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Glycolysis Alice Skoumalová
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Glucose: the universal fuel for human cells Sources: diet (the major sugar in our diet) internal glycogen stores blood (glucose homeostasis) Glucose oxidation: after a meal: almost all tissues during fasting: brain, erythrocytes
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Glycolysis: oxidation and cleavage of glucose ATP generation (with and without oxygen) all cells in the cytosol (the reducing equivalents are transferred to the electron-transport chain by the shuttle) ATP is generated: 1. via substrate-level phosphorylation 2. from NADH 3. from oxidation of pyruvate Regulation of glycolysis: 1. Hexokinase 2. Phosphofructokinase 3. Pyruvate Kinase Generation of precursors for biosynthesis: fatty acids amino acids ribosis-5-P
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Anaerobic glycolysis a limited supply of O 2 no mitochondria increased demands for ATP Lactic acidemia in hypoxia
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Phosphorylation of glucose: irreversible Glucose 6-P: cannot be transported back across the plasma membrane a precursor for many pathways that uses glucose Hexokinases Glucokinase (liver, β-cell of the pancreas) high K m
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Michaelis-Menten kinetics
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1. Conversion of glucose 6-P to the triose phosphates 2. Oxidation and substrate-level phosphorylation
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1. Conversion of glucose 6-P to the triose phosphates irreversible regulation essential for the subsequent cleavage
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Substrate-level phophorylation 2. Oxidation and substrate-level phosphorylation
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Summary of the glycolytic pathway: Glucosis + 2 NAD + + 2 P i + 2 ADP 2 pyruvate + 2 NADH + 4 H + + 2 ATP + 2 H 2 O ∆G 0´ = - 22 kcal (it cannot be reversed without the expenditure of energy!)
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Aerobic glycolysis: involving shuttles that transfer reducing equivalents across the mitochondrial membrane
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Glycerol 3-phosphate shuttle:
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Malate-aspartate shuttle:
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Anaerobic glycolysis: Energy yield 2 mol of ATP dissociation and formation of H +
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Daily lactate production115 (g/d) Erythrocytes29 Skin20 Brain17 Sceletal muscle16 Renal medulla15 Intestinal mucosa8 Other tissues10 Major tissues of lactate production: (in a resting state)
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Cori cycle: Lactate can be further metabolized by: heart, sceletal muscle Lactate dehydrogenase: a tetramer (subunits M and H)
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Lactate dehydrogenase Pyruvate + NADH + H + lactate + NAD + LD 5 isoenzymes: Heart (lactate) Liver, muscle (pyruvate)
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Biosynthetic functions of glycolysis:
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Regulation
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Fructose 2,6-bis-phosphate: is not an intermediate of glycolysis! Phosphofructokinase-21. activated by Fructose 6-P 2. inhibited through phosphorylation - cAMP-dependent protein kinase (inhibition of glycolysis during fasting) tissue-specific isoenzymes (low K m, a high afinity) glucokinase (high K m ) the rate-limiting, allosteric enzyme tissue-specific isoenzymes
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the liver isoenzyme - inhibition by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (inhibition of glycolysis during fasting) Lactic acidemia: increased NADH/NAD + ratioinhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase
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Summary Glycolysis - generation of ATP (with or without oxygen) The role of glycolysis in different tissues Lactate production Regulation
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