METABOLISM of MONOSACCHARIDES
A. Glucose - most common monosaccharide consumed by humans
B. Other Sugars - major sources of cellular energy
1. Fructose - significant amounts in the diet - important contributions to energy metabolism
2. Galactose - significant amounts in the diet - important contributions to energy metabolism - important component of cell structural carbohydrates
3. Mannose
FRUCTOSE METABOLISM
A. Function - converts dietary fructose into a substrate for glycolysis
B. Dietary Sources of Fructose
1. Western Diet - 10 % of the calories supplied by fructose (50 g/day)
2. Source of Fructose - sucrose (disaccharide of fructose and glucose) - fruits - vegetables - honey
3. Fructose - cellular entry is not insulin dependent - extremely poor elicitor of insulin secretion
C. Location - muscle - kidney - liver
D. Phosphorylation of Fructose 1. Enzymes a. Hexokinase - phosphorylates glucose in all cells - several other hexoses can serve as substrates - low affinity (high Km) for fructose low amount of fructose is converted to fructose 6-phospohate by this enzyme - can directly phosphorylate fructose to F6P in muscle b. Fructokinase (Ketohexokinase) - primary mechanism for fructose phosphorylation - converts fructose fructose 1-phosphate (ATP as phosphate donor) i. Found in - liver (processes most of dietary fructose) - kidney - small intestinal mucosa ii. Activity is Not Affected by - feeding-fasting cycle - insulin levels
E. Fructose 1-Phosphate Cleavage 1. Aldolase B (Phosphofructaldolase/Fructose 1-Phosphate Aldolase) - isoenzyme of aldolase in the glycolytic pathway - cleaves (aldol cleavage) fructose 1-phosphate into - DHAP glycolysis or gluconeogenesis - D-glyceraldehyde metabolized by a number of pathways Aldolase A - cleaves fructose 1,6-biphosphate DHAP + glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
F. Interconversion of DHAP and Glyceraldehyde 1. Enzyme - triose phosphate isomerase 2. Fate of Glyceraldehyde 1. Phosphorylated to glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate glycolysis, gluconeogenesis - by glyceraldehyde kinase 2. Oxidized to glycerate serine 3. Reduced to glycerol gluconeogenesis, triglyceride biosynthesis
G. Kinetics of Fructose Metabolism - fructose 1-phosphate metabolism trioses bypass PFK (major rate-limiting glycolytic step) rate of fructose is more rapid than glucose metabolism - elevated dietary fructose rapid acetyl CoA production elevates rate of liver lipogenesis
H. Genetic Diseases of Fructose Metabolism 1. Fructokinase Deficiency (Essential Fructosuria) - benign condition - accumulated fructose urine 2. Aldolase B Deficiency (Hereditary Fructose Intolerance) fructose 1-phosphate accumulation in the cells liver and kidney damage - severe disturbance of liver and kidney metabolism - estimated to occur in 1:20,000 live births a. Manifestations - first symptoms appear when the baby is weaned and fed food containing sucrose or fructose - fructose 1-phosphate accumulate significant fall of Pi levels (“sequestering of phosphate”) and therefore ATP AMP degraded hyperuricemia decreased availability of hepatic ATP affects - gluconeogenesis hypoglycemia with vomiting - protein synthesis decrease in blood clotting factors ( bleeding disorders) and other essential proteins
b. Diagnosis of Hereditary Fructose Intolerance - fructose in the urine - restriction fragment length polymorphism test c. Treatment - limit the amount of dietary fructose (and sucrose)
I. Conversion of Mannose to Fructose 1. Mannose - carbon 2 epimer of glucose - little mannose in the dietary carbohydrate - most intracellular mannose is synthesized from - fructose - salvaging of preexisting mannose by hexokinase - important component of glycoproteins - hexokinase phosphorylates mannose mannose 6-phosphate isomerized to fructose 6-phosphate by phosphomannose isomerase
J. Conversion of Glucose to Fructose by Way of Sorbitol (Fructose Metabolism in Spermatozoa) - most sugars, upon intracellular entry, are rapidly phosphorylated trapped within the cells - alternate metabolism of monosaccharide - provide an additional hydroxyl group by the reduction of an aldehyde group polyol formation increased hydrophilic nature increased water shell inability to cross membranes 1. D-Sorbitol Synthesis a. Aldose Reductase - interconversion of glucose and sorbitol i. Found in - lens - retina - Schwann cells of peripheral nerves - kidney - placenta - RBCs - cells of the ovaries and seminal vesicles
b. Sorbitol Dehydrogenase - interconversion of sorbitol and fructose i. Found in - liver - ovaries - sperm - seminal vesicle ii. Function - provides a mechanism by which sorbitol is converted into a substrate that can enter glycolysis or gluconeogenesis c. Fructose - preferred carbohydrate energy source for sperm cells
d. Sperm Mitochondria - only such organelle to contain LDH - lactate formed from fructolysis oxidized to CO2 and H2O
