26/29: LIPID METABOLISM Flashcards

1
Q

lipids

A
  • major components of cell membranes
  • principal form of stored energy in most organisms
  • some form hormones
  • some anchor some proteins to membranes
  • fats stored in triglycerides (3 FAs in ester linkage to glycerol)
  • common FAs: palmitate C16:0; stereate C18:0; oleate C18:1
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2
Q

why store fats as energy?

A
  • much better source of energy than carbohydrates; because FAs are more reduced
  • v. non polar; stored in anhydrous form so can be stored at v.high density
  • stored fat ~12 weeks energy
  • FAs used as energy source by most tissues; not brain/reed blood cells
  • triglycerides stored in adipose tissue; made of adipocytes, formed droplets in cytoplasm
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3
Q

Degrading triglycerides

A

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  1. Mobilisation - of FAs from triglycerides in adipose tissue
  2. Transport - to other tissues in blood by serum albumin
  3. Activation - of FAs by reaction w/CoA
  4. Transport - into mit.matrix (from cyt), requires conjugation to carnitine
  5. ß Oxidation - produces acetyl coa
  6. Final Oxidation - of acetyl CoA in TCA cycle
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4
Q

Mobilisation and Transport

A
  • released of FAs from TGs in adipose tissue controlled by glucagon and adrenaline
  • activates production of cAMP, activates PKA, activates triglycerol lipase which can hydrolysed off the first FA of the triglyceride by breaking ester bond
  • other lipase take off other 2 FAs
  • FAs can then diffuse through membrane and bind to serum albumin (which has several hydrophobic pockets)
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5
Q

Activation w/CoA and Carnitine Conjugation

A

-thioester forms CoA (reactive thiol) + carb.acid on FA
-acetyl CoA always used as carrier of acyl groups
-2 step reaction catalysed by acyl coA synthetase (requires ATP)
1. FA + ATP; carboxylate displaces outer 2-P of ATP; release Ppi; hydrolysed to 2 Pi; adds adenylate group on FA = acyl adenylate intermediate
2. SH Nu attack displaces adenylate group; end up w/acyl CoA + AMP (uses equivalent of 2ATP)
3. carnitine and acyl CoA transesterification reaction = acyl-carnitine; needed for transport into mit.matrix
-2 enzymes involved:
carnitine acyltransferase I (outer mit. member) swaps CoA for carnitine;
II catalyses reaction where carnitine is taken off and CoA is put back on; end up w/acyl CoA in mit.matrix; needed for transport of long chain FAs

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6
Q

ß oxidation

A
  • starts w/acyl coA
  • initial oxidation of ßC for reactions; releases acetyl coA and a shorter acyl coa (then whole process repeats)
  1. OXIDATION - by acyl coa DH; 3 isoenzymes specific for diff. chain lengths; creates double bond; uses FAD; FADH2 produced feeds into ETC to generate ATP (passes to ETF protein, then e go to Q then Q cycle)
  2. HYDRATION -add water across double bond to get OH
  3. OXIDATION - by NAD = NADH into ETC; oxidise OH on ßC to form keto group
  4. THIOLYTIC CLEAVAGE - CoA comes in and using SH removes 2C and adds CoA to them
  • after first set of 4 reactions, have a C14 acyl Coa and release 2C as acetyl coa (further ox. in TCA)
  • for palmitate, need another 6 cycles of 4 reactions (7 cycles total = 8 acetyl coA)
  • same process just diff. # of cycles for diff. FA length
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7
Q

odd # ß oxidation

A
  • animals can’t synthesize odd #C, but bacteria can
  • in last cycle, end up w/ 1x acetyl coa and 1x propionyl CoA
  • first carboxylation uses bicarbonate and ATP; enzyme is propionyl-coa carboxylase; uses biotin as cofactor
  • gives D-methyl-malonyl CoA and epimerase enzyme converts to L-methyl-malonly-CoA then mutase to succinyl coa (into TCA)
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8
Q

where are FAs oxidised?

