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High Energy Compounds

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High Energy Compounds ... Phosphate is removed from ATP only when the reaction is coupled via enzyme catalysis to some ... which initiates fatty acid biosynthesis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: High Energy Compounds


1
  • High Energy Compounds

2
  • ATP often serves as an energy source.
  • Hydrolytic cleavage of one or both of the "high
    energy" bonds of ATP is coupled to an
    energy-requiring (non-spontaneous)
    reaction. (Examples presented earlier.)
  • AMP functions as an energy sensor regulator of
    metabolism.
  • When ATP production does not keep up with needs,
    a higher portion of a cell's adenine nucleotide
    pool is AMP.
  • AMP stimulates metabolic pathways that produce
    ATP.
  • Some examples of this role involve direct
    allosteric activation of pathway enzymes by AMP.
  • Some regulatory effects of AMP are mediated by
    the enzyme AMP-Activated Protein Kinase.

3
High energy bonds
  • Phosphoanhydride bonds (formed by splitting out
    H2O between 2 phosphoric acids or between
    carboxylic phosphoric acids) have a large
    negative ?G of hydrolysis.

4
  • Why do phosphoanhydride linkages have a high DG
    of hydrolysis? Contributing factors for ATP PPi
    include
  • Resonance stabilization of products of hydrolysis
    exceeds resonance stabilization of the compound
    itself.
  • Electrostatic repulsion between negatively
    charged phosphate oxygen atoms favors
    separation of the phosphates.

5
  • Compounds with ? G more negative than 7 Kcal/mole
    or 30 KJ/ mole are regarded as high energy
    compounds.

6
ATP has special roles in energy coupling Pi
transfer. DG of phosphate hydrolysis from ATP is
intermediate among examples below. ATP can thus
act as a Pi donor, ATP can be synthesized by Pi
transfer, e.g., from PEP.
7
Roles of "high energy" bonds
  • Energy transfer or storage
  • ATP, PPi, polyphosphate, phosphocreatine
  • Group transfer
  • ATP, Coenzyme A
  • Transient signal
  • cyclic AMP

8
Examples of other high energy compounds
1- Phosphocreatine another compound with a
"high energy" phosphate linkage, is used in nerve
muscle for storage of P bonds.
  • Phosphocreatine is produced
  • when ATP levels are high.
  • When ATP is depleted during
  • exercise in muscle, phosphate is
  • transferred from phosphocreatine
  • to ADP, to replenish ATP.

9
  • 2- Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), involved in ATP
    synthesis in Glycolysis, has a very high ?G of Pi
    hydrolysis.
  • Removal of Pi from ester linkage in PEP is
    spontaneous because the enol spontaneously
    converts to a ketone.
  • The ester linkage in PEP is an exception.

10
3- A thioester forms between a carboxylic acid
a thiol (SH), e.g., the thiol of coenzyme A.
Thioesters are linkages. In contrast to
phosphate esters, thioesters have a large
negative DG of hydrolysis.
11
  • Kinetics vs Thermodynamics
  • A high activation energy barrier usually causes
    hydrolysis of a high energy bond to be very
    slow in the absence of an enzyme catalyst.
  • This kinetic stability is essential to the role
    of ATP and other compounds with bonds.
  • If ATP would rapidly hydrolyze in the absence of
    a catalyst, it could not serve its important
    roles in energy metabolism and phosphate
    transfer.
  • Phosphate is removed from ATP only when the
    reaction is coupled via enzyme catalysis to some
    other reaction useful to the cell, such as
    transport of an ion, phosphorylation of glucose,
    or regulation of an enzyme by phosphorylation of
    a serine residue.

12
Adenylate Energy Charge
  • Many reactions in metabolism are controlled by
    the energy status of the cell.
  • One index of the energy status is the energy
    charge, which is proportional to the mole
    fraction of ATP plus half the mole fraction of
    ADP, given that ATP contains two anhydrid bonds
    whereas ADP contains one.
  • It is a measure of the relative concentration of
    high-energy phospho - anhydride bonds available
    in the adenylate pool.
  • The energy charge can have a value ranging from 0
    (all AMP) to 1 (all ATP).

