Title: Chapter 15 (abbreviated): Principles of Metabolic Regulation
1Chapter 15 (abbreviated) Principles of Metabolic
Regulation
- CHEM 7784
- Biochemistry
- Professor Bensley
2CHAPTER 15 (Abbreviated) Principles of Metabolic
Regulation
Todays Objectives (To learn and understand the)
- Principles of regulation in biological systems
- Glycolysis vs. gluconeogenesis which one is
turned on and which one is turned off?
3(No Transcript)
4Homeostasis
- Organisms maintain homeostasis by keeping the
concentrations of most metabolites at steady
state - In steady state, the rate of synthesis of a
metabolite equals the rate of breakdown of this
metabolite
5Principles of Regulation
- The flow of metabolites through the pathways is
regulated to maintain homeostasis - Sometimes, the levels of required metabolites
must be altered very rapidly - Need to increase the capacity of glycolysis
during the action - Need to reduce the capacity of glycolysis after
the action - Need to increase the capacity of gluconeogenesis
after successful action
6Feedback Inhibition
- In many cases, ultimate products of metabolic
pathways directly or indirectly inhibit their own
biosynthetic pathways - ATP inhibits the commitment step of glycolysis
7Factors that Affect the Activity of Enzymes
8Some Enzymes in the Pathway Limit the Flux of
Metabolites More than Others
- Hexokinase and phosphofructokinase are
appropriate targets for regulation of glycolytic
flux
9Elasticity Coefficient Measures the
Responsiveness to Substrate
10Control of Glycogen Synthesis
- Insulin signaling pathway
- increases glucose import into muscle
- stimulates the activity of muscle hexokinase
- activates glycogen synthase
- Increased hexokinase activity enables activation
of glucose - Glycogen synthase makes glycogen for energy
storage
11UDP-Glucose
12Isozymes may Show Different Kinetic Properties
- Isozymes are different enzymes that catalyze the
same reaction - They typically share similar sequences
- Their regulation is often different
13Glycolysis vs. Gluconeo-genesis
14Regulation of Phosphofructokinase-1
- The conversion of fructose-6-phosphate to
fructose 1,6-bisphosphate is the commitment step
in glycolysis - ATP is a negative effector
- Do not spend glucose in glycolysis if there is
plenty of ATP
15Regulation of Phosphofructokinase 1 and Fructose
1,6-Bisphosphatase
- Go glycolysis if AMP is high and ATP is low
- Go gluconeogenesis if AMP is low
16Regulation by Fructose 2,6-Bisphosphate
- F26BP activates phosphofructokinase (glycolytic
enzyme) - F26BP inhibits fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase
(gluconeogenetic enzyme)
17Regulation by Fructose 2,6-Bisphosphate
- Go glycolysis if F26BP is high
- Go gluconeogenesis if F26BP is low
18Chapter 15 Summary
In this chapter, we learned that
- living organisms regulate the flux of metabolites
via metabolic pathways by - increasing or decreasing enzyme concentrations
- activating or inactivating key enzymes in the
pathway - the activity of key enzymes in glycolysis and
gluconeogenesis is tightly regulated via various
activating and inhibiting metabolites