Title: Glycogen Metabolism and Gluconeogenesis
1Glycogen Metabolism andGluconeogenesis
2Glycolysis (recap)
- We discussed the reactions which convert glucose
to pyruvate - C6H12O6 2 NAD 2 ADP ? 2 CH3COCOOH 2 NADH 2
ATP 2 H - What about the sources of glucose?
- Dietary sugars
- Glycogen
3Before we get to glycogen Dietary sugars
4Amylase Reaction
5Glycogen
- Branched every 8-12 residues
- Up to 50,000 or so residues total
6Breakdown Glycogen Phosphorylase
7Glycogen Synthesis and Breakdown
- Glycogen synthesis and breakdown are both
controlled by hormones - Glucagon, Epinephrine
- turn on glycogen breakdown
- Turn off glycogen synthesis
- Hormones act through receptors on cell surface
and G-proteins
Glucagon 29 amino acid polypeptide produced in
pancreas in response to low blood sugar
Epinephrine aka adrenaline produced by
adrenal medulla in response to stress
8Activation of Glycogen Phosphorylase
- G-Proteins
- Second messengers
- Kinase Cascade
3-5 cyclic AMP
9G-Proteins
- G proteins are heterotrimers, containing Ga, Gb
and Gg subunits.
Subunit Size
Ga 45 47 kD
Gb 35 kD
Gg 7-9 kD
10G-Proteins
- The Ga subunits bind guanine nucleotides (hence
the name G Protein). G Proteins are associated
on one hand with the inner surface of the plasma
membrane, and on the other hand with membrane
spanning receptor proteins called G-protein
coupled receptors or GPCRs. - There are a number of different GPCRs most
commonly these are receptors for hormones or for
some type of extracellular signal. - In the resting state, Ga is bound to the Gb-Gg
dimer. Ga contains the nucleotide binding site,
holding GDP in the inactive form, and is the
warhead of the G protein. At least 20
different forms of Ga exist in mammalian cells. - Binding of the extracellular signal by the GPCR
causes it to undergo an intracellular
conformational change this causes an allosteric
effect on Ga. The change in Ga causes it to
exchange GDP for GTP. GTP activates Ga, causing
it to dissociate from the Gb-Gg dimer. The
activated Ga binds and activates an effector
molecule. - Ga also has a slow GTPase activity. Hydrolysis
of GTP deactivates Ga, which reassociates with
the Gb-Gg dimer and the GPCR to reform the
resting state. In other words, G-protein
mediated cellular responses have a built-in off
switch to prevent them from running forever.
11G-Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs)
12G-Proteins Effect of GDP/GTP Binding
GTP terminal PO4 constrains the bg-binding loop
(red)
GDP missing terminal PO4 allows the bg-binding
loop (red) to assime a looser conformation
13Cycling of G protein between active and inactive
states
14G-Protein Killers
- Cholera
- Cholera toxin secreted by the bacterium Vibrio
cholera. - A subunit and five B subunits.
- A subunit catalyzes the transfer of an ADP-ribose
from NAD to a specific Arg side chain of the a
subunit of Gs. - Ga is irreversibly modified by addition of
ADP-ribosyl group - Modified Ga can bind GTP but cannot hydrolyze it
). - As a result, there is an excessive, nonregulated
rise in the intracellular cAMP level (100 fold or
more), which causes a large efflux of Na and
water into the gut. - Pertussis (whooping cough)
- Pertussis toxin (secreted by Bordetella
pertussis) catalyzes ADP-ribosylation of a
specific cysteine side chain on the a subunit of
a G protein which inhibits adenyl cyclase and
activates sodium channels. - This covalent modification prevents the subunit
from interacting with receptors as a result,
locking Ga in the GDP bound form. - You probably vaccinate your dog against the
related species that causes kennel cough.
15Cholera is still a problem-2009 Zimbabwe
outbreak 4300 deaths
16Activation of Adnylate Cyclase
17Activation of cAMP-Dependant Protein Kinase
18Glycogen Phosphorylase
- Exists in 2 forms
- Phosphorylase B (inactive)
- Phosphorylase A (active)
- Phosphorylase B is converted to Phosphorylase A
when it is itself phosphorylated by Synthase
Phosphorylase Kinase (SPK) - GP cannot remove branch points (a-1,6 linkages)
19Activation of Glycogen Phosphorylase
cAMP dependent Protein Kinase
3-5 cyclic AMP
20Activation of Glycogen Phosphorylase
PLP Pyridoxal Phosphate cofactor
cAMP dependent Protein Kinase
21Debranching Enzyme
- The activity of phosphorylase ceases 4 glucose
residues from the branch point. - Debranching enzyme (also called glucan
transferase) contains 2 activities - glucotransferase
- glucosidase.
- Glycogenolysis occurring in skeletal muscle could
generate free glucose which could enter the blood
stream. - However, the activity of hexokinase in muscle is
so high that any free glucose is immediately
phosphorylated and enters the glycolytic pathway.
22Cori Disease
- Cori disease (Glycogen storage disease Type III)
is characterized by accumulation of glycogen with
very short outer branches, caused by a flaw in
debranching enzyme.
