Title: MAMMAMALIAN METABOLISM
1MAMMAMALIAN METABOLISM
- Integration and Hormonal Regulation
2Objective
- Consider the major metabolic pathways in the
context of the whole organism
3Issues with multicellular organism
- Division of labor cell differentiation
- Organ/Organ system specialization
- Characteristic fuel requirements
- Characteristic metabolic patterns
- Hormone Regulation
- Integrate/coordinate metabolic functions of
different tissue - Maximize fuel/fuel precursor allocations to each
organ
4Approach
- Recapitulate major pathways and control systems
- Consider how these processes are divided among
tissues and organs - Consider major hormones that control these
metabolic functions
5Major pathways and Strategies of energy metabolism
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7Glycolysis
- Metabolic degradation of glucose
- Glucose is oxidized to
- 2 molecules of pyruvate
- 2 molecules of ATP
- 2 molecules of NADH
8Anaerobic Conditions
- Pyruvate converted into Lactate
- Requires oxidation of NADH
- Recycles NADH
- In yeast
- Pyruvate converted into ethanol
9Aerobic Conditions
- Glycolysis first step for further oxidationof
glucose - NADH is processed through Oxidative
Phosphorylation - Regenerates oxidized NAD
- Generates ATP
10Regulation of glycolysis
- Phosphofructokinase (PFK)
- Activated by
- Increase in AMP, ADP
- Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate
- Inhibited by
- Increase in ATP
- Citrate
11Regulation of glycolysis
- Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6P)
- Influenced by cAMP
- Liver
- Increase cAmp, decrease F2,6P
- Muscle
- Increase cAmp, increase F2,6P
- Mediated by
- glucogon
- Epinephrine
- norepinephrine
12Gluconeogenesis
- Synthesis of glucose from simplier,
noncarbohydrate precusor - Pyruvate
- Lactate
- Oxaloacetate
- Glycerol
- Gluconeogenic amino acids
13Gluconeogenesis
- Mainly through pathways in the liver
- Major intermediate oxaloacetate
- Converted to phospoenolpyruvate
- Then, into glucose
- Irreversible Steps
- PFK bypass Fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase
- Hexokinase bypass glucose 6-phosphatase
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15Gluconeogenesis
- Reciprical regulation of PFK and FBPase
- Regulates rate and direction through glycolysis
and gluconeogenesis - Both may be active simultaneously
16Glycogen degradation and synthesis
- Storage form of glucose in most animals
- In liver and muscle
- Enters glycolysis
- Catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase
- Converted into glucose 6-phosphate (G6P)
- Opposed by glycogen synthase
- Enzymes respond to
- Glucagon
- epinephrine
17Fatty Acid Degradation and Synthesis
- Degradation beta-oxidation
- In 2 carbon chunks
- Form acetyl-CoA
- Regulated by FA
- Lipase in adipose cells hormone sensitive
- cAMP mediated
- Stimulated by
- Glucogon
- Epinephrine
- Inhibited by
- insulin
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19Fatty Acid Degradation and Synthesis
- Synthesis from acetly CoA
- Acetyl-CoA carboxylase
- Activated by citrate
- Inhibited by intermediate (palmitoyl-CoA)
- Long term regulation
- Stimulated by insulin
- Inhibited by fasting
20Citric Acid Cycle
- Acetyl CoA oxidized to
- CO2
- H20
- Concomitant production of
- NADH
- FADH2
- Glycogenic Amino Acids
- Enter at a cycle intermediate
21Citric Acid Cycle
- Regulatory enzymes
- Citrate synthase
- Isocitrate dehydrogenase
- Alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
- Controlled by
- Substrate availability
- Feedback inhibition
22Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Major products
- NADH is oxidized to NAD
- FADH2 is oxidized to FAD
- Coupled to synthesis of ATP
- Rate dependent upon
- ATP
