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Chapter 14 Glycolysis, Gluconeogenesis, and the Pentose Phosphate Pathway Glucose Roles of glucose Fuel (Glucose CO2 + H2O ; ∆G = ~ -2,840 kJ/mol) Precursor for other molecules Utilization of glucose in animals and plant Synthesis of structural polymers Storage Glycogen, starch, or sucrose Oxidation via glycolysis Pyruvate for ATP and metabolic intermediate generations Oxidation via pentose phosphate pathway Ribose 5-P for nucleic acid synthesis NADPH for reductive biosynthesis Generation of glucose Photosynthesis : from CO2 Gluconeogenesis (reversing glycolysis) : from 3-C or 4-C precursors 14.1 Glycolysis Glycolysis Glucose 2 x Pyruvate 2 ATP & 2 NADH Fermentation the anaerobic degradation of glucose ATP production An Overview: Glycolysis Two phases of glycolysis (10 steps) Preparatory phase : 5 steps From Glc to 2 glyceraldehyde 3-P Consumption of 2 ATP molecules Payoff phase : 5 steps Generation of pyruvate Generation of 4 ATP from high-energy phosphate compounds 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate, phosphoenylpyruvate Generation of 2 NADH Preparatory Phase Payoff Phase Fates of Pyruvate Aerobic conditions Oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate Generation of acetyl-CoA Citric acid cycle Electron-transfer reactions in mitochondria Complete oxidation of acetyl-CoA CO2 e- transfer to O2 to generate H2O Generation of ATP Fermentation : anaerobic conditions (hypoxia) Lactic acid fermentation Reduction of pyruvate to lactate NAD+ regeneration for glycolysis Vigorously contracting muscle Ethanol (alcohol) fermentation Conversion of pyruvate to EtOH and CO2 Microorganisms (yeast) Fate of Pyruvate Anabolic fates of pyruvate Source of C skeleton (Ala or FA synthesis) ATP & NADH formation coupled to glycolysis Overall equation for glycolysis Glc + 2 NAD+ 2 pyruvate + 2NADH + 2H+ DG’1o = -146 kJ/mol 2ADP + 2Pi 2ATP + 2H2O DG’2o = 2(30.5) = 61.0 kJ/mol Glc + 2NAD+ + 2ADP + 2Pi 2 pyruvate + 2NADH + 2H+ + 2ATP + 2H2O DG’so = DG’1o + DG’2o = -85 kJ/mol 60% efficiency in conversion of the released energy into ATP Importance of phosphorylated intermediates No export of phosphorylated compounds Conservation of metabolic energy in phosphate esters Binding energy of phosphate group Lower DG‡ & increase reaction specificity Many glycolytic enzymes are specific for Mg2+ complexed with phosphate groups Glycolysis : Step 1 1. Phosphorylation of Glc Hexokinase Substrates; D-glc & MgATP2-(ease nucleophilc attack by –OH of glc) Induced fit Soluble & cytosolic protein Glycolysis : Step 2 2. Glc 6-P Fru 6-P (isomerization) Phosphohexose isomerase (phosphoglucose isomerase) Reversible reaction (small DG’o) Glycolysis : Step 3 3. Phosphorylation of Fru 6-P to Fru 1,6-bisP Phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1) Irreversible, committed step in glycolysis Activation under low [ATP] or high [ADP and AMP] Phosphoryl group donor ATP PPi : some bacteria and protist, all plants Glycolysi : Step 4 4. Cleavage of Fru 1,6-bisP Dihydroxyacetone P & glyceraldehyde 3-P Aldolase (fructose 1,6-bisphosphate aldolase) Class I : animals and plant Class II : fungi and bacteria, Zn2+ at the active site Reversible in cells because of lower concentrations of reactant Class I Aldolase Reaction Glycolysis : Step 5 5. Interconversion of the triose phosphates Dihydroxyacetone P glyceraldehyde 3-P Triose phosphate isomerase Glycolysis : Step 6 6. Oxidation of glyceraldehyde 3-P to 1,3bisphosphoglycerate Glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase NAD+ is the acceptor for hydride ion released from the aldehyde group Formation of acyl phosphate Carboxylic acid anhydride with phosphoric acid High DG’o of hydrolysis Glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase Glycolysis : Step 7 7. Phosphoryl transfer from 1,3bisphosphoglycerate to ADP 3-phosphoglycerase kinase Substrate-level phosphorylation of ADP to generate ATP c.f. Respiration-linked phosphorylation Coupling of step 6 (endergonic) and step 7 (exergonic) Glyceraldehyde 3-P + ADP + Pi + NAD+ 3-phosphoglycerate + ATP + NADH + H+ DG’o = -12.5 kJ/mol Coupling through 1,3-bisphophoglycerate (common intermediate) Removal of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate in step 7 strong negative DG of step 6 Glycolysis : Step 8 8. 3-phosphoglycerate to 2phosphoglycerate Phosphoglycerate mutase Mg2+ Two step reaction with 2,3-BPG intermediate Glycolysis : Step 9 Dehydration of 2-phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) Enolase Free energy for hydrolysis 2-phosphoglycerate : -17.6 kJ/mol PEP : -61.9 kJ/mol Glycolysis : Step 10 Transfer of phosphoryl group from PEP to ADP Pyruvate kinase Substrate-level phosphorylation Tautomerization from enol to keto forms of pyruvate Irreversible Important site for regulation Overall Balance in Glycolysis Glucose + 2ATP + 2NAD+ + 4ADP + Pi 2Pyruvate + 2ADP + 2NADH + 2H+ + 4ATP + 2H2O Multienzyme complex Substrate channeling Tight regulation Rate of glycolysis: anaerobic condition (2ATP) aerobic condition (30-32) ATP consumption NADH regeneration Allosteric regulation of enzymes; Hexokinase, PFK-1, pyruvate kinase Hormone regulations; glucagon, insulin, epinephrine Changes in gene expression for the enzymes 14.2 Feeder Pathways for Glycolysis Entry of Carbohydrates into Glycolysis Degradation of Glycogen and Starch by Phosphorolysis Glycogen phosphorylase (Glc)n + Pi Glc 1-P + (Glc)n-1 Debranching enzyme Breakdown of (a16) branch Phosphoglucomutase Glc 1-P Glc 6-P Bisphosphate intermediate Digestion of Dietary Polysaccharides and Disaccharides Digestion of starch and glycogen a-amylase in saliva Hydrolysis of starch to oligosaccharides Pancreatic a-amylase maltose and maltotriose, limit dextrin Hydrolysis of intestinal dextrins and disaccharides Dextrinase Maltase Lactase Sucrase Trehalase Transport of monosaccharide into the epithelial cells c.f. lactase intolerance Lacking lactase activity in the intestine Converted to toxic product by bacteria Increase in osmolarity increase in water retention in the intestine Entry of Other monosaccharides into Glycolytic Pathway Fructose In muscle and kidney Hexokinase Fru + ATP Fru 6-P + ADP In liver Fructokinase Fru + ATP Fru 1-P + ADP Fructose 1-P aldolase Triose phosphate isomerase Glyceraldehyde 3-P Triose kinase Entry of Other monosaccharides into Glycolytic Pathway Galactose Glactokinase; Gal Glc 1-P Galatosemia Defects in the enzymatic pathway Mannose Hexokinase Man + ATP Man 6-P + ADP Phosphomannose isomerase Man 6-P Fru 6-P 14.3 Fates of Pyruvate under Anaerobic Conditions: Fermentation Pyruvate fates Hypoxic conditions - Rigorously contracting muscle - Submerged plant tissues - Solid tumors - Lactic acid bacteria Failure to regenerate NAD+ Fermentation is the way of NAD+ regeneration Lactic Acid Fermentation Lactate dehydrogenase Regeneration of NAD+ Reduction of pyruvate to lactate Fermentation No oxygen consumption No net change in NAD+ or NADH concentrations Extraction of 2 ATP Ethanol Fermentation Two step process Pyruvate decarboxylase Irreversible decarboxylation of pyruvate Brewer’s and baker’s yeast & organisms doing ethanol fermentation CO2 for brewing or baking Mg2+ & thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) Alcohol dehydrogenase Acetaldehyde + NADH + H+ EtOH + NAD+ Human alcohol dehydrogenase Used for ethanol metabolism in liver Thiamine Phyrophosphate (TPP) as Active Aldehyde Group Carrier TPP Vitamin