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C5
Schmitt - lecture notes (urea cycle)
22
Other
Not Applicable
10/20/2007

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Cards

Term
Name all essential AA's.
Definition
Phenylalanine, Valine, Tryptophan, Threonine, Isoleucine, Methionine, Histidine, Arginine, Lysine, Leucine
Term
When can cysteine become essential?
Definition
Cysteine becomes essential when methionine becomes low.
Term
When can tyrosine become essential?
Definition
Tyrosine becomes essential when phenylalanine becomes low.
Term
Which protein type is more stable, extracellular or intracellular?
Definition
Extracellular is more stable. Most is associated with the skeleton and other supporting tissues (collagen major component).
Term
Describe Cystic Fibrosis.
Definition
Hardening of pancreas therefore pancreatic enzymes need to be administered exogenously (Bicarbonate, Trypsin, Chymotrypsin, Elastase, Carboxypeptidase A & B)
Term
Briefly describe protein digestion.
Definition
1) Protein -> Peptides (pepsin and HCl in stomach). 2) Peptides -> Di/Tri Peptides and AA's (aminopeptidase in lumen of small intestine). 3) Di/Tri Peptides -> AA's (Di/Tri Peptidases in intestinal wall)
Term
What is Hartnup's Disease?
Definition
Defect in transport of neutral and aromatic AA's from gut and renal tubules. Symp's similar to pellagra (no Trp = no niacin). Rx = niacin.
Term
What is Cystinuria?
Definition
Defect in transport of basic AA's and cystine (disulfide-linked dimer of cysteine).
Term
What is kwashiorkor?
Definition
Absence of lysine. Plants alone don't have a lot of it.
Term
What are the three ways to move free NH4+ around in the body?
Definition
1) Glutamate dehydrogenase, 2) Glutamine synthase/Glutaminase, 3) Carbamoyl phosphate synthase I & II. (What do they all do?)
Term
Where are Carbamoyl phosphate synthase I and II located?
Definition
I) Mitochondria (urea cycle); 2) Cytoplasm (pyrimidine nucleotide biosythesis)
Term
What is the role of Pyridoxal Phosphate and what vitamin is it?
Definition
Vitamin B6 is involved in: 1) transaminations, 2) decarboxylations, 3) dehydration of B-hydroxyamino acids, 4) racemizations of A-amino acids, 5) removal of H2S from cysteine.
Term
What AA's have amino groups removed by pyridoxal phosphate transaminases?
Definition
A CAT VITAL PAL (Ala, Cys, Arg, Trp, Val, Iso, Tyr, Asp, Lys, Phe, Asn, Leu)
Term
Why do most transaminations converge on glutamate?
Definition
A-Ketoglutarate is frequently used as a reactant. It swaps its hydroxyl group with the amino group of the AA (e.g. alanine) to form glutamate (and pyruvate).
Term
How does glutamate dehydrogenase work?
Definition
NH4+ + NADPH + H+ A-KG < -- > glutamate + NADP+ + H20
Term
Where is glutamate dehydrogenase located and how is it regulated?
Definition
Located in Mitochondria. ADP and GDP activate (more A-KG). ATP and GTP deactivate (more glutamate) Bottom line: Less energy = More oxidation.
Term
What does an amino acid oxidase do to AA's? Where is it found? What is its cofactor?
Definition
AA + H20 --> A-KA + NH3; Found in kidneys and liver; Flavins are cofactors
Term
What does a dehydratase do to AA's? What is its cofactor?
Definition
Remove NH3 and hydroxyl then replace with carboxylic group. (e.g. serine or threonine to pyruvate). Pyridoxal phosphate is its cofactor.
Term
What does desulfhydrase do?
Definition
Converts homocysteine to A-ketobutyrate which is then disposed of via the odd-chain FA pathway.
Term
What's going on with that crazy urea cycle?
Definition
It's making urea! Orn, Cit (+Asp), Argsucc, Arg (and Fum), Orn (and Urea)
Term
What makes urea a good waste product?
Definition
1 C, 2 amino groups, can't be protonated, extremely soluble, not reactive
Term
How do urea cycle enzymes fluctuate based on diet?
Definition
As you'd expect: Levels decline in protein free diet (lower % urea in total urinary nitrogen). Opposite for high protein diet and early stages of fasting (ketone body metabolism).
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