Title: Protein
1Chapter 6
2Functional Categories
- Catalysts - enzymes
- Hydrolases - cleave compounds
- Isomerases - transfer atoms in a molecule
- Ligases (synthases) - join compounds
- Oxidoreductases - transfer electrons
- Transferases - move functional groups
3Functional Categories
- Messengers
- Hormones
- Structural elements
- Contractile proteins
- Fibrous proteins
- Globular proteins
- Immunoprotectors
- Immunoproteins (antibodies)
4Functional Categories
- Transporters
- Albumin
- Transthyretin (prealbumin)
- Transferrin
- Ceruloplasmin
- Lipoproteins
5Functional Categories
- Buffers
- Regulation of acid-base balance
- Fluid balancers
- Proteins attract water to blood
- Other roles
- Adhesion, signaling, receptors, storage
- Conjugated proteins
- Glycoproteins
- Proteoglycans
6Protein Structure Organization
- Primary structure
- Sequence of covalent bonds among amino acids
- Secondary structure
- Hydrogen bonding
- ?-helix
- ?-conformation or ?-pleated sheet
- Random coil
7Protein Structure Organization
- Tertiary structure
- Clustering of hydrophobic AAs toward center
- Electrostatic (ionic) attraction
- Strong covalent bonding between cysteine residues
- disulfide bridges - Quaternary structure
- Interactions between 2 or more polypeptide chains
- Oligomers
8Amino Acid Classification
- Structure
- Central C
- At least 1 amino group (NH2)
- At least 1 carboxy (acid) group (COOH)
- Side chain (R group)
- Makes AA unique
9Amino Acid Classification
- Net electrical charge
- Zwitterions have none
- Polarity
- Polar or nonpolar
- Determined by R group
- Essentiality
- Lysine, threonine histidine totally
indispensable
10Sources of Protein
- Exogenous sources
- Animal products - except fats
- Plant products - grains/grain products, legumes,
vegetables - Endogenous proteins
- Desquamated mucoasal cells
- Digestive enzymes glycoproteins
11Digestion Absorption
- Protein digestion
- Mouth esophagus - none
- Stomach
- HCl denatures
- Pepsin hydrolyzes peptide bonds
12Digestion Absorption
- Small intestine
- Pancreatic enzymes
- Trypsinogen ? trypsin
- Chymotrypsinogen ? chymotrypsin
- Procarboxypeptidases A B ? carboxypeptidases
- Proelastase
- Collagenase
- Brush border peptidases
- Aminopeptidases, dipeptdylaminopeptidases,
tripeptidases - Tripeptides hydrolyzed or absorbed at brush border
13Digestion Absorption
- Intestinal brush border membrane amino acid
peptide absorption - Amino acid transport
- Carriers required - passive active transporters
- Peptide transport
- PEPT1
- Co-movement of protons (H)
14Digestion Absorption
- Intestinal basolateral membrane transport of
amino acids - Diffusion sodium-independent transport are main
modes - Intestinal cell amino acid use
- Cells use or partially metabolize for release
into blood
15Digestion Absorption
- Intestinal glutamine metabolism
- Primary energy source for enterocytes
- Intestinal glutamate metabolism
- Intestinal aspartame metabolism
- Intestinal arginine metabolism
- Intestinal methionine cysteine metabolism
16Digestion Absorption
- Amino acid absorption into extraintestinal
tissues - AAs enter portal vein to liver
- Transport into hepatocytes
- Transport into other cells
- ?-glutamyl cycle
17Amino Acid Metabolism
- Metabolism of AAs includes
- Protein synthesis
- Amino acid catabolism
- Hepatic catabolism
- Uses of aromatic amino acids
- Uses of sulfur-containing amino acids
- Uses of branched-chain amino acids
- Uses of other amino acids
- Plasma amino acids pools
18Synthesis of Plasma Proteins, Nitrogen-Containing
Nonprotein Compounds, Purine Pyrimidine Bases
- Plasma proteins
- Albumin
- Transthyretin (prealbumin)
- Retinol-binding protein
- Blood clotting proteins
- Immunoproteins
- Transport proteins
- Acute phase proteins
- Stress (heat) shock proteins (hsp)
19Synthesis of Plasma Proteins, Nitrogen-Containing
