Glycolysis +gluconeogenesis regulation
CAC + PDH
ETC + Ox Phos
CC + PPP
Glycogen
100
The enzyme that catalyses the reaction of OAA to Phosphoenolpyruvate 

What is PEPCK?

100
Where are electron carriers produced and where?
3 NADH and 1 FADH2


isocitrate to alpha KG

alpha Kg to succinyl coa

malate to OAA


succinate to fumarate

100

which complex does not pump protons into the membrane

complex 2

100

where does the gluconeogenesis step occus in the calvin cycle?

stage 2

100

what is required to begin glycogen synthesis?

glycogenin

200

If F 2,6 BP concentration is high, what happens to glycolysis + gluconeogenesis?

Glycolysis on 

Gluconegenesis off

200

Describe the cofactors used for each subunit of PDH

E1 - TPP

E2 - Lipamide

E3 - FAD

200

name the 4 complexes of ETC

NADH-Q oxidoreductase

Succinate Q reductase

Q cytochrome c oxidoreductase

Cytochrome C oxidase

200

describe the fixation step of the calvin cycle

co2 is fixed by combining with ribulose 1,5 bisphospahte to form two molecules of 3PG

200

three fates of G6P 

  • Glycolysis

  • Free glucose for release in bloodstream

  • PPP for NADPH or ribose derivatives

300

Describe formation of OAA, including enzymes and location.

pyruvate taken to mitochondrial matrix and converted to OAA

reduced to malate by malate DH

malate taken to cytosol where it is oxidized back to OAA by cytoplasmic NAD+ linked malate DH



300

How much ATP is produced per turn on the CAC? Describe how many ATP are produced by NADH, FADH2 and where the extra one comes from

10 ATP total

2.5 per nadh

1.5 per fadh2

1 atp from atp used during succinyl coa to succinate

300

describe the structure of atp synthase

  • F0 (rotor) component: embedded in the inner mito membrane and contains the proton channel

  • F1(stator) component: protrudes into the mito matrix and contains the catalytic activity

300

how does TK and TA stabilize carbanionic intermediates?

TK uses a TPP prosthetic group

TA uses a Lys residue

300

explain how the debranching enzyme works?

  • Transferase and alpha 1,6 glucosidase remodel glycogen

    • Transferease shifts a block of three glucosyl residues from the outer branch to the main chain

    • Alpha 1,6 glucosidase  (debranching enzyme) hydrolyses the remaining 1,6 glycosidic bond

400

Describe the different forms of hexokinase and pyruvate kinase

hexokinase- 

in the liver it exists as glucokinase

not inhibited by G6P and phosphorylates glucose only when it is abundant

pyruvate kinase-

L type in liver (regulated by reversible phosphorylation)

M type in muscle

400

Predict the effect of a mutation that enhances the activity of the kinase associated with the PDH complex

Enhanced kinase activity will result in a decrease in the activity of the PDH complex because phosphorylation by the kinase inhibits the complex.

400

The most common metabolic sign of mitochondrial disorders is lactic acidosis. Why?

the only means of generating ATP is by anaerobic glycolysis, which will lead to an accumulation of lactic acid in blood.

400

describe mode 2 of PPP (both R5P and NADPH)

  • G6P converted to 1 molecules of Ri5P and generates 2 NADPH

  • Ribulose then isomerized to R5P


  • G6P + 2NADP+ + H2O →  R5P + 2NADPH + 2H+ + CO2

400

explain the process of glycogen synthesis

UDP glucose created  

glycogenin primer is created

  • Branching enzyme creates branches by cleaving alpha 1,4 linkages

    • Transfers a 7 residue block and reattaches it with a alpha 1,6 linkage

    • New branch must be at least 4 residues from existing branches

500

Balanced reaction for gluconeogenesis

 2Pyruvate+4ATP+2GTP+2NADH+6H2O→Glucose+4ADP+2GDP+6Pi+2NAD++2H+

500

Malonate is a competitive inhibitor of succinate dehydrogenase. How will the concentrations of CAC intermediates change immediately after the addition of malonate?

Succinate will increase in concentration, followed by alpha KG and the other intermediates “upstream” of the site of inhibition.

500

describe how complex 1 works

  • Q accepts 2 electrons from NADH, generating Q2-

  • The negative charge causes a conformational change and protons enter the intermembrane space

  • Flow of two electrons from NADH to CoQ through NADH Q oxidoreductase leads to the pumping of 4 H ions out of the matrix

  • Q2- takes up two protons from the matrix and is reduced to QH2, then leaving Complex 1

500

Describe Mode 3 (nadph needed and not R5P)

  • G6P is oxidized to Ri5P producing two NADPH and 1 CO2

  • Ri5P converted to R5P

  • R5P can make F6P and G3P in the non-oxidative phase and convert this back to G6P using gluconeogenesis

500

explain one way in which glycogen synthase is regulated? (insulin, glucagon/epinephrine/PP1)

  • Protein Phosphatase 1 dephosphorylates proteins to decrease the rate of glycogen breakdown    


    • Inactivates phosphorylase a and phosphorylase kinase

    • Converts glycogen synthase b to glycogen synthase a 

  • PKA phosphorylates phosphorylase kinase and inhibits glycogen synthesis

  • Insulin inactivates glycogen synthase kinase through Tyr kinase signal transduction pathway and stimulate glycogen synthesis


M
e
n
u