B1 derivative Cleavage of bonds adjacent to a carbonyl group Decarboxylation of a-keto acid Rearrangement of an activated acetaldehyde group Role of Thiamine Pyrophosphate (TPP) in pyruvate decarboxylation TPP Nucleophilic carbanion of C-2 in thiazolium ring Thiazolium ring acts as “e- sink” Fermentation in Industry Food Yogurt Fermentation of carbohydrate in milk by Lactobacillus bulgaricus Lactate low pH & precipitation of milk proteins Swiss cheese Other fermented food Fermentation of milk by Propionibacterium freudenreichii Propionic acid & CO2 milk protein precipitation & holes Kimchi, soy sauce Low pH prevents growth of microorganisms Industrial fermentation Fermentation of readily available carbohydrate (e.g. corn starch) to make more valuable products Ethanol, isopropanol, butanol, butanediol Formic, acetic, propionic, butyric, succinic acids 14.4 Gluconeogenesis Gluconeogenesis Pyruvate & related 3-/ 4-C compounds glucose Net reaction 2 pyruvate + 4ATP + 2GTP + 2NADH + 2H+ + 4H2O Glc + 4ADP + 2GDP + 6Pi +2NAD+ In animals Glc generation from lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, and amino acids Mostly in liver Cori cycle ; Lactate produced in muscle converted to glc in liver glycogen storage or back to muscle In plant seedlings Stored fats & proteins disaccharide sucrose In microorganisms Glc generation from acetate, lactate, and propionate in the medium Gluconeogenesis Glycolysis vs. Gluconeogenesis 7 shared enzymatic reactions 3 bypass reactions; irreversible steps requiring unique enzymes Large negative DG in glycolysis Hexokinase vs. glc 6-phosphatase Phosphofructokinase-1 vs. fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase Pyruvate kinase vs. pyruvate carboxylase + PEP carboxykinase From Pyruvate to PEP Pyruvate + HCO3- + ATP oxaloacetate + ADP + Pi Pyruvate carboxylase Mitochondrial enzyme with biotin coenzyme Activation of pyruvate by CO2 transfer oxaloacetate From Pyruvate to PEP Oxaloacetate + GTP PEP + CO2 + GDP PEP carboxykinase Cytosolic and mitochondria enzyme Overall reaction equation Pyruvate + ATP + GTP + HCO3PEP + ADP + GDP + Pi + CO2, DG’o = 0.9 kJ/mol But, DG = -25 kJ/mol Alternative paths from pyruvate to PEP From pyruvate Oxaloacetate + NADH + H+ malate + NAD+ (mitochondria) Malate + NAD+ oxaloacetate + NADH + H+ (cytosol) [NADH]/[NAD+] in cytosol : 105 times lower than in mitochondria Way to provide NADH for gluconeogenesis in cytosol From lactate NADH generation by oxidation of lactate No need to generate malate intermediate 14.5 Pentose Phosphate Pathway of Glucose Oxidation Pentose Phosphate Pathway Oxidative phase; NADPH & Ribose 5-P Pentose ribose 5-phosphate Synthesis of RNA/DNA, ATP, NADH, FADH2, coenzyme A in rapidly dividing cells (bone marrow, skin etc) NADPH Reductive biosynthesis - Fatty acid (liver, adipose, lactating mammary gland) - Steroid hormones & cholesterol (liver, adrenal glands, gonads) Defense from oxygen radical damages - High ratio of NADPH/NADP+ a reducing atmosphere preventing oxidative damages of macromolecules Nonoxidative phase Recycling of Ribulose 5-P to Glc 6-P Oxidative Pentose Phosphate Pathway Nonoxidative Pentose Phosphate Pathway 6 Pentose phosphates 5 Hexose phosphates Reductive pentose phosphate pathway Reversal of nonoxidative Pentose Phosphate Pathway Photosynthetic assimilation of CO2 by plant Nonoxidative Pentose Phosphate Pathway Transketolase Transfer of a 2-C fragment from a ketose donor to an aldose acceptor Thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) cofactor Transaldolase Transfer of a 3-C fragment Lys : Schiff base with the carbonyl group of ketose Stabilization of carbanion intermdeidate Nonoxidative Pentose Phosphate Pathway Regulation of Pentose phosphate Pathway