Nonprotein Compounds, Purine Pyrimidine Bases
- Nitrogen-containing nonprotein compounds
- Glutathione - antioxidant, reacts with H2O2, AA
transport, conversion of prostaglandin H2 to D2
E2 - Carnitine - FA transport
- Creatine - part of phosphocreatine (high-energy
compound)
20Synthesis of Plasma Proteins, Nitrogen-Containing
Nonprotein Compounds, Purine Pyrimidine Bases
- Carnosine - may be antioxidant
- Choline - methyl donor, part of acetylcholine
lecithin sphingomyelin
21Synthesis of Plasma Proteins, Nitrogen-Containing
Nonprotein Compounds, Purine Pyrimidine Bases
- Purine pyrimidine bases
- Main constituents of DNA RNA
- Pyrimidines
- 6-membered rings containing N in positions 1 3
- Uracil, cytosine thymidine
- Purines
- 2 fused rings, N in positions 1, 3, 7, 9
- Adenine guanine
22Protein Synthesis Overview
- Insulin glucagon
- Rate of protein digestion
- Leucine
- Fed vs. fasted state
23Amino Acid Catabolism Overview
- Transamination /or deamination of amino acids
- Deamination removal of amino group
- Transamination transfer of amino group from one
AA to AA carbon skeleton or ?-keto acid - Catalyzed by aminotransferases
24Amino Acid Catabolism Overview
- Disposal of ammonia--the urea cycle
- NH3 combines with CO2 or HCO3- to form carbamoyl
phosphate - Carbamoyl phosphate reacts with ornithine
transcarbamoylase (OTC) to form citruline - Aspartate reacts with citruline to form
argininosuccinate - Arginosuccinate is cleaved to form fumarate
arginine - Urea is formed and ornithine is re-formed from
cleavage of arginine
25Amino Acid Catabolism Overview
- An overview of metabolism of the carbon
skeleton/?-keto acid - Energy generation
- Glucose ketone body production
- Cholesterol production
- Fatty acid production
26Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Aromatic Amino Acids
- Phenylalanine tyrosine
- Phenylalanine converted to tyrosine by
phenylalanine hydroxylase - Tyrosine
- Degradation begins with transamination to
p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate - Tyrosine used in other tissues for synthesis of
L-dopa catecholamines - Melanin, thyroid hormones
- Disorders of phenylalanine tyrosine metabolism
27Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Aromatic Amino Acids
- Tryptophan
- Catabolized to N-formylkynurenine
- This is catabolized to formate kynurenine
- Used for
- Protein synthesis
- Energy, glucose, ketone body production
- Synthesis of serotonin melatonin
- Disorders of tryptophan metabolism.
28Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Sulfur
(S)-Containing Amino Acids
- Methionine
- Converted to S-adenosyl methionine
- SAM is principal methyl donor
- Removal of methyl group yields S-adenosyl
homocysteine (SAH) - SAH converted to homocysteine
- Homocysteine reacts with serine to form
cystathionine - Cystathionine cleaved to form cysteine
?-ketobutyrate - Propionyl CoA (made from ?-ketobutyrate)
converted to D-methylmalonyl CoA - Disorders of methionine metabolism
29Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Sulfur
(S)-Containing Amino Acids
- Cysteine
- Used for protein glutathione synthesis
- Converted to cysteine sulfinate, used to produce
taurine - Taurine important in retina, functions as bile
salt inhibitory neurotransmitter - Cysteine degradation yields pyruvate sulfite
30Hepatic Catabolism Uses of the Branched-Chain
Amino Acids
- Isoleucine, leucine, valine
- Taken up transaminated primarily in muscles
31Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Other Amino Acids
- Lysine
- Ketogenic - catabolism yields acetyl CoA
- Disorders of lysine metabolism
- Threonine
- 3 pathways
- Disorders of threonine metabolism
32Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Other Amino Acids
- Glycine serine
- Produced from one another in reversible reaction
requiring folate - Disorders of glycine metabolism
- Arginine
