Title: LIPOLYSIS, BETA OXIDATION,
1BIOC 460 DR. TISCHLER LECTURE 31
LIPOLYSIS, BETA OXIDATION, KETONES, LIPOGENESIS
2OBJECTIVES
1. For the lipolytic pathway (lipolysis)
describe the pathway, identify where it occurs,
name the principal enzyme involved, and explain
the role of albumin and fatty acid binding
protein in the transport and metabolism of free
fatty acids liberated by lipolysis 2. For the
degradation of fatty acyl CoAs describe the
roles of acyl CoA synthetase, carnitine-palmitoyl
transferases (CPT-I and CPT-II), and carnitine
acylcarnitine translocase (CAT) discuss the
relationship of products of the ?-oxidation
pathway to energy production. 3. For ketone
body metabolism identify where and when ketone
body formation (ketogenesis) occurs, state the
role of ketogenesis, identify where ketone
oxidation occurs and explain why normally
individuals do not develop ketoacidosis even
when producing ketone bodies.
3OBJECTIVES
4. Describe the reactions catalyzed by malic
enzyme and acetyl CoA carboxylase 5. For
the fatty acid synthase reaction list the
substrates and key products, identify the
sources of NADPH for the reaction, and describe
its general mechanism. 6. Describe how fatty
acids are stored as a source of fuel during
starvation or stress.
4PHYSIOLOGICAL PREMISE Would you believe that
diabetics having a ketotic crisis have actually
been arrested for DUIs even though they have
consumed no alcohol? Indeed a blood analysis
would show no alcohol. Why would this occur?
During a ketotic crisis a byproduct of the excess
ketone production is acetone. Having nowhere else
to go, it is expired through the lungs. It is the
acetone that arresting officers have smelled on
the breath of these individuals and despite their
protestations have innocently believed them to be
consuming alcohol.
5LIPOLYSIS OF STORED TRIACYLGLYCEROL
- fatty acids hydrolytically cleaved from
triacylglycerol - largely in adipose to release fatty acids as a
fuel - may also occur in muscle or liver - smaller
amounts of fatty acids are stored - hormone-sensitive (cyclic AMP-regulated) lipase
initiates lipolysis cleaves first fatty acid - this lipase and others remove remaining fatty
acids - fatty acids/glycerol released from adipose to
the blood - hydrophobic fatty acids bind to albumin, in the
blood, for transport
Lipolysis
Triacylglycerol
Glycerol Fatty acids
6CAPILLARY
CYTOPLASM
cell membrane
FA fatty acid
LPL lipoprotein lipase
FABP fatty acid binding protein
ACS acyl CoA synthetase
Figure 1. Overview of fatty acid degradation
7Cytoplasm
OUTER MITOCHONDRIAL MEMBRANE
palmitoyl-CoA
Intermembrane Space
CPT-I defects cause severe muscle weakness
because fatty acids are an important muscle fuel
during exercise.
Figure 2 (top). Activation of palmitate to
palmitoyl CoA (step 4, Fig. 1) and conversion to
palmitoyl carnitine
8Intermembrane Space
INNER MITOCHONDRIAL MEMBRANE
Matrix
palmitoyl-carnitine
Figure 2 (bottom). Mitochondrial uptake via of
palmitoyl-carnitine via the carnitine-acylcarnitin
e translocase (CAT) (step 5 in Fig. 1).
9Cytoplasm
OUTER MITOCHONDRIAL MEMBRANE
ACS
1
Intermembrane Space
palmitoyl-CoA
INNER MITOCHONDRIAL MEMBRANE
palmitoyl-carnitine
carnitine
Matrix
4
CoA
palmitoyl-CoA
10 inner mitochondrial membrane
Carnitine translocase
matrix side
2 ATP
3 ATP
Figure 3. Processing and ?-oxidation of
palmitoyl CoA
11(excess acetyl CoA)
MITOCHONDRION
Figure 4. Ketone body formation (ketogenesis) in
liver mitochondria from excess acetyl CoA derived
from the ?-oxidation of fatty acids
12KETONE BODY OXIDATION
- high rates of lipolysis (e.g., long-term
starvation or in uncontrolled diabetes) produce
sufficient ketones in the blood to be effective
as a fuel - ketones are the preferred fuel if glucose,
ketones, fatty acids all available in the blood - primary tissues using ketones, when
available, are brain, muscle, kidney and
intestine, but NOT the liver. - ?-Hydroxybutyrate NAD ? acetoacetate NADH
- ?-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase in mitochondria
reverse of ketogenesis
13KETOSIS Excessive build-up of ketone bodies
results in ketosis eventually leading to a fall
in blood pH due to the acidic ketone bodies.
Adipose Tissue
Liver
Free fatty acids
Ketone Bodies
Pancreas
Figure 5. Mechanism for prevention of ketosis
due to excess ketone body production that can
lead to ketoacidosis
14LIPOGENESIS
15LIPOGENESIS
- principally in adipose tissue and liver
- lipogenesis cytoplasm requires acetyl CoA
- adipose FA stored as triacylglycerols via
esterification - liver produces TAG packaged into VLDL and
exported - compounds metabolized to acetyl CoA can serve
as a fat precursor - glucose primary source of carbons for fat
synthesis.
16CYTOPLASM
MITOCHONDRIAL MATRIX
Figure 6. Export of acetyl CoA as citrate for
fatty acid biosynthesis, generation of NADPH and
pathway of lipogenesis. (similar to diagram
discussed for cholesterol synthesis exxept this
involves PDH reaction)
17KEY MITOCHONDRIAL REACTIONS
PYRUVATE CARBOXYLASE pyruvate CO2 ATP ?
oxaloacetate ADP Pi
PYRUVATE DEHYDROGENASE pyruvate NAD coenzyme
A (CoA) ? acetyl CoA CO2 NADH
18KEY CYTOPLASMIC REACTIONS INDIRECTLY NEEDED FOR
LIPOGENESIS
Citrate Lyase citrate CoA ATP ? acetyl CoA
oxaloacetate ADP Pi Malate
dehydrogenase oxaloacetate NADH ? malate
NAD Malic Enzyme malate NADP ? pyruvate
NADPH
19KEY CYTOPLASMIC REACTIONS DIRECTLY NEEDED FOR
LIPOGENESIS AND FATTY ACID ACTIVATION
Acetyl CoA Carboxylase acetyl CoA HCO3-
ATP ? malonyl CoA ADP Pi Fatty Acid
Synthase acetyl CoA 7 malonyl CoA 14
NADPH 14 H ? palmitate 7 CO2 8 CoA
14 NADP Acyl CoA Synthetase (also used
for fatty acids other than palmitate)
palmitate ATP CoA ? palmitoyl CoA AMP
PPi
20A C P
CE acp
CO2
CO2
CO2
CO2
COO-
malonyl CoA
acetyl CoA
4-C unit
Figure 7. General mechanism for the fatty acid
synthase reaction. CE is condensing enzyme. ACP
is acyl carrier protein. This row represents the
initial steps for priming the reaction with
acetyl CoA and the addition of two carbons from
malonyl CoA.
21malonyl CoA
4-C unit
Figure 7. General mechanism for the fatty acid
synthase reaction. CE is condensing enzyme. ACP
is acyl carrier protein. This row depicts a
typical cycle of adding two more carbons to the
fatty acid chain.
22thioesterase cleavage
malonyl CoA
6-C unit
palmitate
Figure 7. General mechanism for the fatty acid
synthase reaction. CE is condensing enzyme. ACP
is acyl carrier protein. This row shows the
release of the finished product, palmitate,
through cleavage by thioesterase.
23Sources of NADPH for the Biosynthesis of Fatty
Acids.
malic enzyme Malate NADP ? Pyruvate CO2
NADPH pentose phosphate pathway Glucose-6-P
2 NADP ? Ribulose-5-P 2 NADPH CO2
24Lysophosphatidic acid
Phosphatidic acid
Diacylglycerol
Triacylglycerol
Figure 8. Formation of phosphatidic acid from
glycerol-3-P or DHAP, and its conversion to
triacylglycerol