Title: Bioenergetics and Metabolism
1Glycolysis 2Regulation of glycolytic flux,
entry and exit of glycolytic metabolites, and
pyruvate metabolism
Bioc 460 Spring 2008 - Lecture 26 (Miesfeld)
Glycolytic flux is regulated in part by PFK-1
activity a metabolic valve in the pathway
This is the chemical structure of which
glycolytic metabolite?
Lactose intolerance is due to insufficient
lactase enzyme
2Key Concepts in Glycolysis
- Glucokinase (hexokinase IV) catalyzes reaction 1
in the glycolytic pathway in liver and pancreas
cells when blood glucose levels are high. Unlike
hexokinase I, glucokinase as a very low affinity
for glucose and is not inhibited by glucose-6P.
Therefore after a meal, the liver accumulates
glucose for glycogen synthesis, and the insulin
secretion pathway is activated in pancreatic
cells. - Phosphofructokinase 1 (PFK-1) is one of three
metabolic valves in the glycolytic pathway.
PFK-1 is allosterically activated by
fructose-2,6-BP, AMP, and ADP (low energy
charge), whereas, it is allosterically inhibited
by ATP and citrate (high energy charge). AMP
stabilizes the R form of the enzyme (active), and
ATP stabilizes the T form (inactive). The
activity of pyruvate kinase is controlled by both
phosphorylation and allosteric regulation. - Disaccharide sugars (maltose, sucrose, lactose)
are cleaved by specific enzymes to produce
glucose and other monosaccharide sugars that
enter the glycolytic pathway. Glycolytic
intermediates are metabolites in amino acid
biosynthesis, pentose phosphate pathway, and
triacylglyceride biosynthesis. - Regeneration of NAD in the cytosol is critical
to maintaining glycolytic flux through the
glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase reaction
(reaction 6).
3Glucokinase is a sensor of high glucose levels
- Hexokinase I
- high affinity for substrate (Km for glucose is
0.1mM) - expressed in all tissues
- phosphorylates a variety of hexose sugars
- inhibited by the product of the reaction,
glucose-6-P - Glucokinase (Hexokinase IV)
- low affinity for substrate (Km for glucose is
10mM) - highly specific for glucose
- expressed primarily in liver and pancreatic cells
- not inhibited by glucose-6-P
4Two Major Roles of Glucokinase
- Role in liver cells
- When blood glucose levels are high, both
hexokinase I and glucokinase are active in liver
cells, whereas, other tissues only have
hexokinase 1 and their ability to take up glucose
after a meal is unchanged. Since phosphorylation
traps glucose inside cells, and reaction 1 of
glycolysis (same reaction catalyzed by both
hexokinase 1 and glucokinase) is highly
favorable, liver cells take up a disproportionate
amount of the elevated blood glucose. - Role in pancreatic ß cells
- Glucokinase also sequesters glucose inside the
pancreatic ? cells which initiates a complex
signaling pathway leading to the release of
insulin into the blood. Since insulin signaling
results in lowered blood glucose levels by
activating glucose uptake in the muscle and fat
cells (adipose), glucokinase is vital to glucose
control.
5Homeostatic blood glucose levels are 5mM which
saturates hexokinase I activity in all tissues.
However, after a carbohydrate-rich meal (glucose
is plentiful), blood glucose levels increase
dramatically and the glucokinase reaction in
liver and pancreas cells becomes a major
contributor to the formation of glucose-6-P.
Since glucose-6-P is trapped in the cell because
of the negative charge, the liver and pancreas
accumulate a large share of the blood glucose.
6Glucokinase is a Sensor of Glucose Levels
GLUT protein is a glucose transporter.
Glucose activation of glucokinase activity is at
the level of protein synthesis, i.e., elevated
glucose in the cell leads to increased synthesis
of glucokinase enzyme.
What happens to flux through the glycolytic
pathway when glucokinase is activated by glucose?
Increased ATP levels stimulate membrane
depolarization and subsequent calcuim uptake.
7The importance of glucokinase in insulin
secretion was confirmed using transgenic mice
that lacked the glucokinase gene in pancreatic ?
cells. Since these mice cannot secrete insulin
when blood glucose levels were high, they
developed insulin-dependent diabetes.
Making a glucokinase knock-out mouse
8Over 150 mutations in the glucokinase gene have
been found in humans with a form of diabetes
called mature-onset diabetes of the young (MODY2).
Human metabolic diseases are often caused by
non-lethal recessive gene mutations in enzymes
9Allsoteric regulators control the activity of
phosphofructokinase 1 and modulate glycolytic flux
- Phosophofructokinase-1 (PFK-1)
- catalyzes reaction 3 in glycolysis to generate
fructose-1,6- BP - Phosphofructokinase-2 (PFK-2)
- bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the
synthesis of - fructose-2,6-BP (F-2,6-BP), a potent
- allosteric regulator of PFK-1 activity. We will
- talk more about the synthesis of F-2,6-BP
- later in the course.