- Kidney - creatine synthesis
- Liver - generation of urea ornithine
- Histidine
- Glutamate, carnosine, histamine
33Amino Acids Not Taken Up by the Liver Plasma
Amino Acids Amino Acid Pool(s)
- Plasma concentrations rise after a meal
- Pool of about 150 g of endogenous exogenous AAs
- Re-use thought to be primary source of AAs for
protein synthesis - More nonessential than essential in pool
34Interorgan Flow of Amino Acids Organ-Specific
Metabolism
- Glutamine the liver, kidneys, intestine
- Ammonia transport
- Hypercatabolic conditions
- Alanine the liver muscle
- Inter-tissue transfer of amino groups
- Liver converted to glutamate or glucose
35Interorgan Flow of Amino Acids Organ-Specific
Metabolism
- Skeletal muscle
- Isoleucine, leucine, valine
- Nitrogen-containing compounds as indicators of
muscle mass muscle/ protein catabolism
36Interorgan Flow of Amino Acids Organ-Specific
Metabolism
- Kidneys
- Serine synthesis from glycine
- Glycine catabolism to ammonia
- Histidine generation from carnosine degradation
- Arginine synthesis from citruline
- Tyrosine synthesis from phenylalanine
- Guanidoacetate formation from arginine glycine
for creatine synthesis
37Brain Accessory Tissues
- Biogenic amines neurotransmitters/hormones
- Tryptophan - melatonin serotonin
- Tyrosine - dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine
- Glysine - inhibitory neurotransmitter
- Taurine - inhibitory neurotransmitter
- Aspartate - excitatory neurotransmitter
- Glutamate - excitatory neurotransmitter or
converted to ?-amino butyric acid (GABA)
38Brain Accessory Tissues
- Neuropeptides
- Hormone-releasing factors
- Endocrine effects
- Modulatory actions on transmitter functions, mood
or behavior - Neurosecretory cells of hypothalamus secrete
- Synthesized from AAs via DNA codes
39Protein Turnover Synthesis Catabolism of
Tissue Proteins
- Food intake nutritional status
- Hormonal mediation
- AA pools connect 2 cycles of N metabolism
- Protein turnover
- Nitrogen balance
- Protein synthesis degradation controlled
separately
40Protein Turnover Synthesis Catabolism of
Tissue Proteins
- Cellular protein degradation systems
- Lysosomal degradation
- Proteasomal degradation
- Calcium or calcium-activated proteolytic
degradation
41Changes in Body Mass with Age
- Lean body mass increases throughout childhood
- Changes in total fluid ECF/ICF
- Gender differences develop during adolescence
- Greater increase in males
- After 25, weight gain fat gain
- Lean mass decreases with increasing age
- More so in women than men
- Body water declines too
42Protein Quality Protein Intake
- Foods can be categorized as
- High-quality or complete proteins
- Low-quality or incomplete proteins
- Evaluation of protein quality
- Nitrogen balance/nitrogen status
- Chemical or amino acid score
- Protein digestibility corrected amino acid score
43Protein Quality Protein Intake
- Protein efficiency ratio
- Biological value
- Net protein utilization
- Net dietary protein calories percentage
- Protein information on food labels
- Daily Value
44Protein Quality Protein Intake
- Recommended protein amino acid intakes
- RDA for adults 0.8 g/kg
- AI for birth-6 months
- RDA for indispensible AAs
- Negative effects of high protein intakes
controversial (no UL) - AMDR 10-35 kcal
45Protein Quality Protein Intake
- Protein deficiency/malnutrition
- Kwashiorkor
- Adequate energy with insufficient protein
- Edema owing to loss of blood proteins
- Marasmus
- Wasting, emaciation
- Chronic insufficiency of energy protein
46Perspective 6
- Protein TurnoverStarvation Compared with Stress
47Starvation vs. Stress
- Starvation
- Protein synthesis decreases
- Hormone balance adjusts
- Adaptation - muscle catabolism slows
- Stress
- Hypermetabolism
- Lipolysis doesnt lead to ketosis
- Muscle catabolism undiminished
- Protein turnover - immune response acute phase
response