2. Effect of Hyperglycemia on Sorbitol Metabolism - insulin is not required for the entry of glucose into the cells listed above hyperglycemia increased intracellular glucose entry increased intracellular glucose concentration + adequate NADPH supply aldose reductase to produce increased amount of sorbitol (cannot pass freely across cell membranes (remains trapped in the cells) - increased intracellular sorbitol concentration is exacerbated by low or absent sorbitol dehydrogenase (retina, lens of the eye, kidney, nerve cells) sorbitol accumulation strong osmotic effects water imbibition and retention cell swelling cataract formation, peripheral neuropathy, vascular problems nephropathy, retinopathy (complications of diabetes mellitus)
GALACTOSE METABOLISM 1. Lactose (Galactosyl -1,4-Glucose) - major dietary source of galactose - disaccharide - milk sugar - from - milk - milk products - lysosomal degradation of complex carbohydrates (glycoproteins, glycolipids) - normal cell turnover - digested by -galactosidase 2. Galactose - differs from glucose in the configuration of the OH- group at C4 - galactose entry into cells is not insulin-dependent
GALACTOSE
A. Function - converts dietary galactose (from lactose) to a form that can enter glycolysis
B. Location - kidney - liver - brain
C. Phosphorylation of Galactose - catalyzed by galactokinase - ATP as phosphate donor - produces galactose 1-phosphate
GALACTOSE METABOLISM
D. UDP-Galactose Formation 1. Enzymes a. Galactose 1-Phosphate Uridyltransferase - deficient in patients with classic galactosemia - transfers the UMP group of UDP-glucose to produce UDP-galactose and glucose-1- phosphate i. Phosphoglucomutase - converts glucose-1-phosphate to glucose-6-phosphate 2. Enzyme Deficiency accumulation in cells and tissues - galactose 1-phosphate - in neural tissues mental retardation - in liver liver cirrhosis - galactose cataracts - physiologic consequences are similar to essential fructose intolerance but a wider spectrum of tissues is affected
E. Use of UDP-Galactose as a Carbon Source for Glycolysis or Gluconeogenesis 1. UDP-Hexose 4-Epimerase - convert UDP-galactose to its carbon 4 epimer UDP-glucose
F. Role of UDP-Galactose in Biosynthetic Reactions 1. UDP-Galactose - donor of galactose units in a number of synthetic pathways a. Synthesis of - lactose - glycoproteins - glycolipids - glycosaminoglycans
2. -Galactosidase Deficiency, Dietary Galactose Deficiency - glucose 1-phosphate UDP-glucose UDP-galactose by UDP-hexose 4-epimerase G. Disorders of Galactose Metabolism 1. Classic Galactosemia 2. Galactokinase Deficiency - accumulation of galactose in blood and tissues - in lens of the eye galactose reduced to galactitol by aldose reductase osmotic effect cataracts 3. Effects of Aldose Reductase (nsa picture)
H. Case: Galactosemia 1. Presentation A male infant, although normal at birth, was difficult to feed and, when fed he exhibited vomiting and diarrhea and an overall failure to thrive. At 5 days of age, he began to exhibit jaundice. 2. Diagnosis a. Urinalysis - (+) test for reducing sugars - no glucose present by glucose oxidase assay b. Galactose assay - urine and serum high levels c. Assay for Galactose 1-Phosphate Uridyl Transferase in RBCs - no activity enzyme deficiency galactosemia 3. Discussion a. Mild Jaundice - indicative of the onset of damage to the liver b. High Reducing Sugar Levels with No Glucose galactosemia c. Confirmatory Test - assay for Galactose 1-Phosphate Uridyl Transferase in RBCs 4. Treatment - galactose-free diet - as infant grows older diet excluding milk and milk products
LACTOSE METABOLISM
A. Lactose (-D-Galactosyl-(1,4)--D-Glucose) Synthesis - milk sugar 1. Enzyme - lactose synthase (UDP-galactose : glucose galactosyltransferase) - in the endoplasmic reticulum - transfers galactose from UDP-galactose to glucose releasing UDP a. 2 Proteins i. Protein A (-D-Galactosyltransferase) - in tissues other than lactating mammary glands, it transfers galactose from UDP-galactose to N-acetyl-D-glucosamine same -1,4 linkage N-acetyllactosamine formation (component of structurally important glycoproteins) ii. Protein B - found only in lactating mammary glands - it is -lactalbumin found in large quantities in milk - forms a complex with protein A specificity change of protein A lactose formation
B. Hormonal Control of Lactose Synthesis 1. Prior to and During Pregnancy - mammary glands synthesize N-acetyllactosamine 2. During Pregnancy - progesterone inhibits protein B synthesis 3. After Birth - progesterone levels drop significantly stimulating synthesis of prolactin (peptide hormone) stimulates synthesis of galactosyl transferase and -lactalbumin (protein B) 4. Protein B - forms a complex with protein A (enzyme) changed specificity of that transferase (instead of N-acetyllactosamine) lactose production
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