- ADP
- Pi
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24Pentose phosphate Pathway
- Generates from G6P
- Ribose 5-phosphate
- NADPH
- Catalyzed by
- Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase
- Regulated by
- NADP
- NADPH is needed for biosynthesis
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26Amino Aciddegradation and synthesis
- Excess AA
- Degraded to common metabolic intermediates
- Most paths
- Begin with transamination to alpha-keto acid
- Eventually amino group transferred to urea
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28Amino Aciddegradation and synthesis
- Ketogenic AA
- E.g. leucine, lysine, tryptophane,
phenylalanine, tyrosine, isoleucine - Only leucine, lysine exclusively ketogenic
- Converted into
- Acetyl-CoA
- Acetoacetyl-CoA
- Can not be glucose precursors
29Amino Aciddegradation and synthesis
- Glucogenic AA
- Converted into glucose precursors
- Precursors
- Pyruvate
- Oxaloacetate
- Alpha-ketoglutarate
- Succinyl CoA
- fumarate
30Amino Aciddegradation and synthesis
- Other situations
- 4 AA are both ketogenic and glucogenic
- Tryptophan,Phenylalanine,Tyrosine,Isoleucine
- Essential AA cannot be synthesized
- Histidine, Isoleucine, Leucine, Lysine,
Methionine, Phenylalanine, Threonine, Tryptophan,
Valine, and Arginine (in young) - Nonessential AA can be synthesized
31Two Key Compounds
- Acetyl-CoA, pyruvate
- At metabolic crossroads
32Acetyl-CoA
- Degradation products of most fuels
- Oxidized to CO2 and H2O in citric acid cycle
- Can be used to synthesize FA
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34Pyruvate
- Product of
- Glycolysis
- Dehyddrogenation of lactate
- Some glucogenic AA
- Can yield acetyl-CoA
- Enter CAC
- Biosynthesis of FA
35Pyruvate
- Carboxylated via pyruvate carboxylase
- Forms oxaloacetate
- Replenishes intermediates
- Gluconeogenesis
- Via phosphoenolpyruvate
- Bypass of irreversible step in glycolysis
- Precursor to several AA
36Sites
- Cytosolic
- Glycolysis
- Glycogen synthesis, degradation
- FA synthesis
- Pentose Phosphate pathway
37Sites
- Mitochondrial
- FA degradation
- Citric Acid cycle
- Oxidative Phosphorylation
38Sites
- Both
- Gluconeogenesis
- AA degradation
- Location controlled by specific membrane
transporters - Esp. inner mitochondrial membrane
- Controls flow of metabolites
39Regulation
- Intercellular Regulating Mechanisms
- Hormones
- Trigger cellular response
- Short-term second messenger
- Long-term protein synthesis
- Molecular Level
- Feedback
- Substrate availability
40Tissue Specific Metabolism
41TSM LIVER
- Liver central processing and distributing role
- Furnishes other tissues/organs with appropriate
mix of nutrients via the blood - Other tissues and organs are termed extrahepatic
or peripheral - Handles carbohydrates, amino acids and fats
42TSM LIVER
- Extremely adaptable to prevailing conditions
- Can shift enzymatic ally from one nutrient
emphasis to another within hours - Responds to the demands of extrahepatic
tissues/organs for fuels - Maintains blood levels of nutrients
- Well located for the task
43Sugars
- Role as Blood glucose Buffer
- Absorbs and releases glucose
- Response to levels of
- Glucagon
- Epinepherine
- Insulin
- Response to glucose
44Glucose absorption
- Hepatocytes are permeable to glucose
- Not insulin dependent
- Absorption driven by blood glucose
- Convert glucose to G6P
- Catalyzed by glucokinase (not hexokinase)
- Blood glucose
- Normally lower than max phosporylation rate of
glucokinase - Uptake about equal to blood glucose
45Glucose absorption
- Other monosaccarides
- Can be converted to G6P
- Includes
- Fructose
- Galactose
- Mannose
46Release of glucose
- No food
- Blood glucose levels drop
- Liver keeps blood glucose at about 4mM
