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Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis
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Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis

Page 2: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one

molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate with the formation of two ATP molecules

anaerobic

Page 3: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

Why is glucose such a commonly used fuel? tends to exist in ring form, very stable,

doesn’t generally glycosylate proteins formed from formaldehyde under prebiotic

conditions

Page 4: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

What are the possible fates of glucose?

Page 5: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

What’s the difference between a facultative anaerobe and an obligate anaerobe?

Can you give an example of habitat-dependent anaerobiosis?

What about activity-dependent anaerobiosis?

Glycolysis

Page 6: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

All the intermediates in glycolysis have either 3 or 6 carbon atoms

All of the reactions fall into one of 5 categories phosphoryl transfer phosphoryl shift isomerization dehydration aldol cleavage

Page 7: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

Entire reaction sequence may be divided into three stages glucose is trapped and destabilized six carbon molecule is split into two three

carbon molecules ATP is generated

Page 8: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 1

glucose converted to glucose-6-PO4

ATP is needed catalyzed by hexokinase or glucokinase induced fit G01= -4.0 kcal/mole

Page 9: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 1

phosphoglucoisomerase aldose is converted to ketose G01=+0.4 kcal/mole

Page 10: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 1

rate limiting enzyme – allosteric inhibited by high ATP, citric acid, long-chain fatty acids stimulated by ADP or AMP G01= - 3.4 kcal/mole

Page 11: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

Page 12: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 2

six carbon molecule split into 2- 3 carbon molecules aldose and ketose

G01=+ 5.73 kcal/mole

Page 13: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 3

At equilibrium most mixture exists as dihydroxyacetone phosphate

G01=+ 1.83 kcal/mole

Page 14: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Triose Phosphate Isomerase

Page 15: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 3

redox reaction energy from redox used to form acyl

phosphate G01= +1.5 kcal/mole

Page 16: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 3

Consists of two coupled processes

Page 17: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 3

formation of ATP – substrate level phosphorylation

Page 18: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis – Stage 3

phosphoryl shift – uses 2,3 bisphosphoglycerate G01= +1.1 kcal/mole

dehydration G01 = +.44 kcal/mole phosphoryl transfer G01 = -7.5 kcal/mole

Page 19: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

Page 20: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Fate of Pyruvate

Page 21: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Alcoholic Fermentation

Which organisms carry out this process? yeast other microorganisms

PDC requires thiamine pyrophosphate as coenzyme NAD+ is regenerated

Page 22: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Lactic Acid Fermentation

Occurs in muscle cells, microorganisms Regenerates NAD+

Page 23: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

NAD+ and Dehydrogenases

Various dehydrogenases have a similar binding domain for NAD+ showing their common origin Rossman fold

Page 24: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

How can fructose be used for energy?

Page 25: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

To use galactose it must be converted to glucose-6-PO4

Page 26: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

Page 27: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

What causes lactose intolerance?

Page 28: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis

What is galactosemia? inability to metabolize galactose missing galactose 1-phosphate uridyl

transferase liver disease development of cataracts CNS malfunction

Page 29: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Control of Glycolysis

Of what value is glycolysis for cells? provides energy in form of ATP provides building blocks for synthetic reactions

Where are most control points found? enzymes that catalyze irreversible reactions

hexokinase phosphofructokinase pyruvate kinase

Page 30: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Phosphofructokinase

Most important control point in mammalian glycolytic pathway allosteric enzyme

activated by AMP and fructose 2,6 bisphosphate

inhibited by high levels of ATP, citrate, fatty acids

Page 31: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Phosphofructokinase

Page 32: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Hexokinase

Hexokinase is inhibited by its product glucose-6-PO4

glucose remains in blood

Glucokinase, an isozyme of hexokinase is not inhibited by glucose-6-PO4

found in liver has lower affinity for glucose

Page 33: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Pyruvate Kinase

Pyruvate kinase exists as isozymes L form – predominates in liver M form – mostly in muscle and brain

PK is an allosteric enzyme activated by fructose 1,6 bisphosphate inhibited by ATP, alanine

