Human Metabolism. Keith N. Frayn

Human Metabolism - Keith N. Frayn


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catabolism can proceed

       the nitrogen can be incorporated into other compounds or excreted in the urine

       different types of deamination but oxidative deamination is quantitatively the most important

Image shows the process of deamination. Amino acid is shown to be converted into 2-oxoacid and NH3.
• oxidative glutamate dehydrogenase
• non-oxidative serine & threonine: hydroxyl in side chain
• hydrolytic asparagine & glutamine: N in side chain

       glutamate is the only amino acid that undergoes oxidative deamination (glutamate dehydrogenase)

Figure shows amino acid glutamate undergoing oxidative deamination, also called glutamate dehydrogenase.

       mostly occurs in liver and kidney

       unusually can use either NAD+ or NADP+ as coenzymeNAD+ used mostly in oxidative deaminationNADP+ used mostly in reductive amination

       direction of reaction depends on substrate availability (& hence metabolic state)

       allosteric regulation (unusually for a readily reversible reaction):

Figure shows the reaction whereby glutamate is converted into 2-oxoglutarate and NH4 plus.

      The urea (ornithine) cycle occurs in the liver. Urea (CO·(NH2)2) contains two nitrogen atoms: one derives from ammonia (oxidative deamination of glutamate), the other from aspartate (transamination, also of glutamate, by AST) (Figure 1.21): the body excretes nitrogen with minimal carbon (and energy) loss. Because urea is very water-soluble, much nitrogen waste can be excreted for relatively little water loss, an important adaptation in terrestrial animals. Urea lacks toxicity at physiological concentrations; it is (neuro)toxic only in extremely high concentrations, for example those seen in untreated renal failure, but considerably less so than ammonia.

Figure shows a urea cycle. One nitrogen atom enters the cycle as an ammonium ion from glutamate dehydrogenase, whilst another enters from the amino acid aspartate, itself derived principally from glutamate via a transamination reaction. Hence the urea molecule contains two nitrogen atoms for only one carbon atom. The entire cycle is found only in liver, but sections of the cycle are present in other tissues, notably the intestine and kidney.

      Besides urea formation, another route of nitrogen-ammonia excretion exists. In peripheral tissues (e.g. muscle) ammonia may be formed by the oxidative deamination of glutamate (by glutamate dehydrogenase, Box 1.8). This reaction, in combination with the aminotransferases, can be seen to capture amino nitrogen from a number of amino acids. However, blood ammonia concentrations are very low (it is highly toxic) and instead it is exported by being fixed in the amido (side chain) group of glutamine by the enzyme glutamine synthase: hence glutamine is ‘safely’ carrying two nitrogen atoms. In liver, the enzyme glutaminase removes the amido nitrogen of glutamine as ammonia for rapid incorporation into urea (an example of hydrolytic deamination: see Box 1.8). In kidney, glutaminase also removes the amido group of glutamine to form ammonia (and glutamate; glutamate dehydrogenase then deaminates this to form a second ammonia molecule), but here in the kidney the resulting ammonia is excreted directly into the urine where is acts as a urinary buffer (this means that the urine can be buffered without carbon loss). There is also a supply of ammonia from the small intestine (see Chapter 5, Section 5.8). These relationships are discussed further in Chapter 7 (Section 7.4).

Figure shows the metabolism of the carbon skeletons of amino acids following their deamination. Following deamination, the remaining 2-oxoacid enters intermediary metabolism in one of only seven sites.

      SUPPLEMENTARY RESOURCES

      Supplementary resources related to this chapter, including further reading and multiple choice questions, can be found on the companion website


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