- Deficiency in glycogen debranching activity
causes hepatomegaly, ketotic hypoglycemia,
hyperlipidemia, variable skeletal myopathy,
cardiomyopathy and results in short stature.
23Glycogen Synthesis
- Glycogen Synthase adds glucose residues to
glycogen - Synthase cannot start from scratch needs a
primer - Glycogenin starts a new glycogen chain, bound to
itself
24Glycogen Synthesis (cont.)
- Synthase then adds to the nonreducing end.
25Glycogen Synthesis (cont.)
- To add to the glycogen chain, synthase uses an
activated glucose, UDP-Glucose - UDP-Glucose Pyrophosphorylase links UDP to glucose
26Glycogen Synthesis (cont.)
- Synthase then adds the activated glucose to the
growing chain - Release and subsequent hydrolysis of
pyrophosphate drives the reaction to the right
27Glycogen Synthesis (cont.)
- Glycogen branching enzyme then introduces branch
points
28Mature Glycogen
- Built around glycogenin core
- Multiple non-reducing ends accessible to glycogen
phosphorylase
29Reverse Regulation of Phosphorylase and Synthase
- The same kinase phosphorylates both glycogen
phosphorylase and synthase - Synthase I (dephos.) is always active
- Synthase D (phos.) is dependent on G-6-P
- The same event that turns one on turns the other
one off.
30Gluconeogenesis
31Gluconeogenesis
- Average adult human uses 120 g/day of glucose,
mostly in the brain (75) - About 20g glucose in body fluids
- About 190 g stored as glycogen
- Less than 2 days worth
- In addition to eating glucose, we also make it
- Mainly occurs in liver (90) and kidneys (10)
- Not the reverse of glycolysis
- Differs at the irreversible steps in glycolysis
32Gluconeogenesis
Differs Here
And Here
And Here
33First Difference
Gluconeogenesis burn two nucleotide triphosphates
Glycolysis make a nucleotide triphosphate
34Pyruvate Carboxylase
35PEP Carboxykinase
36Malate Shuttle
- Pyruvate Carboxylase is mitochondrial
- OAA reduced to malate in matrix
- Carrier transports malate to cytoplasm
- Cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase reoxidizes to
OAA - Mammals have a mitochondrial PEPCK
37Second and Third differences
38Energetics
- Gluconeogenesis
- Pyruvate 4 ATP 2 GTP 2 NADH 2 H2O ?
glucose 4 ADP 2 GDP 2 NAD - ?G -37 kJ/mol
- Glycolysis (reversed)
- Pyruvate 2 ATP 2 NADH 2 H2O ? glucose 2
ADP 2 NAD - ?G 84 kJ/mol
- Net difference of 4 nucleotide triphosphate bonds
at 31 kJ each accounts for difference in DGs - Â
39Local Regulation
- Phosphofructokinase-1(Glycolysis) is inhibited by
ATP and Citrate and stimulated by AMP. - Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Gluconeogenesis) is
inhibited by AMP.
40Global Control
- Enzymes relevant to these pathways that are
phosphorylated by cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase
include - Pyruvate Kinase, a glycolysis enzyme that is
inhibited when phosphorylated. - A bi-functional enzyme that makes and degrades an
allosteric regulator, fructose-2,6-bisphosphate.
41Pyruvate Kinase Regulation
- Local regulation by substrate activation
- Global regulation by hormonal control of
Protein Kinase A
42Effects of Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate
- Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate allosterically
activates the glycolysis enzyme
Phosphofructokinase-1, promoting the relaxed
state, even at relatively high ATP. Activity in
the presence of fructose-2,6-bisphosphate is
similar to that observed when ATP is low. Thus
control by fructose-2,6-bisphosphate, whose
concentration fluctuates in response to external
hormonal signals, supercedes control by local
conditions (ATP concentration). - Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate instead inhibits the
gluconeogenesis enzyme Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase
.
43Source of Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate
- Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate is synthesized and
degraded by a bi-functional enzyme that includes
two catalytic domains - Phosphofructokinase-2 (PFK2) domain
catalyzesfructose-6-phosphate ATP ?
fructose-2,6-bisphosphate ADP. - Fructose-Biosphosphatase-2 (FBPase2) domain
catalyzesfructose-2,6-bisphosphate H2O ?
fructose-6-phosphate Pi.
Phosphorylation activates FBPase2 and inhibits
PFK2
44BifunctionalEnzyme
Activates PFK1 Inhibits F-1,6-bisphosphatase
Inhibits PFK1 Activates F-1,6-bisphosphatase
45Reciprocal Regulation of PFK-1 and FBPase-1
46Medical aside nonlethal!
People with Type II diabetes have very high (3x
normal) rates of gluconeogenesis Initial
treatment is usually with metformin.
Metformin shuts down production of PEPCK and
Glucose-6-phosphatase, inhibiting gluconeogenesis.
47Futile Cycles
- Occur when loss of reciprocal regulation fails
twixt glycolysis and gluconeogenesis - Anesthestics like halothane occasionally lead to
runaway cycle between PFK and fructose-1,6-BPase - Malignant Hyperthermia
48The Cori Cycle
High NADH/NAD
Low NADH/NAD