Biochemestry Flashcards

1
Q

Particular feature of arginase deficiency that differentiate from other urea cycle disorders.

A

Mild or NO hyperammonemia

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Functions of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4)

A

Cofactor of the most important hydroxylases:
- phenylalanine hydroxylase (tyrosine synthesis, PKU if deficient this enzyme or dihydrobiopterin reductase→synthesis of BH4 [cofactor of phe hydroxylase►malignant PKU→↓↓BH4])
- tyrosine hydroxylase (cathecolamine [from DOPA] synthesis )
- tryptophan hydroxylase (5HT synthesis)
Also for nitric oxide synthase

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Ashkenazi Jews show high incidence of what type of metabolic diseases?

A

Tay-sachs, Niemann-pick, some forms of Gaucher. (Shingolipidoses)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

How do you differentiate or identify cori disease from other glycogen diseases, which enzyme is deficient?

A
  • Involve muscle (hypotonia, weakness) and liver (hepatomegaly, fibrosis) ▶️ different of Hers and Von Gierke (also liver involve)
  • debranching enzyme deficiency
  • hypoglycemia, ketoacidosis, abnormal short outer chain inside hepatocytes
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

How is the B-oxidation of fatty acids in a high-carbohydrate, high-protein diet? How does that state occur?

A
  • Inhibited
  • Malonyl-CoA▶️❌carnitine acyltransferase▶️ fatty acids can not go to the mitochondrial matrix ▶️ no B-oxidation.
  • Well-fed state ▶️ ⬆️ ATP ▶️ ❌ isocitrate deshydrogenase ▶️ ⬆️ citrate in mitochondria ▶️(citrate shuttle) cytosol ▶️(ATP citrate lyase) Acetyl-CoA ▶️ Acetyl-CoA carboxylase ➕ by citrate, insulin ▶️ malonyl-CoA►(Fatty acid synthase) Fatty acids
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Signs and symptoms of Homocystinuria. 50% of patients respond to which supplementation? Other measures of treatment.

A
  • Marphanoid habitus, ectopia lentis, atherosclerosis, thromboembolic occlusions (MI, stroke), intellectual dissability, osteoporosis, kyphosis.
  • High doses of pyridoxine (vitamin B6)
  • Restriction methionine if cystathionine synthase deficiency
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What is the Zellweger syndrome?

A
  • Deficient or absent peroxisome (member of family Leukodistrophies) ▶️ Infants unable to properly form myelin
  • Hypotonia, seizures, hepatomegaly, mental retardation, early death

*More severe of 3, others: Refsum disease, Neonatal adrenoleukodistrophy (NALD)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Cause and mechanism of Refsum disease.

A

Defect peroxisomal alpha-oxidation ▶️ accumulation of pythanic acid ▶️ neurological disturbances

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

The first enzyme of the gluconeogenesis converts pyruvate in which component and who regulates that enzyme?

A

Pyruvate (Pyruvate carboxylase [biotin]) ▶️ Oxaloacetate (in mitocondria)
⬆️ Acetyl-CoA ▶️ ➕ Pyruvate carboxylase ⏩ gluconeogenesis

*⬇️ Acetyl-CoA ▶️ ➕ Pyruvate deshydrogenase ⏩ glycolysis

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Markers of Vitamin B12 deficiency

A

⬆️ Mehylmalonic acid, ⬆️ homocysteine

- cofactor for methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, methyonine synthase

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

How do you treat an acute intermittent porphyria attack and why? Cause of the disease and what can precipitate the attacks?

A
  • Hemin and Glucose ▶️ 🚫 dALA synthase ▶️ ⬇️ dALA
  • Deficiency of Porphobilinogen deaminase (inherited) ▶️ ⬆️ Porphobilinogen (PBG)
  • Induction of dALA synthase ▶️ ⬆️ Aminiolevulinate (dALA) [phenobarbital, griseofulvin, phenytoin, alcohol, progesterone - puberty, low-calorie diet]
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Which amino acids are useful to treat Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency, why? Other measures to treat it?

A

Lysine or Leucine ▶️ exclusively ketogenic

*Tx: ketone bodies as fuel in placed of Glucose ⏭ ketogenic diet ▶️ high fat, low carb, moderate protein; ketogenic AA. Because:
Glucose ▶️ pyruvate ▶️ ⬆️ lactate ▶️ lactic acidosis

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Causes of secondary lactase deficiency

A
  • Infections→ex common: Giardiasis
  • Inflammation→ex: celiac disease

*Epithelial destruction and replace by immature cells with low lactase

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Which enzymes use as cofactor vitamin B12, and for this reason which components build up in a vitamin B12 deficiency?

