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Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design Part : the specificity and catalytic power of enzymes the regulation of enzyme activity the transport of molecules and ions across membranes Part : to extract energy and reducing power from its environment to synthesize the building blocks of its macromolecules and then the macromolecules themselves Metabolism: a highly integrated network of chemical reactions contain many common motifs

Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

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Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design. Part Ⅰ:  the specificity and catalytic power of enzymes  the regulation of enzyme activity  the transport of molecules and ions across membranes Part Ⅱ:  to extract energy and reducing power from its environment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Part :Ⅰ

the specificity and catalytic power of enzymes

the regulation of enzyme activity

the transport of molecules and ions across membranes

Part :Ⅱ to extract energy and reducing power from its environment

to synthesize the building blocks of its macromolecules and

then the macromolecules themselves

Metabolism: a highly integrated network of chemical reactions

contain many common motifs

Page 2: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Cells transform different types of energy

¤ Phototrophs (photsynthetic organisms):

light energy chemical energy

¤ Chemotrophs:

Utilize chemical energy generated by phototrophs

ion gradient: other types of chemical energy, nerve impulses, etc.

mechanical energy: muscle contraction and movement

synthesis biomolecules

§ 15.1 Metabolism is composed of many coupled, interconnecting reactions

Page 3: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Metabolism(or intermediary metabolism)

Energy is being extracted from fuels via a linked series chemical reactions and used it to power biosynthesis processes

Two broad classes:

¤ Catabolism: fuels transform into cellular energy

Fuels (carbohydrates, fats, etc) CO2+H2O+useful energy

¤ Anabolism:

cellular energy to generate complex structures or energy-rich compounds

Useful energy + small molecules complex molecules

* Amphibolic pathways:

either anabolic or catabolic is depended on the energy conditions in the

cell.

Biosynthetic and degradative pathways are always distinct.

Page 4: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Metabolic pathways – many coupled, interconnecting reactions

Page 5: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

§ 15.2 Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) – the universal currency of free energy in biological systems

(XTP?)

2 Phosphoanhydride bonds

Mg2+ or Mn2+

-4 -3

-2

Carbohydrates and fats ATP

Page 6: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Pi: orthophosphate

PPi: pyrophosphate

ATP ADP (ATP-ADP cycle)

the fundamental mode of energy exchange in biological systems

ATP + NDP ADP + NTP (nucleoside diphosphate kinase)

ATP + NMP ADP + NDP (nucleoside monophosphate kinase)

ATP + AMP 2 ADP (adenylate kinase, myokinse)

Page 7: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

¤ ATP + H2O ADP + Pi G0’= -7.3 kcal/mol

ATP + H2O AMP + PPi G0’= -10.9 kcal/mol

Under typical cellular condition: G = -12 kcal/mol

A + B C + D

G = G0’ + RT ln [C][D]/[A][B]

¤ A thermodynamically unfavorable reaction can be driven by

a favorable reaction increase a factor of about 108.

Keq of A B under standard condition: 1.15×10-3

Keq of A B under standard condition + ATP: 2.67×102 at pH 7, G°’= -7.3 kcal/mol

Keq of A B under typical cellular condition + ATP : 7.7×105 G= -12 kcal/mol if nATP 108n

¤ ATP hydrolysis drives metabolism by shifting the equilibrium

of coupling reactions

chemical energy coupling agent

protein conformation shift, e.g., muscle contraction

the conc. of ion or molecule on the outside/inside of a cell,

e.g., Na+/K+ pump

Page 8: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

What makes ATP a particular efficient phosphoryl-group donor

The free energy of hydrolysis

Three structural factors:

1. resonance stabilization,

2. electrostatic repulsion,

3. stabilization due to hydration

ADP and Pi both effectively bind to water than ATP

squiggle (~P) indication

~ P: high energy bond

Page 9: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Phosphoryl transfer potential – an important form of cellular energy transformation

An efficient carrier of phosphoryl groups

Page 10: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

High phosphoryl transfer potential compounds

C

Creatine kinase:

Creatine phosphate + ADP

ATP + creatine

In vertebrate muscle serves as a reservoir of high-potential phosphoryl groups

Page 11: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Sources of ATP (energy) during exercise

Page 12: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Chemotrophs

Phototrophs

immediate energy donor

§ 15.3 The oxidation of carbon fuels

an important source of cellular energy

Page 13: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Free energy of oxidation of single-carbon compounds

H2 11/20 施明哲主任

Page 14: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Two kinds of trapped energy of fuels oxidation

1. A high-energy phosphate compound

GAP 1,3-BPG 3PGA

2. Ion gradient formation

Substrate-level phosphorylation

( p. 443)

acid

Page 15: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Three stages of catabolism

Page 16: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

§15.4 Metabolic pathways contain many recurring motifs

¤ Activated carrier of phosphoryl groups, e.g., ATP

¤ Activated carrier of electrons for fuel oxidation

e.g., nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+)

flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)