47Fate of glucose
- Varies with metabolic requirement
- G6P to glucose
- Requires glucose 6-phosphatase
- Blood transport to peripheral organs
- G6P to glycogen
- When demand for glucose is low
- Glycogen to G6P
- When demand for glucose is low
- Signaled by increased
- Glucagon
- epinephrine
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49Fate of glucose
- G6P to acetyl-CoA
- By glycolysis
- Need pyruvate dehydrogenase
- Used for synthesis of
- FA
- Phospholipids
- Cholesterol to bile acids
50Fate of glucose
- Substrate for the Pentose phosphate pathway
- NADPH needed for biosynthesis of
- Fatty acids
- Cholesterol
- D-ribose 5-phosphate
- precursor for nucleotide biosynthesis
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52Fate of Fatty Acids
- Increased demand for metabolic fuel
- FA converted into acetyl-CoA into ketone bodies
- KB are transportable form of acetyl
- Exported via blood to tissues
- Up to one third of energy in heart
- 60-70 in brain during prolonged fast
- Major oxidative fuel of the liver
- FA converted into acetyl-CoA to CAC
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54Fate of Fatty Acids
- Decreased demand for metabolic fuel
- FA converted into liver lipids
- Some acetyl from FA (and glucose) converted into
cholesterol - Specialized mechanisms for transport of lipids in
blood - Converted into lipoproteins, then to adipose for
storage - Bound to albumin as free FA, transported in blood
to skeletal and cardiac muscle
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56FA degradation and synthesis
- Compartmentalized
- Prevent futile cycling
- FA oxidation in mitochondria
- FA synthesis in cytosol
57FA degradation and synthesis
- Interactions
- Carnitine Palmitoly Transferase I (CPTI)
- Transport FA into mitochondria
- CPTI inhibited by Malonyl-CoA MCoA)
- MCoA is key intermediate in FA synthesis
- When FA are synthesized, can not transport FA
into mitochondria
58FA degradation and synthesis
- Interactions
- When metabolic demand for fuel is low
- acetyl-CoA comes from glucose
- When metabolic demand for fuel is high
- Inhibits FA synthesis
- FA into Mitochondria into ketone bodies
59Fatty Acids
- Liver can not use Ketone Bodies
- Lacks 3-ketoacyl-CoA-transferase
- When metabolic demand is increased
- Fatty Acids are the liver's main source of
acetyl-CoA
60Fate of Amino Acids
- AA degraded to variety of intermediates
- Glucogenic AA
- Pyruvate
- Citric acid intermediates
- Ketogenic AA
- Ketone bodies (sometimes)
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62Fate of Amino Acids
- After about 6 hour fast
- Glycogen stores are depleted
- Gluconeogenesis from AA
- Mostly muscle protein
- Degrated to alanine and glutamine
- Animals can not convert Fat to Glucose
- Proteins are an important fuel reserve
63Fate of Amino Acids
- AA degraded to variety of intermediates
- Glucogenic AA
- Pyruvate
- Citric acid intermediates
- Ketogenic AA
- Ketone bodies (sometimes)
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65TSM Brain
- High Respiratory Rate
- About 2 of body weight 20 of resting O2
consumption - Independent of activity level
- Most power (Na-K)-ATPase
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67TSM Brain
- Most conditions
- Only fuel glucose
- Extended fasting ketone body
- Needs steady suppy
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69TSM Brain
- With blood glucose below half normal
- Brain dysfunction
- Drop more
- Coma
- Irreversible damage
- death
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71TSM Muscle
- Major Fuels
- Glucose from Glycogen
- FA
- Ketone Bodies
- Storage Glycogen
- Can Not Export Glucose
- No gluconeogenesis
- No G-6-phosphatase