13
Cont
  • Hence the energy charge is defined as
  • Energy charge ATP1/2ADP
  • Adenylate Kinase catalyze the following
    reactions
  • 1- ATP ADP Pi
  • 2- ATP AMP PPi
  • 3- ATPAMP 2ADP
  • ATP ADP AMP

14
Cont
  • Danil Atkinson showed that ATP-generating
    pathways (catabolic) are inhibited by a high
    energy charge.
  • It is evident that control of these pathways has
    evolved to maintain the energy charge within
    rather narrow limits. In other words the energy
    charge like the pH of a cell is buffered. The
    energy charge of most cells range from 0.8 to
    0.95.
  • A high Energy Charge signals the slow down of
    metabolism. A low Energy Charge signals up
    regulation of metabolism.

15
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16
Energy charge regulate metabolism

High concentrations of ATP inhibit the relative
rates of a typical ATP-generating (catabolic)
pathway and stimulate the typical ATP-utilizing
(anabolic) pathway.
17
  • Regulatory enzymes in energy-producing catabolic
    pathways show greater activity at low energy
    charge, but the activity falls off sharply as AEC
    approaches 1.0.
  • In contrast, regulatory enzymes of anabolic
    sequences are not very active at low energy
    charge, but their activities increase as AEC
    nears 1.0 .
  • These contrasting responses are termed R, for
    ATP-regenerating, and U, for ATP-utilizing.

18
  • Regulatory enzymes such as PFK and pyrvuate
    kinase in glycolysis follow the R response curve
    as AEC is varied.
  • Note that PFK itself is an ATP-utilizing enzyme,
    using ATP to phosphorylate fructose-6-phosphate
    to yield fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. Nevertheless,
    because PFK acts physiologically as the valve
    controlling the flux of carbohydrate down the
    catabolic pathways of cellular respiration that
    lead to ATP regeneration, it responds as an R
    enzyme to energy charge.

19
  • Regulatory enzymes in anabolic pathways, such as
    acetyl-CoA carboxylase, which initiates fatty
    acid biosynthesis, respond as U enzymes.

20
Cellular energy homoeostasis maintenance of
energy state by creatine kinase (CK) and
adenylate kinase (AK) isoenzymes
  • A fundamental principle in multicellular
    organisms is the strict maintenance of stable
    concentrations of intracellular oxygen and ATP as
    the universal energy currency of biological
    systems, as well as the tight regulation of
    energy utilization with energy supply.

21
  • Upon activation of excitable cells, such as
    skeletal and cardiac muscle, or brain and nerve
    cells, ATP turnover rates may increase by several
    orders of magnitude within seconds, but ATP
    remains remarkably stable and ATP/ADP ratios, as
    well as ATP/AMP ratios, are maintained as high as
    possible to guarantee optimal efficiency for
    cellular ATPases that are at work to perform a
    multitude of energy-dependent cellular
    activities, such as muscle contraction, cell
    motility and ion pumping.

22
  • ATP homoeostasis and maintenance of high ATP/ADP
    and ATP/AMP ratios are facilitated by the action
    of two well-known enzyme systems, working as very
    fast and efficient energy safeguards. First, CKs,
    efficiently regenerating ATP at the expense of
    phosphocreatine (PCr) by the following reaction
  • PCr ADP ATP Cr

CKs
23
  • Second, Adenylate kinase (AK), reconverting two
    ADP molecules into one ATP and one AMP.
  • These two enzymes, working together in an
    subcellular energy distribution network or
    circuit temporally and, due to their subcellular
    microcompartmentation, to buffer subcellular ATP
    level.

24
  • A common cause of many diseases, like cardiac
    insufficiency, cardiac hypertrophy as well as
    most of the neurodegenerative pathologies, is a
    generally lowered cellular PCr/ATP ratio,
    indicating a lowered energy state of cells and
    tissues.
  • This is often accompanied by elevated calcium
    levels, leading to chronic calcium overload with
    its host of negative consequences on cell
    function and viability.
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