Title: Section 8. Amino Acid Metabolism
1Section 8. Amino Acid Metabolism
11/15/05
2Nitrogen Fixation
Fig. 24.2
- Source of nitrogen for life processes. 2 x 1011
kg/year. - Rhizobium, other root nodule bacteria, and blue
green algae. - Nitrogenase complex
- reductase is a dimer with two 4Fe 4S clusters
- nitrogenase is an a2b2 tetramer with two P
clusters (Fe, S) and two FeMo cofactors.
1
3Nitrogenase Complex Reactions
- FeMo cofactor reaction
- N2 ? 2 NH3
- N2 triple bond is 225 kcal/mole.
- Notice that H2 is made also.
- Reductase reaction
- provides 8 e-
- 16 ATP ? 16 ADP 16 Pi.
- Ferredoxin supplies e- to reductase.
- 8 ferredoxin(red) ? 8 ferredoxin(ox) 8 e-.
- Ferredoxin(ox) is reduced by photosynthetic
centers.
Stryer 4th
2
4Nitrogen Incorporation into Amino Acids
(p. 669)
- Glutamate dehydrogenase catalyzes NH4 addition
to a-ketoglutarate to form a protonated Schiffs
base, which is reduced to glutamate. - Coupled to oxidation of NADPH (or NADH).
Requires cofactor pyridoxal phosphate. - Glutamine synthetase incorporates a second NH4
to make glutamine (see below). - Incorporated nitrogens transferred to make other
amino acids.
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(p. 669)
5Amino Acid Metabolism in Humans
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6Nitrogen Excretion in Humans
- Urea 90
- Ammonium 4
- Creatinine 3
- Amino acids 1.4
- Uric acid 1
- Other 0.6
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7Examples of Non-protein Nitrogenous Compounds
- heme
- pyrimidines
- purines
- choline (serine)
- creatine
- bile salts (glycine)
- Melanin (tyrosine)
- porphyrins
- epinephrine (phenylalanine)
- nicotinic acid (tryptophan)
- Almost all nitrogen in human metabolism comes
from dietary amino acids. - To the left are some examples of
nitrogen-containing compounds that are made from
amino acids.
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8Essential and Nonessential Amino Acids
- Essential Nonessential
- histidine alanine proline
- isoleucine arginine serine
- leucine asparagine tyrosine
- lysine aspartate
- methionine cysteine
- phenylalanine glutamate
- threonine glutamine
- tryptophan glycine
- valine
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9Biosynthetic Family Schemes
- These schemes, for bacteria and plants, show
biosynthetic families of amino acids made from
major metabolic precursors (blue) and from other
amino acids (yellow). - The amino acids in bold are essential for humans.
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10Amino Acids and ?-Keto Acids
- Every amino acid has a corresponding ?-keto acid
(carbon skeleton). - Each amino acid and its keto acid are
interconvertible by transaminiation reactions. - It is our inability to synthesize the carbon
skeletons that makes certain amino acids
essential to the human diet.
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11Vitamin B6 and Pyridoxal Phosphate
- The vitamin form, an alcohol, is oxidized to the
aldehyde level. - The coenzyme is pyridoxal phosphate.
- During transaminiation reactions, the pyridoxal
group is transiently converted to pyridoxamine.
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12Catalytic Intermediate
- A Schiff base is formed by pyridoxal phosphate
and an amino acid. - All the bonds to the ?-carbon on the amino acid
are weaker and more labile. - a aminotransferase
- b decarboxylase
- c aldolase
- N of lower structure contributes to weakening
the a, b and c bonds.
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13Reactions in an Aminotransferase Active Site
- Dehydration attaches an amino acid to
enzyme-bound PLP, forming a Schiff base. - The aldimine is converted to ketimine.
- Hydrolysis frees the ?-keto acid.
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14Transamination Mechanism
- Upper Left side Amino acid 1 binds and is
converted to a keto acid. - Lower right side Keto acid 2 binds and is
converted to an amino acid.
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15Catabolism of Amino Acids
- Amino acids provide about 15 of human metabolic
energy. - Peripheral tissues are the primary sites of amino
acid catabolism, converting the carbon skeletons
into pyruvate, acetyl CoA, acetoacetyl CoA,
?-ketoglutarate, succinyl CoA, fumarate or
oxaloacetate. - Amino groups are removed, converted to urea and
excreted. - When necessary, peripheral tissue amino groups
can be transported to the liver as part of
alanine (or glutamine). - In the liver, alanine is converted back into
pyruvate (suitable for gluconeogenesis), and the
amino group is transferred to glutamate and then
to the urea cycle.
Peripheral tissue
Liver
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16Common Amino Group Carriers
- Alanine aminotransferase and glutamate
aminotransferase are the catalysts.
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17Clinical Measures of Tissue Damage
- Alanine aminotransferase (ALT), also known as
serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) is
normally more concentrated in the liver, compared
to other locatons. It is released into the
bloodstream as the result of liver injury and
serves as a fairly specific indicator of liver
status. - Aspartate aminotransferase (AST), also known as
serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT)
is, by contrast, normally found in a diversity of
tissues including liver, heart, muscle, kidney,
and brain. It is released into serum when any one
of these tissues is damaged. For example, its
level in serum rises with heart attacks and with
muscle disorders.
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18- Web links
- Nitrogen Fixation. A summary of the topic.
- Nitrogen Cycle. The biological big picture.
- Amino Acid Metabolism. Reviews reactions.
- Next topic Urea cycle