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BIO 202 Biochemistry II by Seyhun YURDUGÜL: Carbohydrate Metabolism I Glycolysis

This document provides an overview of carbohydrate metabolism and glycolysis. It begins by describing how carbohydrates like starch and glycogen are broken down in the body. It then discusses glycolysis, the pathway that converts glucose to pyruvate, producing a small amount of ATP. Key reactions in glycolysis like hexokinase, phosphohexose isomerase, and 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase are explained. Regulation of glycolysis and the role of the liver are also covered.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views59 pages

BIO 202 Biochemistry II by Seyhun YURDUGÜL: Carbohydrate Metabolism I Glycolysis

This document provides an overview of carbohydrate metabolism and glycolysis. It begins by describing how carbohydrates like starch and glycogen are broken down in the body. It then discusses glycolysis, the pathway that converts glucose to pyruvate, producing a small amount of ATP. Key reactions in glycolysis like hexokinase, phosphohexose isomerase, and 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase are explained. Regulation of glycolysis and the role of the liver are also covered.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BIO 202 Biochemistry II

by
Seyhun YURDUGÜL

Lecture 3
Carbohydrate Metabolism I
Glycolysis
CONTENT OUTLINE
• Brief information on the carbohydrates
• Glycolysis
• Pathways by chart illustration
• Linker pathways on brief
• Regulation
Carbohydrates meets with our body

• Dietary carbohydrate from which humans


gain energy
• enter the body in complex forms,
• such as: disaccharides
• and the polymers:
• a)starch (amylose and amylopectin)
• b) glycogen.
Carbohydrates meets with our body
• polymer cellulose:
• also consumed but not digested.
• The first step in the metabolism of digestible
carbohydrate:
• the conversion of the higher polymers to
simpler, soluble forms:
• that can be transported across the intestinal
wall and delivered to the tissues.
Carbohydrates meets with our body

• The breakdown of polymeric sugars


begins in the mouth.
• Saliva has a slightly acidic pH of 6.8;
• and contains lingual amylase that begins
the digestion of carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates meets with our body

• The action of lingual amylase:


• limited to the area of the mouth and the
esophagus;
Carbohydrates
• virtually inactivated by the much
stronger acid pH of the stomach.
• Once the food has arrived in the stomach,
• acid hydrolysis contributes to its
degradation;
• specific gastric proteases
• and lipases aid this process for proteins
and fats, respectively.
Carbohydrates
• The mixture of gastric secretions, saliva, and food,
known collectively as chyme, moves to the
intestine
• The resultant glucose and other simple
carbohydrates:
• transported across the intestinal wall to the
hepatic portal vein
Carbohydrates
• and then to liver parenchymal cells and other
tissues.
• there converted to fatty acids,
• amino acids,
• and glycogen,
• or else oxidized by the various catabolic
pathways of cells.
Structurally
• Starch (in plants)
• and glycogen (in animals)
• compose of one single unit: glucose
• So how we can degrade glucose?
Glycolysis
• the sequence of reactions that converts
glucose into pyruvate;
• with the concomitant production of a
relatively small amount of ATP.
Glycolysis
• Glycolysis can be carried out anaerobically
(in the absence of oxygen)
• and an especially important pathway for
organisms that can ferment sugars.
Glycolysis
• is the pathway utilized by yeast to produce the
alcohol found in beer.
• serves as a source of raw materials for the
synthesis of other compounds.
• e.g. 3 phosphoglycerate can be converted into
serine,
• while pyruvate can be aerobically degraded by the
Krebs or TCA cycle;
• to produce much larger amounts of ATP.
Glycolysis
• Oxidation of glucose
• oxidized to either lactate
• or pyruvate.
• Under aerobic conditions,
• the dominant product in most tissues is pyruvate
• and the pathway:
• known as aerobic glycolysis.
Glycolysis
• When oxygen is depleted,
• as for instance during prolonged vigorous
exercise,
• the dominant glycolytic product in many
tissues:
• lactate
• and the process: anaerobic glycolysis.
The Energy Derived from
Glucose Oxidation
• Aerobic glycolysis of glucose to pyruvate,
• requires two equivalents of ATP
• to activate the process,
• with the subsequent production of four equivalents
of ATP
• and two equivalents of NADH.
The Energy Derived from Glucose
Oxidation