¤ Activated carrier of electrons for reductive biosynthesis

e.g., reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate

(NADPH)

NADH is used primarily for the generation of ATP

¤ Activated carrier of two-carbon fragments

e.g., acetyl coenzyme A (CoA)

Page 17: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

NAD(P)+: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate)

Niacin (vit. 3)

(Fig. 15.17)

ADP

H+ + 2e-

H- (hydride ion)NADH vs. NADPH

Page 18: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

FAD: flavin adenine dinucleotide

isoalloxazine ring

Vit B2 riboflavin

5CFMN

Page 19: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design
Page 20: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Coenzyme A: a carrier of acyl group

thioester

Page 21: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Transfer acetyl group is exergonic

Acetyl CoA carries an activated acetyl group, just as

ATP carries an activated phosphoryl group.

Page 22: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Two key aspects of metabolism utilize activated carriers:

1. The use of specificity of enzymes to control the flow of free energy and reducing power, such as NAD(P)H, FADH2

2. The economy and elegance of metabolism underlie design

Lys residue

Page 23: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design
Page 24: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Act as coenzyme:

are needed in small amounts in the diets

at least 12 vitamins are needed

Page 25: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design
Page 26: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

react with hydroxyl radicals

Page 27: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Vitamins: essential to the health of vertebrates but cannot be

synthesized, so must be obtained in the diet.

fat-soluble vitamins: A, D, E, K,

all of which are derived from isoprene units

water-soluble vitamins: C, B, biotin, folic acid, nicotinic acid,…

No biological activity

Nelson

Page 28: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Regulate calcium uptake in the intestine and calcium levels

in the kidney and bone

Vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol): is added to milk and butter

Nelson

Page 29: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Vitamin A (retinol): the visual pigment of the vertebrate eye

β-carotenoids

Cure acne and wrinkled skin

From fish liver oils, liver, eggs, whole milk, butter

carrots, sweet potato, and other yellow vegetables

Deficiency: night blindness, dryness of the skin and eyes…

Nelson

p. 424

Page 30: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Vitamin E:

tocopherols: a substituted aromatic rings and a long isoprenoid

side chain

The aromatic ring reacts with and destroys the reactive oxygen species,

protecting unsaturated fatty acids from oxidation.

Tocopherols: in eggs, vegetable oils, and wheat germ

Vit E deficiency: fragile erythrocytes for humans

scaly skin, muscle weakness and wasting, sterility

Nelson

Page 31: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Vitamin K:

active prothrombin formation

Vit. K deficiency: hemorrhagic disease of the newborn

in U.S.A., newborns are injected Vit. K

Vit. K1 rich in green plant leaves

Vit. K2 is formed by the intestinal bacteria

Nelson

K2: menaquinone

Page 32: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Key reactions are reiterated throughout metabolism

EC1

EC6

EC5

EC2

EC3

EC4

oxidoreductaseligase

isomerase

transferase

hydrolase

lyase

p. 427 can proceed in either direction, depending on G and [reactants]

and [products]

p. 237

15.5

Page 33: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Isomerization

aconitase

Glucose isomerase

Page 34: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

The addition of functional groups to double bonds or removal of groups to form double bonds — lyase

aldolase

enolase

Page 35: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

The commonalties in the diverse metabolic pathway

(02)

Page 36: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Metabolic processes are regulated in four principal ways

1.The amount of enzymes the rate of synthesis and degradation

the rate of transcription of the genes that encoding enzymes

2. The catalytic activities of enzymes the reversible allosteric inhibition

CTP inhibit asparate transcarbamoylase

the reversible covalent modification

phosphorylation, glycosylation, lipidation, methylation

hormone coordination: epinephrine, insulin

act through 2nd messengers

3. The accessibility of substrates the flux of substrates among different compartments

compartmentalization (synthesis/degradation)

4. The energy state

myristoylation, palmitoylation,prenylation

farnesylation

Page 37: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Ubiquitination: lysis protein

Sumoylation: repress gene expression

small ubiquitin-like modifer, SUMO

KXE

Farnesyl transferase inhibitors are a new class of biologically active anticancer drugs. The exact mechanism of action of this class of agents is, however, currently unknown. The drugs inhibit farnesylation of a wide range of target proteins, including Ras. It is thought that these agents block Ras activation through inhibition of the enzyme farnesyl transferase, ultimately resulting in cell growth arrest.

Page 38: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Energy charge: [ATP] + 0.5 [ADP] / {[ATP] + [ADP] + [AMP]}

catabolism

anabolism

0.9

The pH of a cell

Phosphorylation potential:

[ATP] / [ADP] [Pi] ex. 11

Page 39: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

Evolution of metabolic pathways

RNA

ribozymes

Page 40: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

96 T

Page 41: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

97T

Page 42: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

96 C

Page 43: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

97C

Page 44: Chapter 15 Metabolism: Basic concepts and design

98T