L1 - Alcohol metabolism and oxidative stress Flashcards

1
Q

Use a4 paper notes and lecture

A

Yes

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2
Q

whar is the recommended alcohol intake limit in units for men and wome in a week?

A

14

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3
Q

what is the toxic intermediate of alcohol metabolism which accumulates causing hangover symptoms?

A

acetaldeyhde

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4
Q

How does excessive alcohol intake lead to a fatty liver AND liver cirrhosis (damage)?

A

Fatty liver - Excess alcohol metablism leads to excess NADH and acetyl CoA -> increased fatty acid and ketone body synthesis -> increased fat deposition

Liver damage - Excessive prolonged consumption leads to sufficient accumulationg of toxic acetaldehyde which causes liver damage

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5
Q

How does disulfiram work in treating alcohol dependence?

A

It inhibits acdehyde dehydrogenase which metabolises acetaldehyde to acetate -> acetaldehyde builds up giving severe hangovers to put the user off drinking

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6
Q

How are reactive oxygen species (ROS’) produced by mitochondria?

A

Occassionally in mitochondria an electron escapes the electron transport chain in oxidative phosphorylation and reacts with the surrounding oygen to produce a superoxide free radical

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7
Q

Which free radical is the most damaging?

A

OH (hydroxyl free radical) - note remember to put the dot after free radicals

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8
Q

nitric oxide is a free radical which can react with a superoxide radical to produce peroxynitrate which is a damaging oxidant but not a free radical. h2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) isn’t a free radical T/F?

A

T - but it can react with ferrrous iron (fe2+) to make free radicals

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9
Q

ROS cause damage via three main mechanisms, what are they?

A

damage to proteins/damage to DNA/lipid peroxidation (formation of more ROS’)

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10
Q

LO - There are four major cellular defences against ROS’, describe three of them and how they work

A

Free radical scavengers - such as vitamin E which mops up against lipid peroxidation

Superoxide dismutase - converts superoxide to hydrogen peroxide and oxygen

Catalase - Converts hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen

Glutathione - Works by reacting with ROS’ so that they don’t cause damage elsewhere

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11
Q

Name two endogenous sources of ROS’ and two exogenous sources

A

Endogenous - Electron transport chain/Nitric oxide synthases/NADPH oxidases

Exogenous - UV light/X-rays/pollutants/anti-malarial drugs/herbicides

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12
Q

NO is a free radical but also has important endogenous functions, name two

A

Vasodilation/signalling

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13
Q

Our bodies defences use ROS’ to combat bacterial infection. MAcrohpages use a respiratory burst of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in combatting bacterial infection. The superoxide radical is made by NADPH oxidase, in what disease is there a genetic defect in NADPH oxidase?

A

Chronic granulomatous disease - patients are thus susceptible to bacterial infections such as pneumonia/impetigo/cellulitis/abcesses etc.

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14
Q

What does the pentose phosphate pathway produce?

A

5 carbon ribose sugars needed for the synthesis of DNA and RNA and importantly it is a big source of NADPH

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15
Q

What is the rate limiting enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway?

A

Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase

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16
Q

How then does Glucose 6-phosphate deficiency result in increased damage from oxidative stress and haemolysis?

A

G6PDH is required for pentose phosphate pathway -> pentose phosphate pathway is a big source of NADPH -> deficiency thus means less NADPH -> NADPH required for glutathione defence - no glutathione means increased oxidative stress -> cell damage and cross-linking of haemoglobin causes heinz body formation -> haemolysis

17
Q

How does a deficiency in any of the three enzymes important in galactose metabolism cause cataracts?

A

It causes increased activity of an alternate pathway that uses aldose reductase which uses up NADPH -> NADPH needed for glutathione -> increased vulnerability to ROS stress -> protein damage -> cataracts

18
Q

Paracetomol overdose also causes problems by depleting glutathione, actetylctysteine is the antidote which replenishes glutathione levels, T/F?

A

T

19
Q

differentiate between glucogenic and ketogenic amino acids

A

ketogenic - directly makes acetyl-CoA -> funneled into ketone body synthesis

glucogenic - products are funneled into gluconeogenesis