Session 5 (2) - Byproducts of metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

How are ROS’s formed?

A

Some electrons leaked from electron transport chain (1+3), prematurely reducing oxygen to super oxide radicals (O(x2)-. Oxygen molecule with unpaired electron.

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2
Q

What do ROS cause damage to?

A

DNA, protein and membranes

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3
Q

What enzyme catalyses formation of hydrogen peroxide and oxygen from ROS?

A

Superoxide Dismutase (SOD)

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4
Q

What is the issue with hydrogen peroxide production?

A

It is in itself a Reactive Oxygen Species

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5
Q

What enzyme is used to remove H2O2

A

Enzyme catalase therefore rapidly breaks it down into molecular oxygen and water.

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6
Q

What do you add to H2O2 to form hydroxyl radicals? Give equation.

A

H2O2 + Fe2+ –> OH- (hydroxyl radicals)

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7
Q

What is the issue with hydroxl radicals?

A

Highly reactive, damage cell membranes but cannot be elimated by enzymatic reaction.

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8
Q

How are hydroxyl radicals removed?

A

NADPH provides H+ and converts to water.

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9
Q

How are ROS useful in the body? What enzyme is used in reaction? What happens to cell and surrounding bacterial cells? What system is this used in?

A

Neutrophils and monocytes can rapidly produce a release of ROS, known as an oxidative burst. NADPH Oxidase is used.
Electrons from NAPH transfer across membrane.
Cell and surround bacterial cells destroyed.
Immune system.

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10
Q

How can oxidizing agents be produced in the body via artificial means?

A

Primaquine (anti-malarial) and Paraquat (banned herbicide)

Ionising radiation

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11
Q

What is produced from Arginine in the body? What enzyme is used, and what is it involved in?

A

NO, produced from arginine via Nitric Oxide synthase.

NO combines with O2 to produce peroxynitrite, which is involved cell damage.

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12
Q

Name five cell defences against ROS other than SOD and catalase

A

NADPH, glutathione, anti-oxidant vitamins, flavenoids and minerals

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13
Q

What is NADPH, and where is it produced?

A

reducing agent that is mostly produced by the pentose phosphate pathway.

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14
Q

What is glutathione?

A

a tripeptide that is usually abundant in cells and acts as an important antioxidant. The thiol (-SH) group in cysteine can donate its H and therefore act as a reducing agent.

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15
Q

How is oxidised glutathione converted bact to reduced form?

What enzmes catalyse the reactions?

A

NADPH

glutathione peroxidise and glutathione reductase

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16
Q

Name three anti-oxidant vitamins

A

Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Vitamin A

17
Q

How is diabetes mellitus related to ROS?

A

(Type 1) B cell destruction by ROS

18
Q

How is alzheimers disease caused by ROS

A

Protein damage and misfolding by ROS

19
Q

How are the negative effects of cardiovascular disease compounded by ROS?

A

Reperfusion causes huge amounts of ROS to be produced. ROS switched on by cells when dying, encouraged by reoxygenation.

20
Q
Outline cellular defences against following 
O2- 
H2O2
OH- 
NO- 
ONOO-
A
SOD
Catalase
NADPH
Glutathione
Other antioxidants
21
Q

What is oxidative stress?

A

When ROS levels are excessive, or not enough anti-oxidants.

22
Q

What clinical condition is NADPH oxidase complicit in?

A

Atherosclerosis