- No receptors for Glucagon
72TSM Muscle
- Energy Reservoir
- Proteins into Amino Acids
- Amino Acids into Pyruvate
- Pyruvate into Alanine into the liver into
pyruvate into glucose
73Epinephrine Receptors
- Regulates glycogen breakdown and synthesis
- Increase cAMP in muscle
- Activates glycogen breakdown
- Activates glycolysis
- Increase glucose consumption
- Epinephine acts independently of glycogen
- With insulin
- Regulates general blood glucose levels
74Muscle Contraction
- Skeletal Muscle at rest
- about 30 of O2 consumption
- Can increase 25 in exercise
- Shifts to glycolysis of G6P from glycogen
- Much of G6P into Lactate
- Cori Cycle
- Respiratory burden shifted to liver
- Delay of O2 dept
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76Muscle Fatigue
- Definition
- Inability of muscle to maintain a given power
output - About 20 drop in contraction strength
- Aerobic ( Red Fiber slow twitch)
- Difficult to fatigue
- Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Good vascular supply
- myoglobin
77Muscle Fatigue
- Anaerobic
- With in about 20 sec in max exertion
- I.E. Tetanic Exertion
- Results from sustained contraction of white
fibers (fast twitch) - Depends on glycolysis
- Creatine phosphate (CP)
- Glygogen storage
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80Cause of Fatigue
- Drop in intramuscular pH
- From 7.0 to as low a 6.4
- From glycolytic proton generation
- How does increased acidity cause muscle fatigue?
- Maybe decresed enzyme activity?
- Esp PFK
81TSM Cardiac Muscle
- Continuous activity
- Aerobic
- Many mitochondria
- Fuel
- FA fuel of choice
- Ketone bodies
- Stored glycogen to glucose (with heavy workload)
- Pyruvate
- lacctate
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84TSM Adipose Tissue/Adipocytes
- General Metabolism
- Location
- Under skin
- Abdominal cavity
- In skeletal muscle
- Around blood vessels
- In mammary glands
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86TSM Adipose Tissue/Adipocytes
- General Metabolism
- Quanity
- Normal male about 21
- Normal female about 25
- Functions
- Energy storage
- Maintenance of metabolic homeostasis (second only
to the liver)
87TSM Adipose Tissue/Adipocytes
- General Metabolism
- Source of Fatty Acids
- Liver
- Diet
- To form stored triglycerides
- Fatty acyl-CoA esterified with PGA
- Glycerol-3-Phosphate
- Formed from reduction of DAP
- Glycolytically generated from glucose
- Adipose cells lack enzyme to phosphorylate
endogenoous glycerol
88TSM Adipose Tissue/Adipocytes
- General Metabolism
- Hydrolyze triglycerides to Fatty Acids and
Glycerol - In response to levels of
- Glucogon
- Epinephrine
- Insulin
- Catalyzed by hormone-sensitive lipase
- Increased PGA reform triglycerides
- Decreased PGA release FA to blood
89TSM Adipose Tissue/Adipocytes
- Rate of Glucose uptake by adipocytes
- Regulated by
- Insulin
- Glucose availability
- Controlling factor in
- Formation of triglycerides
- Mobilization of triglycerides
90TSM Blood
- Mediates metabolism between organs
- Transports
- Nutrients
- Small intestine to liver
- Liver to adipose tissue, other organs
- Waste products
- Tissues to kidneys
- Respiratory gases
- O2 lungs to tissues
- CO2 tissues to lungs
- Regulatory molecules (hormones)
91TSM Blood
- Composition
- About 5-6L in average adult
- Cells/formed elements
- Erythrocytes
- Leukocytes
- Platelets
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93TSM Blood
- Composition
- Plasma
- 90 water
- 10 solutes
- Plasma proteins
- Inorganic components
- Organic components
- Major effort of homeostasis to keep values within
normal ranges - Blood glucose levels are regulated by
- Epinephrine, glucagon and insulin
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