Protein - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Protein

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Chapter 6 Protein Functional Categories Catalysts - enzymes Hydrolases - cleave compounds Isomerases - transfer atoms in a molecule Ligases (synthases) - join ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Protein


1
Chapter 6
  • Protein

2
Functional Categories
  • Catalysts - enzymes
  • Hydrolases - cleave compounds
  • Isomerases - transfer atoms in a molecule
  • Ligases (synthases) - join compounds
  • Oxidoreductases - transfer electrons
  • Transferases - move functional groups

3
Functional Categories
  • Messengers
  • Hormones
  • Structural elements
  • Contractile proteins
  • Fibrous proteins
  • Globular proteins
  • Immunoprotectors
  • Immunoproteins (antibodies)

4
Functional Categories
  • Transporters
  • Albumin
  • Transthyretin (prealbumin)
  • Transferrin
  • Ceruloplasmin
  • Lipoproteins

5
Functional Categories
  • Buffers
  • Regulation of acid-base balance
  • Fluid balancers
  • Proteins attract water to blood
  • Other roles
  • Adhesion, signaling, receptors, storage
  • Conjugated proteins
  • Glycoproteins
  • Proteoglycans

6
Protein Structure Organization
  • Primary structure
  • Sequence of covalent bonds among amino acids
  • Secondary structure
  • Hydrogen bonding
  • ?-helix
  • ?-conformation or ?-pleated sheet
  • Random coil

7
Protein 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

8
Amino 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

9
Amino Acid Classification
  • Net electrical charge
  • Zwitterions have none
  • Polarity
  • Polar or nonpolar
  • Determined by R group
  • Essentiality
  • Lysine, threonine histidine totally
    indispensable

10
Sources of Protein
  • Exogenous sources
  • Animal products - except fats
  • Plant products - grains/grain products, legumes,
    vegetables
  • Endogenous proteins
  • Desquamated mucoasal cells
  • Digestive enzymes glycoproteins

11
Digestion Absorption
  • Protein digestion
  • Mouth esophagus - none
  • Stomach
  • HCl denatures
  • Pepsin hydrolyzes peptide bonds

12
Digestion 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

13
Digestion 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)

14
Digestion 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

15
Digestion Absorption
  • Intestinal glutamine metabolism
  • Primary energy source for enterocytes
  • Intestinal glutamate metabolism
  • Intestinal aspartame metabolism
  • Intestinal arginine metabolism
  • Intestinal methionine cysteine metabolism

16
Digestion Absorption
  • Amino acid absorption into extraintestinal
    tissues
  • AAs enter portal vein to liver
  • Transport into hepatocytes
  • Transport into other cells
  • ?-glutamyl cycle

17
Amino 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

18
Synthesis 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)

19
Synthesis 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)

20
Synthesis of Plasma Proteins, Nitrogen-Containing
Nonprotein Compounds, Purine Pyrimidine Bases
  • Carnosine - may be antioxidant
  • Choline - methyl donor, part of acetylcholine
    lecithin sphingomyelin

21
Synthesis 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

22
Protein Synthesis Overview
  • Insulin glucagon
  • Rate of protein digestion
  • Leucine
  • Fed vs. fasted state

23
Amino 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

24
Amino 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

25
Amino Acid Catabolism Overview
  • An overview of metabolism of the carbon
    skeleton/?-keto acid
  • Energy generation
  • Glucose ketone body production
  • Cholesterol production
  • Fatty acid production

26
Hepatic 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

27
Hepatic 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.

28
Hepatic 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

29
Hepatic 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

30
Hepatic Catabolism Uses of the Branched-Chain
Amino Acids
  • Isoleucine, leucine, valine
  • Taken up transaminated primarily in muscles

31
Hepatic Catabolism Uses of Other Amino Acids
  • Lysine
  • Ketogenic - catabolism yields acetyl CoA
  • Disorders of lysine metabolism
  • Threonine
  • 3 pathways
  • Disorders of threonine metabolism

32
Hepatic 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

33
Amino 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

34
Interorgan 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

35
Interorgan Flow of Amino Acids Organ-Specific
Metabolism
  • Skeletal muscle
  • Isoleucine, leucine, valine
  • Nitrogen-containing compounds as indicators of
    muscle mass muscle/ protein catabolism

36
Interorgan 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

37
Brain 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)

38
Brain 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

39
Protein 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

40
Protein Turnover Synthesis Catabolism of
Tissue Proteins
  • Cellular protein degradation systems
  • Lysosomal degradation
  • Proteasomal degradation
  • Calcium or calcium-activated proteolytic
    degradation

41
Changes 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

42
Protein 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

43
Protein Quality Protein Intake
  • Protein efficiency ratio
  • Biological value
  • Net protein utilization
  • Net dietary protein calories percentage
  • Protein information on food labels
  • Daily Value

44
Protein 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

45
Protein 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

46
Perspective 6
  • Protein TurnoverStarvation Compared with Stress

47
Starvation 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
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