Title: Gluconeogenesis
1Gluconeogenesis
2What is the Significance of Gluconeogenesis?
Some tissues absolutely require a constant supply
of glucose. The brain, for example. When glucose
is absent (during fasting) and when liver stores
of glycogen are depleted, gluconeogenesis becomes
essential.
3Gluconeogenesis Reverse Glycolysis?
Gluconeogenesis is essentially glycolysis in
reverse. Many glycolytic reactions are near
equilibrium under physiological conditions (DG
0), but som exhibit large negative free
energies. These must be overcome in
gluconeogenesis.
4Free Energies of Glycolysis in Heart Muscle Under
Standard (DG) and Physiological (DG) Conditions
Arrows indicate glycolytic reactions near
equilibrium under physiological conditions.
5Comparison of Glycolytic and Gluconeogenic
Pathways I Specific Gluconeogenic Enzymes
Compensate Energetically Prohibitive Glycolytic
Steps
Free energies (in the gluconeogenic direction) in
liver shown in parentheses.
6Comparison of Glycolytic and Gluconeogenic
Pathways II Specific Gluconeogenic Enzymes
Compensate Energetically Prohibitive Glycolytic
Steps
The middle steps of glycolysis are more or less
readily reversible underphysiological conditions.
Free energies (in the gluconeogenic direction) in
liver shown in parentheses.
7Comparison of Glycolytic and Gluconeogenic
Pathways III Specific Gluconeogenic Enzymes
Compensate Energetically Prohibitive Glycolytic
Steps
The very favourable substrate level phosphorylatio
n of ADP by phospho- enolpyruvate and pyruvate
kinase is overcome in gluconeogenesis by two
coupled reactions. Note the occurrence of a
citric acid cycle intermediate in the
gluconeogenic pathway Implications?
Free energies (in the gluconeogenic direction) in
liver shown in parentheses.
8Citric Acid Cycle (and Other) Sources of Carbon
for Gluconeogenesis
Note the points at which amino acids may enter
the citric acid cycle. Connection to amino acid
biosynthesis and degredation. Reason for muscle
wasting during extended periods of
fasting. What about fats?
9The Two Enzyme Conversion of Pyruvate to
Phosphoenolpyruvate
PEPCK Phospho-Enol Pyruvate Carboxy Kinase
10The Biotin Cofactor in Pyruvate Carboxylase
First Transformation
Biotin (Vitamin B7) is readily carboxylated. Carb
oxy-biotin in pyruvate carboxylase is the source
of the activated carboxylate added to pyruvate to
generate oxaloacetate.
11Capture of Bicarbonate Ion Activation of
Pyruvate Carboxylase (First Transformation)
12Transient Generation of a Pyruvate Enolate
Nucleophile and a Carbon Dioxide Electrophile
Results in the Formation of Oxaloacetate (First
Transformation)
13- Things Happening at the Pyruvate Carboxylase
Active Site - (First Transformation)
- Bicarbonate capture by biotin.
- Uses ATP.
- Pyruvate enolate formation.
- Therefore
- ATP binding site
- Pyruvate binding site
- Carbonate binding site
- Presence of biotin
- All of these species are brought together
14The Reaction at Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxy
Kinase (PEPCK) (Second Transformation)
Decarboxylation of oxaloacetate and formation of
pyruvate enolate.
Nucleophilic attack by pyruvate enolate on
g-phosphate of GTP generates phosphoenol pyruvate.
Recall Phosphoenolpyruvate a trapped pyruvate
enolate. Think of oxaloacetate as another trapped
pyruvate enolate.
15Problem Citric Acid Cycle metabolites occur in
the mitochondrial matrix. Glycolysis (and
gluconeogenesis) are cytosolic processes. Answer
Various metabolite transporters are
available. Some are boring. A metabolite goes
from one side to the other. Some are much more
interesting. Another connection to amino acid
metabolism.
16The Aspartate Malate Shunt
17Amino Transferases, Deaminations, and the
Pyridoxine Cofactor
18Deamination by Aspartate Amino Transferase I
19Deamination by Aspartate Amino Transferase II
20Deamination by Aspartate Amino Transferase III
21Gluconeogenesis Reverse Glycolysis?
Gluconeogenesis is essentially glycolysis in
reverse. Many glycolytic reactions are near
equilibrium under physiological conditions (DG
0), but some exhibit large negative free
energies. These must be overcome in
gluconeogenesis.