A
  • main place is mitochondrial matrix
  • peroxisomes take rare v.long chain FAs and can degrade them to smaller chains which then go to mitochondria (don’t do ß oxidation; use different pathway which don’t generate ATP)
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9
Q

control of FA degradation

A
  1. hormonal control of triglyceride lipase
    - FAs only released if glu is low (stimulated by glucagon) or if there’s potential need for energy (adrenaline); insulin inhibits release
  2. transport into mitochondria
    - enzyme carnitine acyl transferase I is regulated
    - inhibited by malonyl CoA
    - lots of malonyl CoA indicates high [acetyl coA] so don’t need to produce more by oxidising FAs
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10
Q

lipid synthesis overview

A
  • starts w/acetyl coa
  • chemical reverse of FA degradation but diff. set of enzymes; occurs in cytoplasm
  • start w/ reaction cat. by acetyl coa carboxylase; adds CO2 from bicarbonate to acetyl coa = malonyl coa (committed step)
  • acetyl CoA can go into TCA cycle for oxidation, can be used to make AAs, cholesterol, ketone bodies, etc
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11
Q

fatty acid synthesis (carboxylase reaction)

A

1) ACETYL COA CARBOXYLASE REACTION
- same mech as pyruvate carboxylase reaction in gluconeogen
- uses biotin as cofactor (carrier of CO2)
- enzyme has 2 activities; 1. CO2 activated by attachment to N of biotin - needs ATP hydrolysis; 2. activated CO2 transferred onto acetyl CoA = malonyl CoA
- intermediates in FA synthesis are attached to acyl carrier protein (ACP)
- difference of ACP is that it does not have nucleotide; instead is attached to Ser residue on protein

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12
Q

fatty acid synthesis (elongation phase)

A

2) ELONGATION PHASE OF FA SYNTHESIS
- starts w/formation of acetyl-ACP and malonyl-ACP
- mammals: ACP part of FA synthase complex (big multifunctional enzyme complex that carries out all FA synth reactions)
- malonyl CoA-ACP and acetyl-CoA-ACP transferase swap CoA for ACP

  1. condensation (and decarboxylation)
    - gives acetoacetyl-ACP
    - CO2 released is the one that came from bicarbonate in acetyl coA carboxylase reaction; all C in FA comes from acetyl coA
    - malonyl coa acts as activated donor of 2C units; decarboxylation reaction drives condensation reaction w/acetyl-ACP
  2. reduction
    - use NADPH as e donor for reductive biosynthesis
    - keto group reduced to OH
  3. dehydration
    - release water creating double bond
  4. reduction
    - use NADPH
    - get rid of C=C as 2H are added to fully saturate
    - have 4C FA = butyryl-ACP

cycle repeats:
-butyryl-COA + malonyl COA = 6C; add 2C in every round of 4 reactions

  • longest FA can synthesise is palmitate C16; then hydrolysis reaction which releases palmitate from ACP
  • to get shorter FAs, hydrolysis occurs earlier
  • add 2C so mammals cannot synthesise odd # C
  • bacteria use propionyl-CoA as substrate in first reaction
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13
Q

synthesis of longer C16 FAs

A
  • C16 palmitate can be acted on by elongase enzyme to give stereate; that can be elongated further
  • elongase enzymes are on cytoplasmic face of ER
  • desaturase enzyme introduces double bonds = monounsaturated FAs
  • mammals can’t synthesise polyunsaturated FAs (have to come from diet); plants can synthesise them; linoleate is important (C18:2) to synthesise prostaglandins and thromboxins important in inflammatory response of immune system (essential FAs)
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14
Q

citrate cycle

A
  • citrate acts as carrier of acetyl groups out of the mit. membr
  • citrate exchanges for malate
  • citrate can be broken down by citrate lyase in the cytoplasm; using hydrolysis of ATP
  • in mitochondria, have citrate synthase
  • malic enzyme oxidises malate to pyruvate using NADP to make NADPH (can be used in FA synthesis; rest comes from pentose-P pathway); releases CO2
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15
Q

control of FA synthesis by acetyl coA carboxylase

A

Control by phosphorylation:

  • P is inactive (by protein kinase); AMP-K; AMP-dependent kinase; activate AMP; inhibited ATP; responds to energy charge; glucagon/adrenaline activate P
  • deP is active (by phosphoprotein phosphatase, PP2); insulin activates deP

Allosteric control:

  • phosphorylated form can be allosterically activated by citrate = partially active so can start to catalyse formation of malonyl coA to allow FA synthesis to start
  • [citrate] high = TCA cycle slow = [ATP] high so use acetyl CoA for FA synthesis rather than oxidising it; effect of citrate inhibited by palmityl CoA
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