6.1 BCHM - Biochem of Neuropathies Flashcards

1
Q

rVitamin B1 (thiamine), B2 (riboflavin), B3 (niacin), B5 (pantothenate). are all involved in ________?

Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), B7 (biotin), B9 (folic acid), B12 (cobalamins). are all invovled in _________?

A

First group = pure energy metabolism.

Second group = biosynthesis.

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2
Q

What causes neural tube defects in developing babies?

A

Not enough folic acid.

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3
Q

Where does folate come from naturally, how does this differ from the kind that the goverment puts in our foods?

A

Folates are acids found in green leafy veggies and in liver.

The government puts a folic acid in our foods which is a type of folate that is highly oxidized, plays no biological role, and very little is found in our body. However, it can be reduced to form biologically relevant folates.

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4
Q

Natural folates are reduced, why are these susceptible to random destruction by oxidation reactions? Why are folic acid supplements more stable?

A

Molecular oxygen readily accepts high energy reduced electrons and causes this destruction.

Supplements are already oxidized.

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5
Q

Folic acid dietary supplements contain folate which is more stable than natural reduced folates. In the liver the following conversion occurs.. Name the enzymes?

A

Folate binds dihydrofolate reductase.

This enzyme reduces folate -> dihydrofolate -> tetrahydrofolate.

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6
Q

Do the reduction reactions of folate require energy? What is the cofactor?

A

Reduction is occuring, therefore energy is in fact needed.

NADPH (biosynthetic energy molecule) powers this reaction.

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7
Q

How are reduced forms of folate retained in the cell? Think about the implications of lacking this substance.

A

Retained by linking several glutamate residues.

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8
Q

Tetrahydrofolate is converted into various folates that contain single carbon groups! These single carbon groups are important for donating __1___? ___2___ synthesis requires folates. Associate each form of folate with what it helps synthesize.

A

1) Donate one-carbon gropu to biosynthetic reactions.
2) DNA synthesis.
3) Formyl groups -> purines

methyl groups -> thymine bases

methionine -> S-adenosylmethioning (used in methylating histones)

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9
Q

Why does a deficiency in folate lead to spina bifida + anemia?

A

Neurons (in developing fetuses) and erythropoesis (in children/ adults) divide rapidly, rapidly dividing cells are especially sensitive to folate deficiency because they require DNA.

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10
Q

Check out the image below. How do 5-fluoruracil and methotrexate work as cancer therapeutics?

A

5-fluorouracil: mimics uracil, binds thymidylate synthase, inhibits production of thymine.

Methotrexate: mimics tetrahydrofolate binds to dihydrofolate reductase, and inhibits purine biosynthesis.

Basically they halt DNA synthesis.

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11
Q

Vitamin B12 is necessary for the regeneration of methionine. Methionine is used in the creation of SAM. Folates, SAM, B12 are at center of one carbon metabolism: they cycle 1 carbon units among themselves and undergo various cycles to donate carbon atoms to various biosynthetic pathways. What is the methyl-folate trap hypothesis?

A

B12 deficiency traps tetrahydrofolate in methyl form causing a functional folate deficiency.

SAM synthetase is only reaction in body that uses N5-methyltetrahydrofolate, B12 deficiency traps this form of folate => depletion of other forms of folate.

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12
Q

What is SAM (S-adenosylmethionine) role in the body?

A

Bodies most prevalent cofactor for donation of methyl groups in biosynthetic pathways.

Activates methyl groups by combing ATP w/ methionine.

Ex: donates methyl groups to convert: norepinephrin -> epinephrine. serotonin -> melatonin.

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