22The Second Glycolytic Bypass Occurs at
Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphatase 1 FBPase 1
In liver, the reverse glycolytic reaction (at
phosphofructokinase) would consume 24.5
kJ/mol. However the fructose-1.6-bisphosphatase
reaction liberates 8.6 kJ/mol.
23The Third Glycolytic Bypass in Gluconeogenesis
Occurs at Glucose-6-phosphatase
In liver, the reverse glycolytic reaction (at
hexokinase) would consume 32.9 kJ/mol. However
the glucose-6-phosphatase reaction liberates 5.1
kJ/mol.
24Comparison of Overall Glycolytic and
Gluconeogenic Reactions
Glycolysis DG -63 kJ/mol
glucose 2 ADP 2 Pi 2 NAD
2 pyruvate 2 ATP 2 NADH 2 H 2 H2O
Gluconeogenesis DG -16 kJ/mol
2 pyruvate 4 ATP 2 GTP 2 NADH 2 H 4 H2O
glucose 4 ADP 2 GDP 6 Pi 2 NAD
Gluconeogenesis is energetically expensive, but
it must be so such that it is effectively
irreversible.
25The Glyoxylate Cycle Another Process Involving
Glycolytic Enzymes and Metabolites.
26The Glyoxylate Cycle
- Related to the citric acid cycle many of the
same reactions. - Found in plants, fungi, bacteria not animals.
- Net reaction is the formation of succinate from
the - condensation of 2 acetyl-CoA groups.
- This is the reason animals cant synthesize
glucose from fat. - Given the connections among the citric acid cycle
and - gluconeogenesis, it is therefore a means of
synthesizing - glucose and other carbohydrates from
- fat and (b) other 2 carbon units.
- E.g. Mycobacterium tuberculosis feeds on host
fat to produce its carbohydrdates.
2 acetyl-CoA 2 NAD FAD
succinate 2 CoA 2 NADH FADH2 2 H
27Components of the Glyoxylate Cycle
28The Glyoxylate Cycle I
29The Glyoxylate Cycle Demonstration of
Connections to the Citric Acid Cycle
Note that the decarboxylation reactions of the
citric acid cycle are bypassed. Glyoxyla
te cycle allows assembly of larger molecules from
two carbon units.
30The Pentose Phosphate Pathway Glucose oxidation
pathway. Alternative to glycolysis. However,
biosynthetic (anabolic), not catabolic.
Generates, 3, 4, 5, 7 carbon sugars. Generates
ribose-5-phosphate nucleotide
synthesis. Generates NADPH. NADPH figures in
many biosynthetic processes amino acid
metabolism fatty acid metabolism synthesis of
glucose in the dark cycle of photosynthesis
31The Pentose Phosphate Pathway Consists of two
stages an oxidative stage which produces
NADPH a non-oxidative stage producing 3, 4, 6,
and 7 carbon sugars (metabolic precursors) Linked
to glycolysis through common metabolites glucose
-6-phosphate fructose-6-phosphate glyceraldehyde-3
-phosphate
32The NADP Cofactor
NADP Structurally similar to NAD Same redox
center. But plays fundamentally different
biochemical role. NAD energy production,
electron transport glucose oxidation. NADP re
ductive biosynthesis, anti-oxidant esp. in
RBC, glucose oxidation (in pentose phosphate
pathway)
33The Oxidative Stage of the Pentose Phosphate
Pathway Production of 2 NADPH A Decarboxylation
Production of Ribulose-5-phosphate
34The Five Carbon Sugars of the Pathway, and Their
Inter-conversions
35Transketolase transfers 2 carbon units
from ketoses to aldoses.
(ketose)
(aldose)
transketolase
(ketose)
(aldose)
36transketolase
37Recall TPP Facile Ylid Formation
38A Second Transketolase Reaction
transketolase
xylulose-5-phosphate erythrose-4-phosphate
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate fructose-6-phosphate
39Transaldolase Transfers 3 Carbon Units From a
Ketose to an Aldose TransAldolase. TransALDOLASE.
Mechanism?
(aldose)
(ketose)
transaldolase
(ketose)
(aldose)
40(No Transcript)
41The transketolase reaction. Work through the
details on your own.
42The transaldolase reaction. Work through the
details on your own.
43Overview of Carbohydrate Metabolism