Title: Fatty acid breakdown
1Fatty acid breakdown
- The oxidation of fatty acids
- proceeds in three stages
2b-oxidation
- b-oxidation is catalyzed by four enzymes
- Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
- Enoyl-CoA hydratase
- b-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase
- Acyl-CoA acetyltransferase (thiolase)
3First step
- Isozymes of first enzyme
- confers substrate specificity
- FAD-dependent enzymes
- Reaction analogous to succinate
- dehydrogenase in citric acid
- cycle
4Electrons on FADH2 transferred to respiratory
chain
5Second step
- Adding water across a double bond
- Analogous to fumarase reaction in
- citric acid cycle
6Third step
- Dehydrogenation (oxidation)
- using NAD
- NADH is transferred to respiratory
- chain for ATP generation
- Analogous to malate dehydrogenase
- reaction of citric acid cycle
7Fourth step
- Splits off the carboxyl-end
- Acetyl-CoA and replaces it with
- Co-A Thiolase
8b-oxidation bottomline
- The first three reactions generate a much less
stable, more easily broken C-C bond subsequently
producing - two carbon units
- through thiolysis
9The process gets repeated over and over until no
more acetyl-CoA can be generated
- 160-CoA CoA FAD NAD H2O ? 140-CoA
acetyl-CoA FADH2 NADH H - Then..
- 140-CoA CoA FAD NAD H2O ? 120-CoA
acetyl-CoA FADH2 NADH H - Ultimately..
- 160-CoA 7CoA 7FAD 7NAD 8H2O ?
8acetyl-CoA 7FADH2 7NADH 7H
10Acetyl-CoA can be fed to the citric acid cycle
resulting in reducing power
11Breakdown of unsaturated fatty acids requires
additional reactions
- Bonds in unsaturated fatty acids are in the cis
conformation, enoyl-CoA hydratase cannot work on
as it requires a trans bond - The actions of an isomerase and a reductase
convert the cis bond to trans, resulting in a
substrate for b-oxidation
12In some instances (monounsaturated), enoyl-CoA
isomerase is sufficient
13For others (polyunsaturated), both are needed
14Complete oxidation of odd-number fatty acids
requires three extra reactions
- Although common fatty acids are even numbered,
odd numbered fatty acids do occur (ie.
propionate) - Oxidation of odd numbered fatty acids uses same
pathway as even numbered - However, ultimate substrate in breakdown has
five, not four carbons, which is cleaved to form
acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA
15Propionyl Co-A enters the citric acid cycle using
three steps
- Propionyl Co-A is carboxylated to form
methyl-malonyl CoA (catalyzed by the biotin
containing propionyl-CoA carboxylase) - Recall that methyl-malonyl CoA is also a
intermediate in the catabolism of methionine,
isoleucine, threonine and valine to succinyl-CoA
16(No Transcript)
17Methyl-malonyl-CoA undergoes two isomerization
steps to form succinyl-CoA
- Methyl-malonyl epimerase catalyzes the first
reaction - Methyl-malonyl-CoA mutase (a vitamin B12
dependent enzyme) catalyzes the second to form
succinyl-CoA
18Vitamin B12 catalyzes intramoelcular proton
exchange
19Vitamin B12 is a unique and important enzyme
cofactor
- Contains cobalt in a corrin ring system
(analogous to heme in cytochrome) - has a 5 deoxy adenosine (nucleoside component
- Has a dimethylbenzimidazole ribonucleotide
component
20(No Transcript)
21Attachment of upper ligand is second example of
triphosphate liberation from ATP
- Cobalamin ?
- Coenzyme B12
- The other such reaction
- where this is observed
- is formation of Ado-Met
22Proposed mechanism for methyl-malonyl CoA mutase
- Same hydrogen
- always accounted
- for
23Regulation of fatty acid oxidation
- Fatty acids in the cytosol can either be used to
form triacylglycerols or for b-oxidation - The rate of transfer of fatty-acyl CoA into the
mitochondria (via carnitine) is the rate limiting
step and the important point of regulation, once
in the mitochondria fatty acids are committed to
oxidation
24Malonyl-CoA is a regulatory molecule
- Malonyl-CoA (that we will talk about in more
detail next week in lipid biosynthesis) inhibits
carnitine acyltransferase I
25Also
- When NADH/NAD ratio is high b-hydroxyacyl-CoA
dehydrogenase is inhibited - Also, high concentrations of acetyl-CoA inhibit
thiolase
26Diversity in fatty acid oxidation
- Can occur in
- multiple cellular
- compartments
27- b-oxidation in peroxisomes and glyoxysomes is to
generate biosynthetic precursors, not energy
28Distinctions among isozymes
29Fatty acids can also undergo w oxidation in the ER
- Omega oxidation occurs at the carbon most distal
from the carboxyl group - This pathway involves an oxidase that uses
molecular oxygen, and both an alcohol and
aldehyde dehydrogenase to produce a molecule with
a carboxyl group at each end - Net result is dicarboxylic acids
30(No Transcript)
31Omega oxidation is a minor pathway
- Although omega oxidation is normally a minor
pathway of fatty acid metabolism, failure of
beta-oxidation to proceed normally can result in
increased omega oxidation activity. A lack of
carnitine prevents fatty acids from entering
mitochondria can lead to an accumulation of fatty
acids in the cell and increased omega oxidation
activity
32Alpha oxidation is another minor pathway
33Ketone bodies are formed from acetyl CoA
- Can result from fatty acid oxidation or amino
acid oxidation (for a few that form acetyl-CoA)
34Formation of ketone bodies
35Ketone bodies can be exported for fuel
36Then broken down to get energy (NADH)