A
  • Methionine synthase (⬆️ Homocysteine)

- Methylmalonyl CoA mutase (⬆️ Methylmalonic acid)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Cause and laboratory findings in a Methylmalonic acidemia. Clinical presentation.

A
  • Methylmalonyl CoA mutase deficiency (AR) ▶️ ⬆️ Methylmalonic acid, propionic acid ▶️ metabolic acidosis ▶️ hyperammonemia, hypoglycemia ▶️ ⬆️ ketone bodies (⬆️ anion gap)
  • Lethargy, vomiting, hypotonia, tachypnea
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

In what reaction and by which enzyme of the cycle of krebs is produced the cofactor needed to form phosphoenolpyruvate from oxaolacetate during gluconeogenesis?

A

Succinyl-CoA ⏩ succinate [succinyl-CoA synthetase or succinate thiokinase] ⤴️ GTP ▶️ needed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase [oxaloacetate ▶️ PEP]

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

During starvation what hormone mediates the increase of substrates for gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis?

A
  • Hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL)
  • Stress hormones (cortisol, Epi, glucagon)►Gs protein coupled receptor in adipocytes→phosphorylate (PKA)→(+)HSL→lipolysis→release of free fatty acids and glycerol taken by liver
  • FFA→acetyl-CoA→ketone bodies or TCA (energy for gluconeogenesis)
  • Glycerol→gluconeogenesis
18
Q

Clinical presentation of Hartnup disease. What vitamin deficiency cause them and why?

A
  • Photosensitivity, pellagra-like symptoms (diarrhea, dementia, dermatitis), ataxia→wax and waine during disease, aminoaciduria (neutral aa)→differentiates from other causes of aminoaciduria (Fanconi syndrome)
  • Intestinal and renal absorption of tryptophan (essential aa precursor of nicotinic acid, 5HT, melatonin) is defective→Niacin (B3) deficiency
19
Q

Causes of vitamin B3 (Niacin) deficiency.

*What is the disease?

A
  • Hartnup disease→↓intestinal and renal absorption of some neutral amino acids, including tryptophan (precursor of niacin)
  • Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) deficiency→ex, Isoniazid►B6 needed to synthesis of niacin from Trp
  • Malignant carcinoid syndrome→↑metabolism of Trp
  • Dietary→↓intake Trp, Lysine, ↑intake leucine

*Pellagra

20
Q

Most common enzymes deficiencies of the B-oxidation and clinical presentation

A
  • Acyl-coA dehydrogenase deficiency▶️most common⏩hypoketotic hypoglycemia after fasting (⬇️⬇️acetoacetate in blood)
  • Primary carnitine deficiency▶️fatty acids not transported to mitochondria⏩muscle weakness, cardiomyopathy, ⬆️muscle triglycerides, hypoketotic hypoglycemia
21
Q

Causes of galactosemia

A
  • GALT deficiency
  • GALK deficiency
  • UDP-galactose-4 epimerase
22
Q

Cause and consequence of glactose-1-phosphate accumulation

A
  • Galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (GALT) deficiency
  • Toxic accumulation→liver dysfunction►transaminitis, hyperbilirrubinemia, hypoglycemia; renal dysfunction►hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, aminoaciduria; predisposition to E. coli sepsis; cataract►galactitiol accumulation in lens
23
Q

Treatment of GALT deficiency

A

Replace breast milk by soy milk (glucose+fructose)

24
Q

Effect of ethanol on gluconeogenesis and why does it occur?

A

Ethanol▶️⬆️NADH, ⬇️NAD (alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase reduces NAD to NADH)▶️NAD is require for gluconeogenesis:

  • ❌Lactate▶️pyruvate (intermediate of gluconeogenesis)
  • ❌Malate▶️Oxaloacetate (intermediate of gluconeogenesis)
25
Q

What is produced during the oxidative irreversible stage of pentose phosphate pathway and its functions?

A

NADPH (main source)▶️cholesterol (steroids) and fatty acid synthesis, glutathione antioxidant mechanism

26
Q

Important products of nonoxidant (reversible) stage of pentose phosphate pathway and its functions.

A
  • Ribose 5-phosphate▶️nucleic acid synthesis

- Fructose 6-phosphate (others glucolytic intermediates)▶️glycolysis

27
Q

What is the useful of urine copper reduction test?