L form of PK influenced by covalent modification inhibited by phosphorylation

Page 34: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Pyruvate Kinase

Page 35: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glucose Transport

What is the role of glucose transporters in animal cells? facilitate movement of glucose across cell

membrane

What kind of molecule is a transporter and where is it located? small protein embedded in plasma

membrane

Page 36: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glucose Transport

mammalian glucose transporter

Page 37: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glucose Transport

Page 38: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Glycolysis and Cancer

Why are rapidly growing tumor cells dependent upon glycolysis? insufficient oxygen supply

What is the function of HIF-1? hypoxia-inducible transcription factor

stimulates synthesis of many glycolytic enzymes and GLUT-1 and 3

also stimulates vascular endothelial growth factor

Page 39: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

What is gluconeogenesis? synthesis of glucose from non-carbohydrate

precursors

Why is this an important pathway? What are some of the major precursors?

lactate, amino acids, glycerol

Where does this process occur? liver, kidney

Page 40: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

If gluconeogenesis involves the conversion of pyruvate to glucose why is it not simply the reverse of glycolysis? glycolysis contains several irreversible reactions

Which reactions in glycolysis are irreversible? phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate fructose 6-phosphate to fructose 1,6-

bisphosphate glucose to glucose 6-phosphate

Page 41: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

What is the first reaction?

CH3 CCO2-

O

CH2 CCO2-

O

CO2-

+ CO2+ ATP

+ ADP + Pi

Pyruvate

Oxaloacetate

biotin

pyruvatecarboxylase

Page 42: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Why is pyruvate carboxylase of special interest? structural properties

contains ATP-grasp domain at N-terminal end contains biotin-binding domain at C-terminal

end

Page 43: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

What is the role of biotin in this reaction? prosthetic group lined to -amino group of lysine

residue carrier of activated carbon dioxide

Page 44: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Pyruvate carboxylase is an allosteric enzyme activated by acetyl

CoA needed to form

carboxybiotin

Page 45: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Carboxylation of pyruvate occurs in the mitocondria but next step in reaction sequence occurs in cytosol

Page 46: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Decarboxylation of oxaloacetate is coupled with

phosphorylation by GTP

enzyme is phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase

CH2 = CCO2-

OPO32 -

CH2 CCO2-

O

CO2-

+ CO2

+ GTP

Phosphoenol pyruvate

Oxaloacetate + GDP

Page 47: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Which other steps in glycolysis are irreversible? conversion of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate to

fructose 6-phosphate conversion of glucose 6-phosphate to

glucose

Page 48: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Fructose-6-phosphate

C

CH2 OP O32 -

O

HHO

OHH

OHH

CH2 OH

Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate

C

CH2 OP O32 -

O

HHO

OHH

OHH

CH2 OP O32 -

fructose-1,6-bis-phosphatase

H2 O P i

G° = -16.7 kJ mol-1

fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase is an allosteric enzyme, inhibited by AMP and activated by ATP

Page 49: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Enzyme that catalyzes last reaction not found in all tissues liver and kidney cortex

Page 50: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Gluconeogenesis

Is gluconeogenesis an energetically favorable reaction in the cell?

What drives this reaction?

Are glycolysis and gluconeogenesis active at the same time?

Page 51: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis What are some of the factors that

ensure the reciprocal regulation of these processes? allosteric regulators of key enzymes energy charge fructose 2,6-bisphosphate hormones

Page 52: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis

Page 53: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis fructose 2,6-bisphosphate stimulates

PFK and inhibits fructose 1,6-bisphosphase controlled by insulin and glucagon and

reflects the nutritional status of the cell

Page 54: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis How do hormones influence the

enzymes associated with these processes? influence gene expression

change transcription rate influence degradation of m-RNA

– insulin PFK, PK– glucagon PEPCK, fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase

Page 55: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis What are substrate

cycles and why are they important? can amplify

metabolic signals can generate heat

Page 56: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis What is the Cori cycle and why is it

important?

Page 57: Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis. Glycolysis What is glycolysis? sequence of reactions that converts one molecule of glucose to two molecules of pyruvate.

Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis