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A comprehensive set of exam questions covering module 4 of a biochemistry course, focusing on energy metabolism and glycolysis. It includes detailed explanations of key concepts, such as the role of atp in energy transfer, the regulation of glycolysis, and the connection between anaerobic glycolysis and lactic acid production. The document also explores the biochemical basis of various metabolic disorders, including hereditary fructose intolerance and g-6-p dehydrogenase deficiency. It is a valuable resource for students preparing for exams in biochemistry.
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"Understand the role of high-energy phosphate bonds in ATP (and other nucleotide triphosphates) in the transfer of free energy from exergonic to endergonic processes, enabling
transfer potential that is an intermediate among biologically important phosphorylated molecules compounds derived from this metabolism of fuel power ATP synthesis, and in turn, ATP donates a phosphoryl group to other biomolecules to facilitate their metabolism ATP constantly regenerated via oxidation of carbon in fuel like glucose and fats" "Explain how unfavorable reactions may be driven forward by either high substrate or low product concentrations. Given the deltaG' and the concentrations of substrate and product, be
energetically unfavorable reactions to energetically favorable ones to drive overall forward deltaG' = -RT lin [B]/[A] = -RT ln Keq IF G < 0 , then [B] > [A] (Keq > 1) then proceeds forward IF G' > 0, then [A] > [B] (Keq < 1) then proceeds reverse"
oxidation of glucose through oxidative phosphorylation (30-32 ATPs) ATP is consumed within 60 seconds of generation for energy utlization (muscle contraction, ion transport, biosynthesis, etc) to be regenerated post translational and allosteric regulation (seconds/minutes) --> post transcriptional regulation (hours) --> transcriptional regulation (days)"
repel each other), Mg+2 coordination (makes phosphorus more electrophilic), resonance stabilization or stabilization due to hydration (water can bind better to ADP than ATP) -- this results in donation of Pi ATP not expended through hydrolysis bc hydrolysis has high energy of activation (ATPase helps overcome) -Arginine finger helps?
Dont store all energy as ATP bc hydrolyzed too easy and short half-life --> solved by stored in form of creatine phosphokinase (CPK) -- quick energy source in muscle" "Describe the 10 reactions of glycolysis and the energy yield, as well as how its regulation insures cellular ATP homeostasis. KNOW THE 3 IRREVERSIBLE AND HIGHLY REGULATED REACTIONS OF GLYCOLYSIS
for ATP - no mitochondria anaerobic glycolysis = total amount of NAD+ & NADH is very low, so NADH must be rapidly oxidized for glycolysis to continue // NADH is ocidized to NAD+ by lactade dehydrogenase, only produces 2ATPs/glucose good during short, intense exercise, replenishes very quickly and is 100x faster than oxidative phosphorylation
bypasses the three irreversible steps of glycolysis glucose is synthesized, ATP consumed, NADH is oxidized to NAD+ -starts in mitochondria with pyruvate, uses pyruvate carboxylase & PEP carboxykinase, F16BP- ase, and G-6P-ase, to synthesize glucose (-6 ATP equivalent) -- not exactly the reverse of glycolysis bc have some common enzymes Fructose 2,6-BP reciprocally regulates glycolysis and gluconeogenesis (lowered in fasting, activates GN and favors F6P // raised in well fed state, blocking F16 and thus GL)" "Describe why the enzymatic defect in patients with Hereditary Fructose Intolerance (HFI, Aldolase B deficiency) results in hypoglycemia and lactic acidosis, and what common sources of
deficiency in aldolase B causes Fructose 1-P to accumulate and intracellular Pi & ATP levels to fall --> decreased ATP compromises gluconeogenesis and liver protein production --> AMP accumulates and is degraded leads to hypoglycemia, hyperuricemia, and liver failure should avoid fructose and sucrose from the diet" "Describe Galactose metabolism (occurs in all tissues, especially liver) and the causes and
produces galactose 1-P UDP-galactose is produced in an exchange reaction with UDP-glucose, but can also be converted to UDP-glucose classical galactosemia = accumulation of galactose 1-phosphate and galactitol in nerve, lens, liver, and kidney tissue causes liver damage severe mental retardation and cartaracts for galactokinase deficiency and aldose reductase = elevated galactitol can cause cataracts" "Realize the prevalence of G-6P dehydrogenase deficiency in hemolytic anemia and how oxidative stress (consumption of Fava Beans, primaquine) causes RBC lysis (failure to regenerate Glutathione)
In RBC's, the PPP is the only way NADPH is generated. Other anti-oxidants (vitamin E, C, and
G6PD causes hemolytic anemia bc of inability to detoxify oxidizing agents (due to insufficient reduced glutathione) --affects RBCs the most bc only make NADPH via PPP so more severe oxidative stress causes RBC lysis --> oxidant drugs, favism (oxidizing agents like fava beans), and infection (from oxidants produced during infammation) deficiency in G6PD confers evolutionary advantage in some circumstances -- prevalent in Africans bc protects against malaria (parasites require NADPH, and PPP is compromised to parasites die) --> primaquine is a antimalarial drug that will cause hemolysis in individuals deficient in G6PD" "Describe the clinical features of severe thiamine deficiency, and connect the symptoms to the
deficiency = Beriberi -symptoms include weight loss, emotional disturbances, tremors, lactic acidosis drinking heavily causes poor absorption and storage of thiamine, coenzyme TPP no longer works"
Arsenite = inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by inactivating dihydrolipoamide component of transacetylase --reduces overall energy production but can be solved by 2,3-dimercaptopropanol Fluoroacetate = inhibits aconitase (cannot isomerize citrate to isocitrate), results in citrate accumulation -- found in rat poison" "Know that FA synthesis occurs primarily in the liver, and to a lesser extent in adipose. Describe the conversion of excess carbohydrate and protein into cytosolic acetyl-CoA, how this process is regulated, and how it helps to provide some of the cytosolic NADPH necessary for FA
from acetyl CoA from excess protein and carbs uses ATP and NADPH, requires lots of acetyl CoA, involves citrate shuttle and is when citrate concentration in mitochondria is high due to inhibition of isocitrate dehydrogenase by high levels of ATP
"Understand the hormonal induction of Fatty acid release and utilization. Describe the transport of FA into mitochondria and diseases that result from defects associated with carnitine involving
oxidation needs carnitine --amine from Lysine and Met, made in liver and kidneys, stored in skeletal muscle CPT = carnitine palmitoyl transferase CPT1 or CPT II deficiency = hypoglycemia, hypoketosis, myoglobinuria -hypoglycermia results from impaired FA oxidation bc steps of gluconeogenesis use NADH and ATP that come from FA oxidation --not enough to allow ketone body synthesis, which impedes gluconeogenesis" "Describe the pathway of mitochondrial B-oxidation, the products that result, the energy yield,
-FA-CoA is to trans enoyl CoA by dehydrogenase
During starvation, Acetyl-CoA generated from FA metabolism is converted to ketone bodies -- driven by thiolase, acetoacetyl Coa, and 3-hydroxy-3-methyl glutaryl CoA (HMG CoA) in starvation, brain starts to use ketone bodies to spare glucose --> liver does not have thiophorase and cannot use the ketone bodies it uses
adults are prone to develop ketosis bc the fasting state is reached faster in kids (high muscle/adipose ratio), and so there is less insulin in kids and no malonyl CoA leading to unrestricted entry of FAs into liver and conversion to ketones"
"How many FADH2 molecules would be produced in the oxidation of palmitic acid (16:
Fe protein, Ferredoxin" "All of the following are purine bases except _____. Guanine, Thymine, Adenine,
"Which of the following is not a function of lipids: Energy storage, Components of biological membranes, Insulation,
carboxylation"
Inflammation, Digestion"
Glyceroneogenesis"
end of the chain"
Folic acid requires intrinsic factor for its absorption in the intestine."
transport"
starch, cellulose and other plant products"
structure, and role in DNA and RNA"
dihydroxyacetone"
carbon, second to last"
position"
carboxylic acid is the most oxidized out of the choices"
thioester bond = high energy bond = acetyl coa larger atomic size of S educes overlap (no resonance stabilization) // thioester more unstable relative to ester so releases more energy on hydrolysis" "Describe the breakdown of starch to glucose and the import of glucose by the intestinal
then pancreatic a-amylase, which catalyze hydrolysis of a(1-4) glycosidic bonds and produce a- maltose, a-isomaltose, and trisaccharides maltose and isomaltose are broken down by maltase and isomaltase into glucose on border of intestinal epithelial cells SGLT1 (sodium-glucose linked transporter 1) which is present on border of intestinal epithelial cells is a symporter and transports glucose & galactose against concentration gradient using energy from gradient of Na+"
facilitated glucose transporter that helps glucose travel down its concentration gradient on the other side (high capacity/Vmax, low affinity/high Km) --> gets glucose from SGLT1 in liver, pancreas, and intestine and send to capillaries -insulin independent GLUT5 is a facilitated fructose transporter present on the apical border (inside) GLUT4 is an insulin dependent facilitated glucose transporter, works in muscle and adipose -insulin stimulates movement of GLUT4 to plasma membrane from intracellular vesicles"
Triglyceride synthesis = uses glycerol-P and FA (from Acetyl CoA) to make triglycerides, important bc lack glycerol kinase 2,3-BPG = major reaction pathway for consumption of glucose in erythocytes is needed to control Hb affinity for O2" "Explain the biochemical basis of the hemolytic anemia observed in deficiency of erythrocyte
kinase deficiency is second most common cause of anemia --> enzyme with abnormal
properties/kinetics (enzyme activity & stability altered, decreased, or show abnormal Km/Vmax) this results in premature death and lysis of RBCs triosephosphate isomerase = deficiency rare but results in it, accompanied by elevation of DHAP levels in erythrocytes (can't isomerize to G3P) enolase = deficiency is rare, but can cause it (catalyzes dehydration of 2-PG to create phosphoenol pyruvate with high transfer potential) --> no more high potential = premature death"
tissue even when oxygen is available (bypassing oxidative phosphorylation) -p53 tumor suppressor is mutated and defective in electron transport so relies on glycolysis for ATP production // achieved by increased synthesis of hexokinase underlies basis for PET scans (Fluorodeoxyglucose/FdG is administered to look for high glucose metabolizing tissues bc PFK-1 is blocked by it)"
is what RBC's and other cells without mitochondria rely upon for energy production inability to carry this out results in hemolytic anemia"
glucose by hexokinase I is an irreversible & regulatory step / feedback inhibited by G6P
-- low insulin, high glucagon and FA from degradation of muscle proteins (only good for several days, generally preserved for end) = alanine aminotransferase -- low insulin, high glucagon & FA from degradation of triacylglycerides in adipose tissue (hormone sensitive lipase is activated by glucagon, epinephrine, and cortisol) = glycerol kinase / glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase
glycose influx causes increased Xu-5-P, and this activates protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) PP2A dephosphorylates and activates ChREBP (carb response element bp), causing nuclear translocation and INCREASING LIPID Synthesis"
fructose-6-P to create NADPH TPP is a cofactor for transketolase can be used to assay thiamine deficiency --> measurement is done in absence and presence of exogenous TPP (if diference in acitivity levels is >25%, then thiamine deficiency)" "Describe the general structure, regulation, and required cofactors/vitamins of the PDC complex
CO2 and lipids (which cycle back) high blood glucose activates = high pyruvate, high NAD+, high ADP low blood glucose inhibits = high ATP, high NADH, high acetyl-CoA (end product inhibition) PDC is inactive during gluconeogenesis, active during glycolysis -Ca2+ is a strong activator of phospatase, and thus PDC"
"Describe the cellular location and reactions of the citric acid cycle that lead to the production of
Citrate - Isocitrate - Ketoglutarate - Succinyl-CoA - Succinate - Fumarate - Malate - Oxaolacetate yields 10 ATP per cycle per Ac-CoA, 8 electrons occurs in mitochondria" "Describe the effect of the following parameters on the activity of the TCA cycle and the
-inhibited by NADH high ADP/ATP ratio speeds up cycle -activated by ADP" "Describe the central role of the TCA cycle in connecting glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, oxidative
electrons from glucose oxidation feed into ETC, driving ATP synthesis" "Describe the main cataplerotic and anaplerotic pathways that permit the efflux and
efflux for use in other metabolic pathways, in liver -high glucose, ATP unused, NADH high --> inhibits isocitrate dehydrogenase and a-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase -excess citrate shuttled to cytoplasm and used for FA synthesis / a-ketoglutarate is used for AA synthesis anaplerotic pathways = refills intermediates of TCA cycle -as amount of OAA is depleted, citrate synthase reaction decreases and causes acetyl CoA concentration to increase, activating Pyruvate carboxylase to produce more OAA