Urea Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

Where does urea get its components?

A

Nitrogen comes from aspartate and ammonia (NH4+)

Carbon comes from CO2

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2
Q

What process leads to most of the NH4+ in the urine?

A

Deamidation

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3
Q

What is removed in deamination? Which amino acids go through it?

A

Alpha-amino group is removed

Glutamate, glycine, serine, threonine, and histidine are removed

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4
Q

Which amino acids undergo deamidation?

A

Glutamine and asparagine

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5
Q

What is the main pathway of amino acid nitrogen removal? What occurs?

A

Transamination is the main pathway of amino acid nitrogen removal. Transfer of an amino group from an amino acid to an alpha-keto acid occurs

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6
Q

How does transamination take place?

A

Transamination occurs using the enzyme transaminases such as aminotransferases. The coenzyme is pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) or vitamin B6 – pyridoxine

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7
Q

What is used for diagnosing MI, ALT or AST?

A

ALT. It is more sensitive

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8
Q

What is the purpose of transamination?

A

Transamination collects nitrogen on glutamate rather than release free ammonia

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9
Q

Where does the urea cycle take place?

A

The urea cycle takes place in the liver

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10
Q

Since other tissues also degrade amino acids, nitrogen is produced in those tissues. How is the nitrogen produced in those tissues transported to the liver?

A

They are transported by way of alanine or glutamine

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11
Q

After urea is synthesized, what happens to it?

A

It is transported to the kidney and is excreted in urine (some leave by way of the intestine)

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12
Q

What is the first step of the urea cycle?

What is the enzymes that catalyzes it?

What is its significance?

A

Carbamoyl phosphate synthesis

Carbamoyl phosphate synthase I

It is the rate-limiting, committed, irreversible step

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13
Q

CPSI or N-acetylglutamate synthase deficiency leads to

A

Type I hyperammonemia

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14
Q

What can high levels or arginine lead to?

A

Increased levels of N-acetyl-glutamine, which leads to the increased levels of CPSI activity, leading to the increase in urea production

High arginine can also lead to increased ornithine production and lead to an increase in urea production

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15
Q

Deficiency in ornithine translocase causes this disease

A

hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome

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16
Q

Deficiency in ornithine transcarbamoylase causes this disease

A

Type II hyperammonemia

17
Q

Deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase causes this disease

A

Citrullinuria type I

18
Q

Deficiency of arginosuccinate lyase leads to this disease

A

Argininosuccinyl acidemia

19
Q

Arginase deficiency can cause this disease

A

Argininemia

20
Q

What is the treatment for argininosuccinate lyase deficiency?

A

Argenine – it generates more ornithine for the urea cycle to continue

21
Q

Treatment for type I and II hyperammonemia

A

Citrulline — it captures aspartate, so at least one nitrogen can be excreted

22
Q

What is the first step in urea synthesis?

What catalyzes the reaction?

What is its allosteric activator?

A

Carbamoyl phosphate synthesis

Catalyzed by carbamoyl phosphate synthase I (CPSI). Rate-limiting, committed step, which requires 2 ATPs

Allosterically activated by N-acetyl-glutamate

23
Q

What is the second step in the urea cycle?

What catalyzes the reaction and where does it take place?

What transports the reactants to the site of the reaction?

A

Citrulline synthesis

Catalyzed by ornithine transcarbomylase, which takes place in the mitochondria

Ornithine is transported into the mitochondria from the cytosol by ornithine translocase

24
Q

What is the third step in the urea cycle?

What catalyzes the reaction and what is required?

What is its cofactor and how is it produced?

A

Argininosuccinate synthesis

Catalyzed by argininosuccinate synthetase, which takes place in the cytosol and requires 1 ATP molecule

Aspartate is produced by transamination of OAA, aspartate nitrogen will incorporate into urea

25
Q

What is the fourth step in the urea cycle?

Where does this step occur?

What catalyzes this reaction?

What is released in the process and what happens to it?

A

Arginine synthesis

Takes place in the cytosol

Argininosuccinate lyase, which

The released fumarate can enter the TCA cycle and regenerate OAA and then aspartate

26
Q

What is the fifth (last) step in the urea cycle?

What catalyzes this reaction?

Where does it take place?

A

Cleavage of arginine into urea and ornithine

Catalyzed by arginase.

This takes place in the cytosol.

Ornithine moves back to the mitochondria and can be recycled