• Thus, conversion of one mole of glucose


• to two moles of pyruvate :
• accompanied by the net production of two moles each of
ATP and NADH.
• Glucose + 2 ADP + 2 NAD+ + 2 Pi -----> 2 Pyruvate + 2
ATP + 2 NADH + 2 H+
The Energy Derived from Glucose
Oxidation
• The NADH generated during glycolysis:
• used to fuel mitochondrial ATP synthesis via
oxidative phosphorylation,
• producing either two or three equivalents of ATP
depending upon whether the glycerol phosphate
shuttle
• or the malate-aspartate shuttle:
• used to transport the electrons from cytoplasmic
NADH into the mitochondria.
The Energy Derived from Glucose
Oxidation

• The net yield from the oxidation of 1 mole


of glucose to 2 moles of pyruvate:
• either 6 or 8 moles of ATP.
The Energy Derived from Glucose
Oxidation
• Complete oxidation of the 2 moles of
pyruvate, through the TCA cycle:
• yields an additional 30 moles of ATP;
• the total yield:
• either 36 or 38 moles of ATP from the
complete oxidation of 1 mole of glucose to
CO2 and H2O.
The Individual Reactions of
Glycolysis
• The pathway of glycolysis:
• can be seen as consisting of 2 separate phases.
• The first is the chemical priming phase requiring
energy in the form of ATP,
• and the second is considered the energy-yielding
phase.
The Individual Reactions of
Glycolysis

• In the first phase, 2 equivalents of ATP are used to


convert glucose to:
• fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (F 1,6 BP).
• In the second phase F 1,6 BP is degraded to
pyruvate,
• with the production of 4 equivalents of ATP
• and 2 equivalents of NADH.
The Hexokinase Reaction:
First Step of Glycolysis

– The ATP-dependent phosphorylation of


glucose to form glucose 6-phosphate (G6P):
– the first reaction of glycolysis,
– catalyzed by tissue-specific isoenzymes known
as hexokinases.
The Hexokinase Reaction:
First Step of Glycolysis

The phosphorylation accomplishes two goals:


☻ First, the hexokinase reaction converts:
☻ nonionic glucose into an anion that is trapped in the
cell,
☻ since cells lack transport systems for phosphorylated
sugars.
☻Second, the otherwise biologically inert glucose
becomes activated into a labile form;
☻ capable of being further metabolized.
The Hexokinase Reaction:
First Step of Glycolysis

☻ Four mammalian isozymes of hexokinase are


known
☻(Types I - IV),
☻ with the Type IV isozyme often referred to as
glucokinase.
☻ Glucokinase is the form of the enzyme found
in hepatocytes.
Explanation of the previous figure
• Comparison of the activities of hexokinase and
glucokinase.
• The Km for hexokinase is significantly lower
(0.1mM) than that of glucokinase (10mM).
• This difference ensures that non-hepatic tissues
(which contain hexokinase) rapidly and;
• efficiently trap blood glucose within their cells by
converting it to glucose-6-phosphate.
Liver and glycolysis
• One major function of the liver:
• to deliver glucose to the blood;
• by a glucose phosphorylating enzyme
(glucokinase);
• whose Km for glucose :
• sufficiently higher than the normal
circulating concentration of glucose (5mM).
Liver and glycolysis
• This feature of hepatic glucokinase:
• allows the liver to buffer blood glucose.
• After meals,
• when postprandial blood glucose levels are
high,
• liver glucokinase :
• significantly active,
• which causes the liver preferentially to trap
• and to store circulating glucose.
Other glucose supplies in the body
• When blood glucose falls to very low levels,
• tissues such as liver and kidney which contain
glucokinases but are not highly dependent on glucose:
• do not continue to use the glucose supplies that remain
available.
• At the same time, tissues such as the brain, which are
critically dependent on glucose,
• continue to scavenge blood glucose using their low Km
hexokinases,
• and as a consequence their viability is protected.
An important glucose provider
pathway: Gluconeogenesis
• Under various conditions of glucose deficiency,
• such as long periods between meals,
• the liver:
• stimulated to supply the blood with glucose through
the pathway of gluconeogenesis.
• The levels of glucose produced during
gluconeogenesis :
• insufficient to activate glucokinase,
• allowing the glucose to pass out of hepatocytes;
• and into the blood.
Regulation of hexokinase and
glucokinase
• The regulation activities of them:
• different.
• Hexokinases I, II, and III : allosterically
inhibited by product (G6P) accumulation,
• whereas glucokinases are not.
Regulation of hexokinase and
glucokinase
• The latter further insures liver accumulation
of glucose stores during times of glucose
excess,
• while favoring peripheral glucose
utilization;
• when glucose is required to supply energy
to peripheral tissues.
Phosphohexose Isomerase:
The Second Reaction
• The second reaction of glycolysis :
• an isomerization,
• in which G6P is converted to fructose 6-
phosphate (F6P).
• The enzyme catalyzing this reaction:
• phosphohexose isomerase
• also known as phosphoglucose isomerase.
Phosphohexose Isomerase:

• The reaction : freely reversible at normal cellular


concentrations of the two hexose phosphates
• and thus catalyzes this interconversion during
glycolytic carbon flow
• and during gluconeogenesis
6-Phosphofructo-1-Kinase
(Phosphofructokinase-1, PFK-1):

• The next reaction of glycolysis


• involves the utilization of a second ATP:
• to convert F6P to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate
(F1,6BP).
• catalyzed by 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase,
• better known as phosphofructokinase-1 or PFK-
1.
6-Phosphofructo-1-Kinase
(Phosphofructokinase-1, PFK-1):
• This reaction is not readily reversible
• because of its large positive free energy:
• ΔG = +5.4 kcal/mol in the reverse direction.
• Nevertheless, fructose units readily flow in the
reverse (gluconeogenic) direction;
• because of the presence of the hydrolytic enzyme,
• fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (F-1,6-BPase).
6-Phosphofructo-1-Kinase
(Phosphofructokinase-1, PFK-1):
• The presence of these two enzymes in the same
cell compartment:
• provides an example of a metabolic futile cycle,
• which if unregulated would rapidly deplete cell
energy stores.
6-Phosphofructo-1-Kinase
(Phosphofructokinase-1, PFK-1):

• However, the activity of these two enzymes is so


highly regulated that :
• PFK-1: considered to be the rate-limiting enzyme
of glycolysis
• and F-1,6-BPase : considered to be the rate-
limiting enzyme in gluconeogenesis.
Aldolase:

• catalyses the hydrolysis of F1,6BP:


• into two 3-carbon products:
• dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP)
• and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P).
• aldolase reaction proceeds readily in the reverse
direction,
• being utilized for both glycolysis and
gluconeogenesis
Triose Phosphate Isomerase:
• The two products of the aldolase reaction
equilibrate readily in a reaction;
• catalyzed by triose phosphate isomerase.
• Succeeding reactions of glycolysis utilize
G3P as a substrate;
• thus, the aldolase reaction:
• pulled in the glycolytic direction by mass
action principals.
Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate
Dehydrogenase:

• The second phase of glucose catabolism:


• features the energy-yielding glycolytic reactions
that produce ATP and NADH.
Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate
Dehydrogenase:
• In the first of these reactions,
• glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (G3PDH):
• catalyzes the NAD+-dependent oxidation of G3P
to 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate (1,3BPG)
• and NADH.
• The G3PDH reaction : reversible,
• and the same enzyme catalyzes the reverse
reaction during gluconeogenesis.
Phosphoglycerate Kinase:

• The high-energy phosphate of 1,3-BPG:


• used to form ATP and 3-phosphoglycerate
(3PG);
• by the enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase.
• the only reaction of glycolysis or gluconeogenesis
that involves ATP
• and yet is reversible under normal cell
conditions.
Phosphoglycerate Kinase:

• Associated with the phosphoglycerate kinase


pathway:
• an important reaction of erythrocytes,
• the formation of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate,
2,3BPG (see Figure below):
• by the enzyme bisphosphoglycerate mutase.
• 2,3BPG is an important regulator of
hemoglobin's affinity for oxygen.
Phosphoglycerate Kinase:
• Note that 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate phosphatase
degrades 2,3BPG to 3-phosphoglycerate,
• a normal intermediate of glycolysis.
• The 2,3BPG shunt thus:
• operates with the expenditure of 1 equivalent of
ATP per triose passed through the shunt.
• The process: not reversible under physiological
conditions.
Phosphoglycerate Mutase and
Enolase:
• The remaining reactions of glycolysis:
• are aimed at converting the relatively low energy
phosphoacyl-ester of 3PG;
• to a high-energy form
• and harvesting the phosphate as ATP.
Phosphoglycerate Mutase and
Enolase:
• The 3PG is first:
• converted to 2PG by phosphoglycerate mutase
• and the 2PG conversion
• to phosphoenoylpyruvate (PEP):
• catalyzed by enolase
Pyruvate Kinase:

• The final reaction of aerobic glycolysis


• catalyzed by the highly regulated enzyme
pyruvate kinase (PK).
• In this strongly exergonic reaction,
• the high-energy phosphate of PEP :
• conserved as ATP.
Pyruvate Kinase:
• The loss of phosphate by PEP:
• leads to the production of pyruvate in an
unstable enol form,
• which spontaneously tautomerizes to the more
stable, keto form of pyruvate:
• contributes a large proportion of the free energy
of hydrolysis of PEP.
Anaerobic Glycolysis

• Under aerobic conditions,


• pyruvate in most cells:
• further metabolized via the TCA cycle.
• Under anaerobic conditions
• and in erythrocytes under aerobic conditions,
• pyruvate:
• converted to lactate by the enzyme lactate
dehydrogenase (LDH),
• and the lactate: transported out of the cell into the
circulation.
Anaerobic Glycolysis
• The conversion of pyruvate to lactate,
• under anaerobic conditions, provides the cell with
a mechanism for the oxidation of NADH
(produced during the G3PDH reaction):
• to NAD+;
• which occurs during the LDH catalyzed reaction.
• This reduction is required since NAD+:
• a necessary substrate for G3PDH;
• without which glycolysis will cease.
Anaerobic Glycolysis
• Normally, during aerobic glycolysis:
• the electrons of cytoplasmic NADH:
• transferred to mitochondrial carriers of the
oxidative phosphorylation pathway;
• generating a continuous pool of cytoplasmic
NAD+.
Anaerobic Glycolysis

• Aerobic glycolysis :
• generates substantially more ATP per mole of
glucose oxidized than;
• does anaerobic glycolysis.
• The utility of anaerobic glycolysis;
• to a muscle cell when it needs large amounts of
energy stems from the fact that:
• the rate of ATP production from glycolysis is
approximately 100X faster than;
• from oxidative phosphorylation.
Anaerobic Glycolysis
• During exertion muscle cells:
• do not need to energize anabolic reaction
pathways.
• The requirement to generate the maximum amount
of ATP,
• for muscle contraction,
• in the shortest time frame.
• This is why muscle cells derive almost all of the
ATP consumed during exertion;
• from anaerobic glycolysis.
LITERATURE CITED
• Devlin,T.M. Textbook of Biochemistry with
Clinical Correlations,Fifth Edition,Wiley-Liss
Publications,New York, USA, 2002.
• Lehninger, A. Principles of Biochemistry, Second
edition, Worth Publishers Co., New York, USA,
1993.
• Matthews, C.K. and van Holde, K.E.,
Biochemistry, Second edition, Benjamin /
Cummings Publishing Company Inc., San
Francisco, 1996.

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