Metabolism of pentoses, glycogen, fructose and galactose Alice Skoumalová.

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Metabolism of pentoses, glycogen, fructose and galactose Alice Skoumalová

Transcript of Metabolism of pentoses, glycogen, fructose and galactose Alice Skoumalová.

Page 1: Metabolism of pentoses, glycogen, fructose and galactose Alice Skoumalová.

Metabolism of pentoses, glycogen, fructose and

galactose

Alice Skoumalová

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1. The Pentose Phosphate Pathway

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An overview:

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The pentose phosphate pathway (PPP):

occurs in the cytosol

in all cells

Two stages:

1) Oxidative (irreversible)

• Products:

→ Ribulose 5-phosphate (nucleotide synthesis)

→ NADPH (fatty acid synthesis, detoxification, reduction of glutathion)

2) Nonoxidative (reversible)

• Conversion of Ribulose 5-phosphate to intermediates of glycolysis

• Production of Ribulose 5-phosphate from intermediates of glycolysis

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1. The oxidative phase of PPP:

Regulation:

Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase

• inhibition - by NADPH

• induction - by insulin/gluckagon ↑

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2. The nonoxidative phase of PPP:

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The role of PPP in maintenance of the erythrocyte membrane integrity:

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Clinical correlations:

Treatment by certain drugs (i.e. sulfonamides)

Increased production of free radicals

People with glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (7% of the world population)

reduced protection of erythrocytes against FR

hemolysis, hemoglobinuria, hemolytic anemia

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Pathways that require NADPH:

Detoxification

• Reduction of oxidized glutathione

• Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases

Reductive synthesis

• Fatty acid synthesis

• Fatty acid chain elongation

• Cholesterol synthesis

• Neurotransmitter synthesis

• Deoxynucleotide synthesis

•Superoxide synthesis

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Summary:

The pentose phosphate pathway

A shunt from glycolysis

Production of NADPH (reductive syntheses, detoxifications), ribose 5-phospate

Conversion to intermediates of glycolysis

Isomerases, epimerases, transketolases, transaldolases

Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency

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2. Metabolism of glycogen

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Glycogen

α-D-Glucose, α-1,4 and α-1,6 link (branching every 8-10 units)

source of energy in animals (liver, muscles)

highly branched structure (rapid degradation and synthesis, better solubility)

Nonreducing end

glycogenin

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The role of glycogen in muscles and liver:

Decrease in glucose in the blood

→ glycogen degradation

→ release of glucose to the blood

Glucose 6-phosphatase (only in liver)

High ATP demand

→ glycogen degradation

→ anaerobic glycolysis

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Glycogen metabolism-overview:

Synthesis and degradation of glycogen:

→ different enzymes (regulation!)

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Glycogen synthesis:

A glycogen primer

- not degraded

- synthesis (autophosphorylation of glycogenin)

Transfer of 6-8 units

Glycogen synthase (regulation)

An energy-requiring pathway (UTP)

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Glycogen degradation:

Chain cleavage (phosphorolysis)

- to 4 units from a branch point

- The debrancher enzyme (transfer of 3 units, hydrolysis of 1 glucose)

Glycogen phosphorylase (regulation)

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Type Enzyme affected Genetics Organ involved

Manifestations

I (Von Gierke´s disease)

Glucose 6-phosphatase

AR (1/200 000)

Liver Hypoglycemia, lactate acidosis, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia.

Enlarged liver and kidney.

II (Pompe disease)

Lysosomal α-1,4-glucosidase

AR Organs with lysosomes

Glycogen deposits in lysosomes.

Hypotonia, cardiomegaly, cardiomyopathy (Infantile f.).

Muscle weakness (Adult f.)

III (Cori´s disease)

The debrancher enzyme

AR Liver, muscle, heart

Hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia

V (McArdles disease)

Muscle glycogen phosphorylase

AR Muscle Exercise-induced muscular pain, cramps, muscle weakness

Glycogen storage diseases:

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Clinical correlations:

Maternal malnutrition in the last trimester of pregnancy

(physiologically: glycogen formation and storage during the last 10 weeks of pregnancy by the fetus → reserve for first hours → prevention of hypoglycemia)

reduced or no glycogen reserve in the fetus

after birth → hypoglycemia, apathy, coma

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State Regulators Response

Liver

Fasting Glucagon ↑, Insulin ↓

cAMP ↑

Glycogen degradation ↑

Glycogen synthesis ↓

Carbohydrate meal Glu ↑, Glucagon ↓, Insulin ↑

cAMP ↓

Glycogen degradation ↓ Glycogen synthesis ↑

Exercise and stress Adrenalin ↑

cAMP ↑, Ca2+-calmodulin ↑

Glycogen degradation ↑ Glycogen synthesis ↓

Muscle

Fasting (rest) Insulin ↓ Glycogen synthesis ↓

Glucose transport ↓

Carbohydrate meal (rest) Insulin ↑ Glycogen synthesis ↑

Glucose transport ↑

Exercise Epinephrine ↑

AMP ↑, Ca2+-calmodulin ↑, cAMP ↑

Glycogen synthesis ↓

Glycogen degradation ↑

Glycolysis ↑

Regulation of liver and muscle glycogen metabolism:

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Regulation of glycogenolysis in the liver by glucagon:

cAMP → protein kinase A:

1. inactivates glycogen synthase

2. activates glycogen phosphorylase

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Regulation of glycogenolysis in muscle:

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Summary:

Glycogen metabolism

Different role of glycogen stores in the liver and muscles

Glycogen synthesis and degradation are separate pathways (regulation)

Glycogen storage diseases

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3. Fructose and Galactose metabolism

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Principally in the liver (small intestine, kidney)

Aldolase B: low affinity for fructose 1-phosphate (→ accumulation of fructose 1-phosphate in the liver )

Fructose metabolism

Essential fructosuria

Hereditary fructose intolerance

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The polyol pathway

Seminal vesicles (spermatozoa use fructose)

Accumulation of sorbitol in diabetic patients

Lens (diabetic cataract)

Muscles, nerves (periferal neuropathy)

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Galactose metabolism:

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Lens metabolism:

Diabetic cataract :

↑glucose concentration in the lens → ↑aldose reductase activity → sorbitol accumulation → ↑osmolarity, structural changes of proteins

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Clinical correlations:

A newborn: failure to thrive, vomiting and diarrhea after milk

galactosemia (Galactose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferase deficiency)

genetic disease (AR, 1/60 000)

hepatomegaly, jaundice, cataracts, mental retargation, death

Management: early diagnose, elimination of galactose from the diet (artificial milk from soybean hydrolysate)

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Summary:

Fructose and Galactose metabolism

Conversion to intermediates of glycolysis

Genetic abnormalities, accumulation of intermediates, tissue damage

Accumulation of sorbitol in diabetes

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Pictures used in the presentation:

Marks´ Basic Medical Biochemistry A Clinical Approach, third edition, 2009 (M. Lieberman, A.D. Marks)

Textbook of Biochemistry with Clinical Correlations, sixth edition, 2006 (T.M. Devlin)