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FCH 532 Lecture 27 Chapter 26: Essential amino acids Quiz Wed: NIH Shift Quiz Mon: Essential amino acids Exam 3: Next Wed. Page 1030 Table 26-2 Essential and Nonessential Amino Acids in Humans. Glutamate is the precursor for Proline, Ornithine, and Arginine • • • • • E. coli pathway from Gln to ornithine and Arg involves ATP-driven reduction of the glutamate gamma carboxyl group to an aldehyde (N-acetylglutamate-5-semialdehyde). Spontaneous cyclization is prevented by acetylation of amino group by Nacetylglutamate synthase. N-acetylglutamate-5-semialdehyde is converted to amine by transamination. Hydrolysis of protecting group yields ornithine which can be converted to arginine. In humans it is direct from glutamate-5-semialdehyde to ornithine by ornithine-aminotransferase Arginine synthesis glutamyl kinase 6. Acetylglutamate kinase 7. N-acetyl--glutamyl phosphate dehydrogense 8. N-acetylornithine-aminotransferase Page 1036 9. Acetylornithine deacetylase 10. ornithine-aminotransferase 11. Urea cycle to arginine Page 1037 Figure 26-58 The conversion of glycolytic intermediate 3phosphoglycerate to serine. 1. Conversion of 3phosphoglycerate’s 2-OH group to a ketone 2. Transamination of 3phosphohydroxypyruvate to 3-phosphoserine 3. Hydrolysis of phosphoserine to make Ser. Serine is the precursor for Gly • 1. 2. Ser can act in glycine synthesis in two ways: Direct conversion of serine to glycine by hydroxymethyl transferase in reverse (also yields N5, N10-methylene-THF) Condensation of the N5, N10-methylene-THF with CO2 and NH4+ by the glycine cleavage system Cys derived from Ser • • In animals, Cys is derived from Ser and homocysteine (breakdown product of Met). The -SH group is derived from Met, so Cys can be considered essential. Methionine adenosyltransferase 2. Methyltransferase 3. Adenosylhomocysteinase 4. Methionine synthase (B12) 5. Cystathionine -synthase (PLP) 6. Cystathionine -synthase (PLP) 7 -ketoacid dehydrogenase 8. Propionyl-CoA carboxylase (biotin) 9. Methylmalonyl-CoA racemase 10. Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase 11. Glycine cleavage system or serine hydroxymethyltransferase 12. N5,N10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate reductase (coenzyme B12 and FAD) Page 1002 1. Cys derived from Ser • • • • In plants and microorganisms, Cys is synthesized from Ser in two step reaction. Reaction 1: activation of Ser -OH group by converting to O-acetylserine. Reaction 2: displacement of the acetate by sulfide. Sulfide is derived fro man 8-electron reduction reaction. Page 1038 Figure 26-59a Cysteine biosynthesis. (a) The synthesis of cysteine from serine in plants and microorganisms. Figure 26-59b Cysteine biosynthesis. (b) The 8electron reduction of sulfate to sulfide in E. coli. Page 1038 1. Sulfate activation by ATP sulfuylase and adeosine-5’phosphosulfate (APS) kinase 2. Sulfate reduced to sulfite by 3’phosphoadenosine-5’phosphosulfate (PAPS) reductase 3. Sulfite to sulfide by sulfite reductase Biosynthesis of essential amino acids • • • Pathways only present in microorganisms and plants. Derived from metabolic precursors. Usually involve more steps than nonessential amino acids. Biosynthesis of Lys, Met, Thr • • First reaction is catalyzed by aspartokinase which converts aspartate to apartyl--phosphate. Each pathway is independently controlled. Page 1039 Figure 26-60 The biosynthesis of the “aspartate family” of amino acids: lysine, methionine, and threonine. Page 1040 Figure 26-61 The biosynthesis of the “pyruvate family” of amino acids: isoleucine, leucine, and valine. Page 1042 Figure 26-62 The biosynthesis of chorismate, the aromatic amino acid precursor. Page 1043 Figure 26-63 The biosynthesis of phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tyrosine from chorismate. Page 1044 Figure 26-64 A ribbon diagram of the bifunctional enzyme tryptophan synthase from S. typhimurium Page 1045 Figure 26-65 The biosynthesis of histidine.