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LIPID METABOLISM

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AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS A summary of amino acid biosynthesis: AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS (continued) The liver produces most of the amino acids the body can synthesize ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LIPID METABOLISM


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LIPID METABOLISM BLOOD LIPIDS
  • During digestion, lipids are hydrolyzed to
    glycerol, fatty acids, and monoglycerides.
  • For transport in the lymph and blood, the cells
    of the small intestines produce lipoprotein
    aggregates called chylomicrons.

3
LIPID METABOLISM BLOOD LIPIDS (continued)
  • Behavior of blood lipids parallels that of blood
    sugar.
  • The concentrations of both increase after a meal.
  • The concentrations of both return to normal as a
    result of
  • storage in fat depots.
  • oxidation to provide energy.
  • Plasma lipids concentrations
  • rise within 2 hours of a meal.
  • reach a peak in 4-6 hours.
  • drop rapidly to a normal level.

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BLOOD LIPID CLASSIFICATION
  • Lipids are less dense than proteins.
  • The classification of blood lipids is based on
    density.
  • The higher the lipid concentration of a
    lipoprotein aggregate, the lower the density.

VLDL very low density lipoprotein LDL low
density lipoprotein HDL high density
lipoprotein
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SCHEMATIC MODEL OF LDL
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FAT MOBILIZATION (continued)
  • Fatty acids stored in triglycerides are called on
    as energy sources
  • after a few hours of fasting.
  • even when glycogen supplies are adequate by
    resting muscle and liver cells, because it
  • conserves the bodys glycogen stores and glucose
    for brain cells and red blood cells.
  • Brain cells do not obtain nutrients from blood.
  • Red blood cells do not have mitochondria
    therefore, red blood cells do not have fatty acid
    oxidation.

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FAT MOBILIZATION (continued)
  • Triglycerides are stored in adipose tissue.
  • Several hormones, including epinephrine,
    stimulate fat mobilization when body cells need
    fatty acids for energy.
  • Fat mobilization entails the hydrolysis of stored
    triglycerides into fatty acids and glycerol which
    then enter the bloodstream.
  • In blood, mobilized fatty acids form a
    lipoprotein with the plasma protein called serum
    albumin.
  • Fatty acids transported to tissue cells that need
    them in this form.
  • Glycerol produced from triglyceride hydrolysis is
    water soluble.
  • Glycerol dissolves in blood.
  • Glycerol is transported to cells that need it.

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GLYCEROL METABOLISM
  • Glycerol can be converted to dihydroxyacetone
    phosphate, an intermediate of glycolysis.
  • Glycerol can be converted to pyruvate and
    contribute to cellular energy production.
  • Pyruvate can be converted to glucose through
    gluconeogenesis.

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FATTY ACID OXIDATION
  • Activation Step
  • Before fatty acids can be catabolized, they must
    be activated by conversion to fatty acyl CoA.
  • The conversion to fatty acyl CoA is catalyzed by
    acyl CoA synthetase.

10
FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
  • After activation, the fatty acid enters
    mitochondria and is degraded in the fatty acid
    spiral via ?-oxidation.
  • In the final step of ?-oxidation, the chain is
    broken between the ?- and ?-carbons by the
    reaction with coenzyme A.

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FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
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FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
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FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
  • Stearic acid
  • makes eight passes through ?-oxidation sequence.
  • produces nine molecules of acetyl CoA.
  • produces eight molecules FADH2.
  • produces eight molecules of NADH.

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FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
  • During ?-oxidation, the second carbon of the
    fatty acyl CoA molecule is oxidized to a ketone.
  • Each pass through the fatty acid spiral produces
  • one molecule acetyl CoA
  • one molecule NADH
  • and one molecule FADH2.

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FATTY ACID OXIDATION (continued)
  • In the last spiral, the four-carbon chain of
    butyryl CoA passed through the ?-oxidation
    sequence, and produces
  • one molecule FADH2,
  • one molecule NADH,
  • and two molecules of acetyl CoA.

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KEY NUMBERS FOR ATP CALCULATIONS
  • Determine the number of acetyl CoA molecules
  • Determine the number of trips through the fatty
    acid spiral (one less than the number of acetyl
    CoA molecules)
  • Multipliers
  • every acetyl CoA 10 ATP molecules
  • every NADH 2.5 ATP molecules
  • every FADH2 1.5 ATP molecules

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KEY NUMBERS FOR ATP CALCULATIONS (continued)
  • Example for 10-carbon fatty acid (five acetyl CoA
    molecules, four trips through fatty acid spiral)

(5 acetyl CoA) 10 50 ATP (4 NADH H) 2.5
10 ATP (4 FADH2) 1.5 6 ATP Activation
step -2 ATP Total ATP 64 ATP
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ENERGY FROM FATTY ACIDS
  • To obtain energy from stearic acid
  • it is activated by a reaction with coenzyme A to
    form stearoyl CoA, which requires the hydrolysis
    of ATP to AMP and PPi and PPi to 2 Pi
  • stearoyl CoA passes through the ?-oxidation
    spiral to form
  • 9 molecules of acetyl CoA, which can enter citric
    acid cycle and electron transport chain to
    produce 10 ATP molecules per acetyl CoA
  • 8 molecules FADH2, which can enter the electron
    transport chain to produce 1.5 ATP molecules per
    FADH2
  • and 8 molecules NADH, which can enter the
    electron transport chain to produce 2.5 ATP
    molecules per NADH
  • One molecule of stearic acid yields 120 molecules
    of ATP upon complete degredation.

