9.2 Glycolysis [HY] Flashcards

1
Q

What cells can carry out glycolysis?

A
  • All cells
  • being unable to carry out glycolysis is incompatible with life
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2
Q

Why do RBCs undergo glycolysis?

A
  • Glycolysis is the only energy-yielding pathway available because red blood cells lack mitochondria, which are required for the citric acid cycle, electron transport chain, oxidative phosphorylation, and fatty acid metabolism (β oxidation).
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3
Q

Glycolysis

A
  • a cytoplasmic pathway that converts glucose into two pyruvate molecules, releasing a modest amount of energy captured in two substratelevel phosphorylations and one oxidation reaction
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4
Q

What happens (in glycolytic cycle) when either the mitochondria or oxygen is lacking? (such as in
erythrocytes or exercising skeletal muscle)

A
  • glycolysis may occur anaerobically, although some of the available energy is lost
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5
Q

What is glycolytic process for in the liver?

A
  • part of the process by which excess glucose is converted to fatty acids for storage
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6
Q

What’re the first step in glucose metabolism?

A
  • phosphorylation by kinase enzymes inside the cell to prevent glucose from leaving via the transporter
  • kinases attach a phosphate group from ATP to their substrates.
  • convert glucose to glucose 6-
    phosphate
  • Because the GLUT transporters are specific for glucose (not phosphorylated glucose), the glucose gets “trapped”
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7
Q

Hexokinase

A
  • widely distributed in tissues and is inhibited by its product, glucose 6-phosphate.
  • Present in most tissues
  • Low Km (reaches maximum
    velocity at low [glucose])
  • Inhibited by glucose 6-
    phosphate
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8
Q

Glucokinase

A
  • Present in hepatocytes and pancreatic β-islet cells (along
    with GLUT 2, acts as the glucose sensor)
  • High Km (acts on glucose proportionally to its concentration)
  • Induced by insulin in hepatocytes
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9
Q

Phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1)

A
  • the rate-limiting enzyme and main control point in glycolysis
  • inhibited by ATP and citrate
  • activated by AMP
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10
Q

Citrate

A
  • an intermediate of the citric acid cycle
  • high levels of citrate imply that the cell is producing sufficient energy
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11
Q

Which pathway allows production of glycogen & fatty acids (which are storage molecules) instead of them being used for ATP?

*overrides the inhibition caused by ATP

A

Insulin-> PFK-2 -> Fructose 6-P -> Fructose 2,6 biphosphate -> PFK-1

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12
Q

What pathway provides energy for ATP synthesis by oxidative phosphorylation?

A

Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase -> inorganic phosphate to glycogen-3-phosphate (makes) -> 1,3 biphosphoglycerate & NAD to NADH (if aerobic) -> oxidative phosphorylation to ATP

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13
Q

What is the pathway that has substrate-level phosphorylation forming ATP and 3-phosphglycerate?

A

3-Phosphoglycerate Kinase (takes phosphate from) -> 1,3 biphosphoglycerate [1,3 BPG] (to) -> ADP (makes) -> ATP + 3-phosphoglycerate

*only ATP gained in anaerobic respiration

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14
Q

What is the pathway for substrate lvl phosphorylation of ADP using high-energy substrate phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)?

A

PK1 rxn (feed forward rxn) -> Fructose 1,6 biphosphate -> pyruvate kinase (takes p from) -> [PEP] Phosphoenolpyruvate (gives to) -> ADP (makes) -> ATP

*only ATP gained in anaerobic respiration

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15
Q

Fermentation

A
  • Occurs in the absence of oxygen
  • key fermentation enzyme in mammalian cells is lactate dehydrogenase which oxidizes
    NADH to NAD+, replenishing the oxidized coenzyme for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
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16
Q

What would happen without mitochondria and oxygen?

A
  • glycolysis would stop when all the available NAD+ had been reduced to NADH. By reducing pyruvate to lactate and oxidizing NADH to NAD+, lactate dehydrogenase prevents this potential problem from developing
17
Q

What happens when oxygenation is poor (during strenuous exercise in
skeletal muscle, a heart attack, or a stroke)?

A
  • most cellular ATP is generated
    by anaerobic glycolysis, and lactate production increases
18
Q

What is the result of both both mammalian and yeast fermentation?

A
  • replenishing NAD+
19
Q

What is the pathway for triacylglycerol synthesis?

A

Fructose 1,6 biphosphate (forms) -> DHAP -> isomerized to glycerol 3-phosphate -> glycerol

*glycerol is the backbone of triacylglycerols

20
Q

Irreversible steps of glycolysis (Mnemonic)

A

How Glycolysis Pushes Forward the Process: Kinases
- Hexokinase
- Glucokinase
- PFK-1
- Pyruvate Kinase

21
Q

Mutases

A
  • enzymes that move a functional group from one place in a molecule to another
22
Q

RBC pathway for ATP production?

A
  • have bisphosphoglycerate mutase, which produces 2,3-
    bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG) from 1,3-BPG
  • the phosphate is moved from the 1-position to the 2-position. - 2,3-BPG binds allosterically to the β-chains of hemoglobin A (HbA) and decreases its affinity for oxygen.
  • Causes right shift of oxygen dissociation curve
23
Q

Physiological Changes that promote right shift of dissociation curve (the Bohr effect)?

A
  • High 2,3-BPG
  • Low pH
  • High [H+]
  • High pCO2
24
Q

Why does HbF have a higher affinity for oxygen than
maternal HbA?

A
  • B/c 2,3-BPG doesn’t bind well to fetal hemoglobin
25
Q

Rate-limiting enzymes

A
  • Glycolysis: phosphofructokinase-1
  • Fermentation: lactate dehydrogenase
  • Glycogenesis: glycogen synthase
  • Glycogenolysis: glycogen phosphorylase
  • Gluconeogenesis: fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase
  • Pentose Phosphate Pathway: glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
26
Q

How many carbons are involved in Glycolysis?

A

Start with 6 carbon glucose and make two three carbon molecules of pyruvate