A

Detection of reducing sugars in urine (galactose, fructose, glucose)▶️nonspecific for inborn errors of carbohydrate metabolism

28
Q

Which mechanism do TNF-alpha, glucagon, catecholamines and corticoids use to induce insulin resistance?

A

➕Serine kinases▶️phosphorylation at serine residues on beta subunits of insulin receptor (IR) and on insulin receptor substrate (IRS)→🚫normal tyrosine phosphorylation of them▶️⬇️insulin downstream signaling

29
Q

From lipolysis which substrate may be used to produce glucose (gluconeogenesis) and what enzyme initially allow that?

A

Triglycerides→Glycerol+fatty acids→glycerol to liver (glycerol kinase)→glycerol 3-phosphate (glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase)→DHAP►glucose

30
Q

Which tissues cannot use ketone bodies as source of energy?

A
  • Erythrocytes▶️lack mytochondria
  • Liver▶️lack succinyl CoA acetoacetate CoA transferase (thiophorase) (acetoacetate▶️acetoacetyl Coa)

*Skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle (both primarily consumed KB to preserve Glc for brain), brain (prolonged starvation), kidney

31
Q

How is activated the phosphorylase kinase at skeletal muscle and liver and what is the result of it?

A
  • Liver: Epinephrine, glucagon▶Gs protein-coupled receptor▶⬆cAMP▶➕PKA▶➕phosphosrylase kinase (PK)➡glycogenolysis▶maintain blood glucose levels during fasting state
  • Skeletal muscle: Ca release from sarcoplasmic reticulum▶➕PK➡glycogenolysis▶energy necessary for anaerobic muscle contraction (synchronization with contraction)
32
Q

Which feature of elastin explains its rubber like properties?

A

Lysyl oxidase (requires copper)→oxidatively deaminates lysine residues to tropoelastin→formation of demosine cross-links between neighboring polypeptides

33
Q

What supplementation do you use to treat maple syrup disease and why?

A

Thiamine→one of the cofactors of branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase
*Also dietary restriction Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine

34
Q

What have in common branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase?

A

Need same cofactors:
Thiamine, Lipoate, Coenzyme A, FAD, NAD
“Tending Loving Care For Nancy”

35
Q

What is the most abundant amino acid in collagen? What is the function of the other common amino acids?

A
  • Glycine→most common
  • Proline→essential for alpha-helix formation
  • Hydroxylysine→need for cross-linking
36
Q

What disease is caused by defect in phosphorylation of manose in a newborn with coarse facial features, skeletal abnormalities (congenital dislocation of hip), psycomotor abnormalities? Pathogenesis.

A
  • I-cell disease (inclusion cell disease/mucolipidosis type II)
  • Defect in N-acetylglucosaminyl-1-phosphotransferase→failure of the Golgi to phosphorylate mannose residues (↓mannose-6-phosphate) on glycoproteins→proteins are secreted
    extracellularly rather than delivered to lysosomes
37
Q

What sphingolipid disease has both peripheral neuropathy and progressive neurodegeneration? what other feature depict that disorder?. Mention enzyme deficiency and substrate that build up.

A
  • Krabbe disease→↓Galatocerebrosidase→↑Galactocerebroside

- Optic atrophy, globoid cells

38
Q

Treatment for orotic aciduria

A

Uiridine phosphate supplementation→bypass mutated enzyme (UMP synthase)

39
Q

Cause of alkaptonuria. Clinical presentation.

A

Deficiency Homogentisate oxidase (or deoxygenase)→↑↑Hogentisic acid (Tyrosine metabolism to fumarate→TCA)

  • Ochronosis→bluish-black connective tissue, ear cartilage, sclera
  • Urine turns black after prolongued exposure to air
  • Debilitating arthralgias→Ochronotic arthropathy
40
Q

Extracellular processing of collagen

A
  • N and C terminal cleaving by procollagen peptidases→procollagen►Tropocollagen (less soluble)
  • Tropocollagen monomers self-assemble into collagen fibrils
  • Lysyl oxidase→covalent crosslinks between collagen fibrils►strong collagen fibers
41
Q

What is the role of the IkB in the activation of NF-kB and the pathway by which it can occur?

A
  • IkB normally bind and mantain in cytoplasm the NF-kB►phosphorylation of IkB (target to proteasome) release NF-kB→nucleus as a transcription factor
  • Cytokines (IL-1) and TNF-alpha receptors pathway→(+) IKK comples→phosphorylation of IkB