explain why this makes sense given normal energy utilization in muscle. Fig 21.12 and text explanation immediately above (pg 622) 8. (6pts) Outline the degradation pathway for proline. Fig 23.26 9) (16 pts) Odd carbon number fatty acids leave a breakdown product that is different than that formed from even number fatty acids. What is it? Show how this can be converted into something that can enter a primary metabolic pathway. Draw the mechanism of this/these steps. Propionyl CoA to succinyl CoA. Biotin dependent carboxylation. B12-dependent rearrangement 10. (12 pts) super duper extra extra credit. It is often said that the urea cycle is coupled to the Krebs cycle. In what way are these two pathways coupled? Why might this be advantageous, and how does that explain the source of at least one of the nitrogens in urea? The urea cycle generates fumarate, which is converted by the TCA cycle into OAA. OAA is converted back to Asp by transamination with Glu. Thus the alpha amino group of Asp actually comes from glu. The other nitrogen on urea also comes from Glu. So there are two points of contact between the Krebs cycle and the urea cycle which make and regenerate Asp, which is the proximate amino donor. In a sense the Krebs cycle regenerates the need cofactor “Asp” for the use of the cycle and helps it to incorporate the amino group for glu, via transamination with OAA. Point breakdown Possible actual 1) 15 ________ 2) 21 ________ 3) 12 ________ 4) 10 ________ 5) 18 ________ 6) 12 ________ 7) 6 ________ 8) 6 ________ 9) 16 ________ 10) 12 ________ TOTAL 128 __________