PFK-1
10Allosteric regulation of PFK-1
- PFK-1 exists as a homotetramer (a dimer of
dimers). - It is stable in two conformations the inactive
T state or active R state (similar to to the T
and R conformations of hemoglobin). - The activity of PFK-1 is allosterically
activated by binding of F-2,6-BP, AMP, and ADP,
and it is allosterically inhibited by citrate and
ATP.
11Allosteric regulators alter the activity of PFK-1
by binding to a region outside of the active site
12ATP and AMP binding to PFK-1 shifts the
equilibrium between the T and R conformations
What are the two roles of ATP in the PFK-1
catalyzed reaction?
13The activity of liver pyruvate kinase is
controlled by both phosphorylation and allosteric
regulation
When blood glucose levels are high, glycolytic
flux is stimulated in part by dephosphorylation
of liver pyruvate kinase. Conversely, low blood
glucose levels leads to phosphorylation and
partial inactivation of pyruvate kinase. Feed
forward allosteric regulation by fructose-1,6-BP,
and allosteric inhibition by ATP and alanine,
also control pyruvate kinase activity.
Based on what you know about the structure of
pyruvate and alanine, why do you think alanine is
a negative regulator of pyruvate kinase activity?
14Supply of Glycolytic Intermediates
Disaccharide sugars are common nutrients in our
diet and provide much of the carbohydrate used
for energy conversion. - Maltose is from
starch - Sucrose is table sugar - Lactose is from
milk Glycerol is a glycolytic intermediate
derived from the degradation of triacylglycerides.
15Lactose intolerance occurs in most adults as a
result of decreased lactase enzyme production
- High levels of intestinal lactose causes osmosis
of water into the intestine leading to diarrhea,
and moreover, anaerobic intestinal bacteria
metabolize the extra lactose to produce H2 and
CH4 gas.
16Fructose, galactose and glycerol enter the
glycolytic pathway through a variety of routes,
many of which require additional enzymatic
reactions.For example, fructose is first
converted to fructose-1-P which is then cleaved
by fructose -1-P aldolase to generate DHAP and
glyceraldehyde which is then phosphorylated to
produce GAP.
Does the number of ATP required to convert 1 mole
of fructose into 2 moles of pyruvate differ in
liver and muscle cells?
17The metabolic disease fructose intolerance is due
to a deficiency in the enzyme fructose-1-P
aldolase
- High fructose corn syrup is the most common added
sweetener to processed foods, however, for
individuals with fructose intolerance, fructose
in the diet can be extremely toxic. - Prolonged ingestion of fructose, primarily from
fruit juice, leads to the build-up of
fructose-1-P which results in loss of Pi in the
liver and decreased ATP synthesis (ADP Pi --gt
ATP) causing liver damage.
What do you think the treatment is for people
with fructose intolerance?
18In addition to functioning as intermediates in
the gluconeogenic pathway (production of glucose
from non-carbohydrate sources), many of the
glycolytic metabolites provide carbon skeletons
for amino acid synthesis, the pentose phosphate
pathway (ribose-5-P), and triacylglyceride
synthesis (glycerol).
Demand for Glycolytic Intermediates
19Metabolic Fate of Pyruvate
- Under aerobic conditions, the majority of
pyruvate is metabolized in the mitochondria to
acetyl CoA, and ultimately to CO2 and H2O which
are the products of the citrate cycle and
electron transport chain. - Under anaerobic conditions, such as occurs in
muscle cells during strenuous exercise, or in
erythrocytes which lack mitochondria, pyruvate is
converted to lactate (the ionized form of lactic
acid) by the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase. - Under anaerobic conditions in microorganisms such
as yeast, pyruvate can also be utilized for
alcoholic fermentation to convert pyruvate to CO2
and ethanol using the enzymes pyruvate
decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase,
respectively.
20NAD must be regenerated to maintain glycolytic
flux
The glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase reaction
requires a steady supply of NAD which functions
as a coenzyme in this oxidation reaction.
Anaerobic respiration replenishes the NAD
through a reduction reaction leading to lactate
or ethanol production. Aerobic respiration
replaces the NAD through a metabolite shuttle
system since NAD/H cannot cross the mitochondrial
membrane.
21Glyceraldehyde-3-P
Anaerobic Regeneration of NAD
NAD
Pi
Glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase
NADH H
3-Pglycerate
1,3-BisPglycerate
Pglycerate kinase
Phosphoglycerol mutase
ADP
ATP
Enolase
Phosphoenolpyruvate
2-Pglycerate
ADP
Pyruvate kinase
NADH H
ATP
NAD
Pyruvate
Lactate
Lactate dehydrogenase
22Lactate Dehydrogenase Deficiency (LDHA)
- These patients cannot maintain moderate levels of
exercise due to an inability to utilize
glycolysis to produce ATP needed for muscle
contraction under anaerobic conditions. - When lactate dehydrogenase levels are
insufficient, the level of NAD becomes limiting
during exercise and flux through the
glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase reaction is
inhibited.