stu chap 15 glycolysis 2013

72
Fundamentals of Biochemistry Fourth Edition Chapter 15 Glucose Catabolism Glycolysis Copyright © 2013 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Donald Voet • Judith G. Voet • Charlotte W. Pratt

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Glycolysis

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Page 1: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Fundamentals of Biochemistry

Fourth Edition

Chapter 15Glucose Catabolism

Glycolysis

Copyright © 2013 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Donald Voet • Judith G. Voet • Charlotte W. Pratt

Page 2: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis –Central to carbohydrate metabolism but works in conjunction with other pathways

Page 3: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

A. 1st step in glucose metabolism

B. Ultimate goal is to make ATP from glucose

C. Overall:

glucose + 2 ADP + 2 NAD+ + 2 Pi 2 pyruvate + 2 ATP + 2 NADH + 2 H2O + 2 H+

Page 4: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

Key Points

1. Energya.

glucose G-6-PF-6-P F-1,6-bisP

b. 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate 3-phosphoglycerate (x 2)PEP pyruvate (x 2)

c. glyceraldehyde 3-P 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate (x 2)

Page 5: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

Key Points

2. Carbon Compounds

Page 6: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

Key Points

3. Control PointsEnzyme Activator Inhibitor

 a. glucose G-6-P hexokinase ------- G-6-P

b. F-6-P F-1,6-bisP phosphofructokinase-1 F-2,6-bisP citrateAMP,ADP ATP

c. PEP pyruvate pyruvate kinase F-1,6-bisP ATP acetylCoAfatty acids

phosphorylation

 Know these enzymes

Page 7: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

Key Points

4. Glycolysis occurs in cell cytosol

5. Phosphorylation of glycolytic intermediates is importanta. helps keep compounds in cellb. ATP formation coupled to breakdown of some

phospho compoundsc. Phosphoryl group important for enzyme binding.

Page 8: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

The two phases of glycolysis

2

2

2

2

2

Page 9: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

The two phases of glycolysis

Page 10: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

The two phases of glycolysis

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Glycolysis

Let’s look at the reactions of glycolysis

Look for steps where

-- energy compounds are consumed or made

-- regulation occurs

-- other notes as we discuss them

Page 12: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 1

Page 13: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphorylation of Glucose

Page 14: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Hexokinase

Page 15: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 2

Page 16: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 17: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 18: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 19: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 20: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 21: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 22: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Phosphoglucose Isomerase Mechanism

Page 23: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 3

The committed step

Actually Phosphofructokinase-1

Page 24: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 4

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Step 5

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Step 6

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The glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase reaction

Page 29: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 7

Substrate level phosphorylation

Page 30: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Arsenate can act as an uncoupler.

AsO43- similar to…..

Page 31: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 6Arsenate reacts like in this reaction

Page 32: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 7

Substrate level phosphorylation

Page 33: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Step 8

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Step 9

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Step 10

Page 36: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Pyruvate Kinase Reaction

Page 37: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Pyruvate Kinase Reaction

Page 38: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Pyruvate Kinase Reaction

Page 39: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013
Page 40: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Glycolysis

2

2

2

2

2

Page 41: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013
Page 42: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

What is the fate of pyruvate?

Aerobic conditions:

Anaerobic conditions:

Page 43: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Possible Fates of Pyruvate

Page 44: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Anaerobic conditions

Page 45: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013
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Anaerobic conditions -- yeast

Page 47: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Anaerobic conditions: 2 ATP/glucose

Aerobic conditions: many more ATP (~30-32 ATP/glucose)

Page 48: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

The 2,3 bisphosphoglycerate Story

Page 49: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

How does glycolysis affect O2 binding to Hb?

Page 50: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation

General Aspects

Reactions at equilibrium are essentially substrate-limited (increase [S] increases vo).

Regulation occurs at reactions far from equilibrium.

Reactions far from equilibrium are enzyme-limited.– Rate of reaction depends on enzyme activity.

Page 51: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation

Enzyme Limited Reactions

Rate of a sequence of reactions depends on activity of enzymes at “rate limiting steps”.

These reactions are largely irreversible steps.

These steps are often targets for regulation

a) Allosteric regulation

b) Can be hormonal regulation

c) Reversible covalent modification

Regulated enzymes often at “committed steps” of pathways

Page 52: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation of Glycolysis

Hexokinase

1) 1st step

2) Inhibited by Glucose-6-phosphate.

Page 53: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation of Glycolysis

Pyruvate Kinase

1) Last step

2) Feedforward activation by Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate

3) Inhibited by ATP, long chain fatty acids, acetyl CoA (Ala)

4) Phosphorylation by ATP (liver enzyme)

Page 54: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Feedforward Activation

2

2

2

2

2

Page 55: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation of Glycolysis

Phosphofructokinase-1

1) 3rd step -- Committed step

2) Most highly regulated enzyme

3) Inhibited by citrate and ATP

4) Stimulated by ADP and AMP

5) Stimulated by Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate

(in liver– the main glucose control organ in body)

Page 56: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Regulation

Substrate Cycling

Substrate cycling can influence net flux.

phosphatase)

Page 57: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Energetics

Page 58: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Energetics

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What about other sugars?

We get glucose from starches and sucrose.

We also ingest other sugars

Page 60: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

How do other sugars fit in with glycolysis?

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Fructose metabolism is simple in muscle, more complex in liver

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What Happens after Glycolysis?

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One Application of Your Glycolysis Knowledge

Page 64: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Positron Emission Tomography(PET Scans)

Used to study tissue metabolism

Especially for identifying cells with abnormal metabolism, i.e., cancers and epileptic regions.

2-deoxy-2-(18F)fluoro-D-glucose

– 18F half-life is 110 minutes.

Page 65: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

p. 555

Page 66: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Figure 1. “The Case of the Forgetful Professor”Brain scans from a patient with transient epileptic amnesia. (A) Fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery MRI scanning during a prolonged amnestic episode reveals hyperintensity in the left hippocampus. (B) 2-Fluoro-2-[18F]-deoxy-d-glucose PET

scanning during the same episode shows hypermetabolism localized to the left anterior hippocampus. (C) Metabolism in the left anterior hippocampus returned to normal 1 month later. Abbreviation: L = left.

Page 67: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

PET Scans and2-deoxy-2-(18F)fluoro-D-glucose

Behaves very similarly to glucose.

Absorbed by cells and phosphorylated by hexokinase.

Distribution “the same” as glucose in tissues.

But what about step 2 of glycolysis????

Page 68: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Fig. 18-8, p. 541

Isomerization of Glucose-6-P to Fructose-6-P

Page 69: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

PET Scans and2-deoxy-2-(18F)fluoro-D-glucose

So 18FDG, taken up by cells, phosphorylated and .

What happens to this radioactive glucose analog?

Page 70: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

PET Scans and2-deoxy-2-(18F)fluoro-D-glucose

18F decays by losing a positron.(a positive antimatter particle from a

proton.)

Converts a nuclear proton into a neutron resulting in….

Page 71: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

PET Scans and2-deoxy-2-(18F)fluoro-D-glucose

18O- picks up a proton from surrounding aqueous environment forming glucose (with “heavy” but non-radioactive oxygen).

Page 72: Stu Chap 15 Glycolysis 2013

Differences between Slow-twitch muscle and Fast-twitch muscle