Protein Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

Explain nitrogen balance

A

When nitrogen intake = outtake
• Positive nitrogen balance - intake > output
○ Increase in total body protein
○ Normal state in growth and pregnancy or in adult recovering from malnutrition
• Negative nitrogen balance - intake < output
○ Net loss of body protein
○ Never normal - occurs in trauma, infection, malnutrition

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2
Q

How does nitrogen enter and exit the body

A

Enters mainly as protein
Leaves mainly as urea, but also creatinine, ammonia and uric acid
Some through protein loss in hair, skin, nail loss

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3
Q

Describe how amino acids are metabolised

A

• Stage 1 - in the GI tract, proteases and peptidases hydrolyse peptide bonds to released free amino acids
○ Amino acids absorbed into circulation and are used by tissue for protein synthesis and synthesis of various nitrogen-containing compounds (haem, purines, creatine)
○ Under hormonal control
§ Insulin and growth hormone increases protein synthesis and decreases protein degradation
□ Increase uptake into skeletal muscles, adipose tissue and liver
§ Glucocorticoids (cortisol) decrease protein synthesis and increase protein degradation
• Stage 2 - each amino acid in the protein has own pathway of catabolism
○ Most amino acids broken down in liver
○ Removal of amino group - converted to urea and excreted from body as urine
○ C-skeletons converted to pyruvate, acetyl CoA, succinate, a-ketoglutarate, fumarate, oxaloacetate
○ These products enter TCA cycle

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4
Q

What are the functions of amino acids

A

Protein synthesis and synthesis of N-compounds

Excess amino acid are stored or broken down

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5
Q

What are the process of amine group removal

A

Transamination and deamination

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6
Q

Outline transamination

A

○ Transamination - swap amine group with oxygen of keto acid
§ Amino acid 1 + keto acid 2 amino acid 2 + keto acid 1
§ Certain amino groups are able to deal with the amino groups and remove from body
§ Most use α-ketogluterate (keto acid 2) to funnel amino group to glutamate (amino acid 2)
§ Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) uses oxaloacetate to convert glutamate to aspartate
§ Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) uses α-ketogluterate to convert alanine to glutamate
§ Plasma ALT and AST levels measured routinely as part of liver function test
□ Levels high in conditions that cause cellular necrosis - viral hepatitis, autoimmune liver disease
§ Cortisol stimulates transaminase synthesis
§ All aminotransferases require coenzyme pyridoxal phosphate, which is a derivative of vitamin B6

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7
Q

Outline deamination

A

○ Deamination - liberates amino group as free ammonia
§ Mainly occurs in liver and kidney
□ Important in the liver as both disposal of amino acids and synthesis occurs - can control direction
§ L and D-amino acid oxidases convert amino acids to keto acids and ammonia
□ Keto acids can be utilised for energy
□ Deamination of dietary D-amino acids needed as only functional in plants and bacteria
§ Ammonia very toxic and must be removed, converted to urea

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8
Q

What is the common symptom, treatment and test for amino acid metabolism disorders

A

○ Frequently lead to intellectual impairment (mental disability)
○ Treatment involves restricting specific amino acids in diet
○ Heel prick test - sample of blood screened for genetic diseases including sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, congenital hypothyroidism
§ Important as after eaten in diet over time, problems irreversible

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9
Q

Outline the principles of phenylketonuria (PKU), including symptoms, test and treatment

A

○ Most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism
○ Deficiency in phenylalanine hydroxylase - important in tyrosine synthesis from phenylalanine
○ Autosomal recessive
○ Accumulation of phenylalanine in tissue, plasma and urine
○ Phenylketonuria in urine - musty smell
○ Test by measuring phenylalanine content in blood (heel prick test) and urine
○ Affected pathways involving tyrosine - noradrenaline, adrenaline, dopamine, melanin, thyroid, protein synthesis
○ Symptoms - severe intellectual disability, developmental delay, seizures, hypopigmentation
§ Phenylpyruvate inhibits pyruvate uptake into mitochondria and interferes with energy metabolism in brain
○ Treatment - strictly controlled phenylalanine diet, avoid artificial sweeteners, avoid high protein food

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10
Q

Outline the principles of homocystinuria

A

○ Problem breaking down methionine
○ Type 1 - defect in cystathionine ß-synthase (CBS) enzyme, which converts homocysteine to cystathionine and then to cysteine
§ Excess homocysteine excreted in urine
§ Some homocysteine converted to methionine
○ Autosomal recessive disorders
○ Test - high methionine and homocysteine in plasma and homocystine in urine
○ Affects connective tissue, muscles, CNS, CVS - similar to Marfan’s syndrome
○ Elevated plasma homocysteine associated with cardiovascular disease
○ Treatment - low methionine diet, avoid high protein food

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11
Q

Outline the effects of ammonia toxicity

A

○ Readily diffusion and extremely toxic to brain
○ Interfere with amino acid transport and protein synthesis
○ Disruption of cerebral blood flow
○ pH effects (alkaline)
§ Interfere with neurotransmitter release and synthesis
○ Alteration of blood-brain barrier
○ Interference with TCA cycle
§ Ammonia reacts with a-ketoglutarate to form glutamate via glutamate dehydrogenase
§ Removes a-ketoglutarate from TCA cycle - slows and disrupts energy supply to brain
○ Symptoms - blurred vision, tremors, slurred speech, coma, death

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12
Q

How is ammonia removed

A

Detoxified through synthesis of glutamine or alanine, conversion to urea or directly secreted in urine

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13
Q

Outline how glutamine synthesis is used in ammonia detoxification

A

○ Glutamine - ammonia combined with glutamate to form glutamine via glutamine synthetase
§ Glutamine transported in blood to liver or kidneys where it is cleaved by glutaminase to reform glutamate and ammonia
§ In liver, ammonia fed into urea cycle, kidney secreted as urine

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14
Q

Outline how alanine synthesis is used in ammonia detoxification

A

○ Alanine - ammonia combined with pyruvate to form alanine
§ Alanine transported in blood to liver where it is converted back to pyruvate by transamination
§ Amino group fed via glutamate into urea cycle
§ Pyruvate used in synthesis of glucose

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15
Q

Outline the urea cycle and how it links with refeeding syndrome

A

○ Glutamate and aspartate regularly feed into cycle
○ Glutamate dehydrogenase converts glutamate using CO2 from Krebs cycle to ammonia
○ Allow amino groups of amino acids to be safely disposed of as urea
§ Non-toxic, metabolically inert, high nitrogen-content
○ Urea is synthesised in the liver by the urea cycle and transported via the blood to kidneys for excretion
○ Has 5 enzymes - amount of enzymes relate to need to dispose of ammonia
§ High protein diet upregulates enzymes, low protein diet or starvation represses levels
§ Not subject to end product inhibition - need to dispose of all ammonia as urea
○ For severely malnourished people, when they eat lots of protein the enzymes have been downregulated so much that it cannot process the ammonia
§ Refeeding syndrome

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16
Q

Outline urea cycle defects, including symptoms and treatment

A

• Defects in urea cycle - autosomal recessive genetic disorders caused by deficiencies of one of 5 enzymes
○ Mutations cause a partial loss of enzyme function
○ Leads to hyperammonaemia, accumulation/excretion of urea cycle intermediates
○ Symptoms include vomiting, lethargy, irritability, mental retardation, seizures, coma
○ Severity depends on nature of defect and amount of protein eaten
○ Management is low protein diet and replace amino acids in diet with keto acids