Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Functions of nucleotides in biochemistry ● Building blocks of nucleic acids ● Cosubstrates and coenzymes ● Signaling.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Functions of nucleotides in biochemistry ● Building blocks of nucleic acids ● Cosubstrates and coenzymes ● Signaling."— Presentation transcript:

1 Functions of nucleotides in biochemistry ● Building blocks of nucleic acids ● Cosubstrates and coenzymes ● Signaling

2 Structures of NAD, acetyl-CoA, and PAPS © Michael Palmer 2014

3 The RNA world hypothesis © Michael Palmer 2014

4 Why have cosubstrates become fossilized, whereas enzymes have not? © Michael Palmer 2014

5 Metabolic routes and pathways of nucleotides ● De novo synthesis ● Intestinal uptake of nucleosides ● Endogenous turnover (partial degradation/salvage) ● Degradation and excretion

6 Overview of purine synthesis © Michael Palmer 2014

7 IMP synthesis (1) © Michael Palmer 2014

8 IMP synthesis (2) © Michael Palmer 2014

9 IMP synthesis (3) © Michael Palmer 2014

10 A bifunctional enzyme combines AIR carboxylase and SAICAR synthetase activities © Michael Palmer 2014

11 Synthesis of AMP from IMP © Michael Palmer 2014

12 Synthesis of GMP from IMP © Michael Palmer 2014

13 Feedback regulation in purine synthesis © Michael Palmer 2014

14 Overview of digestion and utilization of nucleic acids © Michael Palmer 2014

15 Utilization of ribose and deoxyribose © Michael Palmer 2014

16 Degradation of endogenous purine nucleotides (overview) © Michael Palmer 2014

17 Adenine nucleotide degradation © Michael Palmer 2014

18 The guanase and xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase reactions © Michael Palmer 2014

19 Renal urate elimination: tubular reuptake and secretion © Michael Palmer 2014

20 Non-primates break down uric acid to allantoin © Michael Palmer 2014

21 Overview of purine salvage reactions © Michael Palmer 2014

22 Enzyme defects in purine degradation and salvage © Michael Palmer 2014

23 Gout ● Genetic or dietary factors cause chronically increased urate production or retention ● Urate has limited solubility and may form crystalline deposits, preferentially in joints and soft tissue ● Urate crystals activate inflammation and lead to arthritis that is painful and, in the long run, destructive

24 Diets and drugs that may promote gout ● too much food, too rich in purines ● excessive fructose or sucrose ● alcoholic beverages—but not all kinds: beer yes, wine no ● anorexia nervosa (!) ● drugs that interfere with uric acid secretion: pyrazinamide, salicylic acid ● drugs that contain purines: dideoxyadenosine

25 Gout: the fructose connection © Michael Palmer 2014

26 Drugs that affect purine degradation and elimination © Michael Palmer 2014

27 Acute urate nephropathy in tumor lysis syndrome ● Occurs during chemotherapy of malignancies, particularly with lymphomas and leukemias ● Chemotherapy causes acute decay of large numbers of tumor cells ● Degradation of nucleic acids from decaying cells produces large amounts of uric acid ● Uric acid in nascent urine exceeds solubility and precipitates, clogging up and damaging the kidney tubules ● Clinically manifest as acute kidney failure with high fatality rate

28 Rasburicase, a better preventive treatment for urate nephropathy © Michael Palmer 2014

29 Synthesis of pyrimidines (1) © Michael Palmer 2014

30 Synthesis of pyrimidines (2) © Michael Palmer 2014

31 Degradation of pyrimidines © Michael Palmer 2014

32 β-Alanine may be used to synthesize carnosine © Michael Palmer 2014

33 Synthesis of deoxyribonucleotides © Michael Palmer 2014

34 The thymidylate synthase reaction © Michael Palmer 2014

35 Nucleotide antimetabolites as anticancer and antiviral drugs © Michael Palmer 2014

36 Dual action mode of 5-fluorouracil © Michael Palmer 2014

37 Inhibition of thymidylate synthase by 5-fluorouracil © Michael Palmer 2014

38 Mutagenesis through mispairing of the 5-FU iminol tautomer © Michael Palmer 2014

39 Thymine and various halogen analogues © Michael Palmer 2014

40 Indirect inhibition of thymidine synthesis by methotrexate © Michael Palmer 2014

41 Mercaptopurine inhibits purine synthesis © Michael Palmer 2014

42 Structure of cytosine arabinoside (araC) © Michael Palmer 2014

43 Metabolic activation and inactivation of araC © Michael Palmer 2014

44 Overexpression of 5′-nucleotidase in leukemic cells reduces survival rates © Michael Palmer 2014

45 Action mode of araCTP © Michael Palmer 2014

46 Dideoxyadenosine inhibits retroviral DNA polymerase © Michael Palmer 2014

47 Aciclovir and ganciclovir © Michael Palmer 2014

48 Aciclovir: mode of action on herpes virus © Michael Palmer 2014

49 Some more inhibitors of viral nucleic acid synthesis © Michael Palmer 2014


Download ppt "Functions of nucleotides in biochemistry ● Building blocks of nucleic acids ● Cosubstrates and coenzymes ● Signaling."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google