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ENERGY FROM FATTY ACIDS (continued)
  • The amount of energy produced from stearic acid
    (C18)

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ENERGY FROM FATTY ACIDS (continued)
  • Fatty acids are more energy dense than
    carbohydrates.
  • On basis of equal numbers of carbons, lipids are
    nearly 25 more efficient than carbohydrates as
    energy-storage systems.
  • On an equal-mass basis, lipids contain more than
    twice the energy of carbohydrates.
  • Lipids are more reduced than glucose (partially
    oxidized).

Compound Mass ATP Produced
1 mol stearic acid (C18) 284g 120 mol
3 mol glucose (C18) 540g 96 mol
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AMINO ACID METABOLISM
  • The most important function of amino acids
  • is to provide building blocks for the synthesis
    of proteins in the body.
  • uses 75 of amino acids in normal, healthy
    adults.
  • The amino acid pool is the total supply of amino
    acids in the body coming from digestion of food,
    degradation of tissue, and synthesis in the
    liver.
  • Protein turnover is when body proteins are
    hydrolyzed and resynthesized.
  • Turnover rate of proteins is measured as a
    half-life.
  • Amino acids in excess of immediate body
    requirements are not stored for later use, but
    degraded and the nitrogen atoms are converted and
    excreted, while carbon skeletons are used for
    energy production, synthesis of glucose, or
    conversion to triglycerides.

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AMINO ACID METABOLISM (continued)
23
AMINO ACID METABOLISM (continued)
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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM
  • The nitrogen of amino acids is either excreted or
    used to synthesize other compounds.
  • There are three stages to nitrogen
    catabolism 1. Transamination 2.
    Deamination 3. Urea formation

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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM (continued)
  • Step 1 Transamination is the enzyme-catalyzed
    (transaminase) transfer of an amino group to a
    keto acid.
  • This process is also an important method in the
    biosynthesis of nonessential amino acids
    (glutamate and aspartate) from a variety of amino
    acids.

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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM (continued)
  • The following equations are specific examples of
    the transfer of amino groups to ?-ketoglutarate.
    The carbon skeleton remains behind and is
    transformed into a new ?-keto acid

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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM (continued)
  • Step 2 Deamination is an oxidative process
    resulting in a removal of an amino group.
  • This reaction is the principle source of NH4 in
    humans.
  • This reaction is called oxidative deamination.
  • This reaction is catalyzed by enzymes in the
    liver (amino acid oxidases).

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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM (continued)
  • Step 3 Urea Formation via a metabolic pathway
    (urea cycle) in which ammonia is converted to
    urea.

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UREA CYCLE
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UREA CYCLE (continued)
  • After urea is formed, it diffuses out of liver
    cells into the blood, the kidneys filter it out,
    and it is excreted in the urine.
  • Normal urine from an adult contains 25-30 g of
    urea daily, but exact amount varies with protein
    content of the diet.
  • The direct excretion of NH4 accounts for a small
    but important amount of the total urinary
    nitrogen.
  • It can be excreted with acidic ions, which helps
    kidneys control the acid-base balance of body
    fluids.

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FATE OF THE CARBON SKELETON
  • The carbon skeletons of amino acids fall into two
    categories
  • glucogenic amino acids, which have a carbon
    skeleton that can be metabolically converted to
    an intermediate of glucose synthesis.
  • ketogenic amino acids, which have a carbon
    skeleton that can be metabolically converted to
    acetyl CoA or acetoacetyl CoA.

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AMINO ACID CATABOLISM (continued)
  • The fates of ketogenic (green) amino acid carbon
    skeletons and glucogenic (purple) amino acids

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ESSENTIAL AND NONESSENTIAL AMINO ACIDS
  • Note Essential amino acids cannot be
    synthesized by the body nonessential amino acids
    can be synthesized by the body.

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AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS
  • A summary of amino acid biosynthesis

35
AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS (continued)
  • The liver produces most of the amino acids the
    body can synthesize (nonessential amino acids).
  • The synthesis occurs from intermediates of the
    glycolysis pathway and citric acid cycle.
  • Tryosine is produced from the essential amino
    acid phenylalanine

36
AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS (continued)
  • Glutamate, alanine, and aspartate are synthesized
    from ?-keto acids via reactions catalyzed by
    transaminases.
  • Alanine is produced from pyruvate and glutamate

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AMINO ACID BIOSYNTHESIS (continued)
  • Asparagine and glutamine are formed from
    aspartate and glutamate by reaction of the
    side-chain carboxylate groups with ammonium ions
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