Title: Regulation of Cellular respiration and Related pathways
1Regulation of Cellular respirationandRelated
pathways
2Allosteric regulation Hexokinase is inhibited by
glucose-6-P. If glucose 6 phosphate accumulates
because the rate of glycolysis is low, then
hexokinase is inhibited and the conversion of
glucose to G6P slows. This is a very important
regulatory step, since it prevents the
consumption of too much cellular ATP to form G6P
3PFK is the valve controlling the rate of
glycolysis. -ATP inhibits the phosphofructokinase
reaction. AMP activates the reaction. Thus, when
energy is required, glycolysis is activated. When
energy is plentiful, the reaction is slowed down.
4- Phosphofructokinase is inhibited by citrate. A
large number of compoundsfor example, fatty
acids and amino acidscan be metabolized to TCA
cycle intermediates. High concentrations of
citrate indicate a plentiful supply of
intermediates for energy production therefore,
high activity of the glycolytic pathway is not
required. - This allows regulation between glycolysis and the
Krebs cycle.
5-ATP inhibits pyruvate kinase similar to the
inhibition of PFK. -Pyruvate kinase is also
inhibited by acetyl-Coenzyme A. -Fatty acids
also allosterically inhibit pyruvate kinase,
serving as an indicator that alternative energy
sources are available for the cell.
6- Pyruvate kinase is also activated by
fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. This is an example of
feed-forward activation. If glycolysis is
activated, then the activity of pyruvate kinase
must also be increased in order to allow overall
carbon flow through the pathway. Feed-forward
activation ensures that the enzymes act together.
7Krebs cycle
8Pyruvate oxidation
- -Pyruvate dehydrogenase is allosterically
inhibited by NADH and activated by high
concentrations of NAD. - -A high concentration of NADH in the cell means
that the Electron Transport Chain is full of
electrons and that ATP production is high. - -Inhibition of this enzyme reduces the amount
of Acetyl Co-A that enters into the Krebs cycle.
9- Citrate synthase is inhibited by ATP and NADH.
- Isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) allosterically
activated by ADP and NAD inhibited by ATP and
NADH. - Also, citrate accumulation and transport into the
cytosol leads to activation of fatty acid
biosynthesis (storage of acetyl-CoA as fat).
10Metabolic Pathways
11- Glucose is not the only fuel on which cells
depend. Other carbohydrates, fats, even proteins
may in certain cells or at certain times be used
as a source of ATP. - One of the great advantages of the step-by-step
oxidation of glucose into CO2 and H2O is that
several of the intermediate compounds formed in
the process link glucose metabolism to the
metabolism of other food molecules.
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14- Fats are stored in adipose tissue.
- When needed as an energy source, the fat reserves
are moved out of adipose tissue, and broken down
into glycerol and fatty acids in the liver - The glycerol portion of the molecule may be
converted into DHAP and then to G3P and enters
the glycolytic pathway. - The glycerol may also be converted into glucose.
This process is called gluconeogenesis. - Fatty acids are converted into molecules of
acetyl-CoA , in a process called b-oxidation, and
are oxidized in the Krebs cycle of the
mitochondria.
15- B oxidation involves the successive removal of
two-carbon acetyl groups from the fatty acid.
Each cleavage requires one ATP, but produces 1
NADH and 1 FADH2. - The result is that Palmitic Acid, a 16-carbon
fatty acid, produces 131 ATP molecules, whereas 2
glucose molecules produce 73 ATPs. - By mass, lipids produce about twice the energy
yield of carbohydrates
16- When fats are being used as the primary energy
source such as in starvation, fasting or
untreated diabetes, an excess amount of acetyl
CoA is produced, and is converted into acetone
and ketone bodies. This produces the sweet smell
of acetone on the breath, noticeable in a
diabetic state.
17- The amino acids liberated by the hydrolysis of
proteins can also serve as fuel. First, the
nitrogen is removed, a process called
deamination. The remaining fragments then enter
the respiratory pathway at several points. - For example the amino acids Gly, Ser, Ala, and
Cys are converted into pyruvic acid and enter the
mitochondria to be respired. - Acetyl-CoA and several intermediates in the
Krebs cycle serve as entry points for most of
the other amino acids.
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19- These links permit the respiration of excess fats
and proteins in the diet. - No special mechanism of cellular respiration is
needed by those animals that depend largely on
ingested fats (e.g., many birds) or proteins
(e.g., carnivores) for their energy supply. - Many of the points that connect carbohydrate
metabolism to the catabolism of fats and proteins
serve as two-way valves. They provide points of
entry not only for the catabolism (cellular
respiration) of fatty acids, glycerol, and amino
acids, but for their synthesis (anabolism) as
well. Thus the catabolic breakdown of starches
can lead (through acetyl-CoA and PGAL) to the
synthesis of fat.