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Amino acid biosynthesis

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Amino acid biosynthesis. Chemistry 256. Why biosynthesis?. So that every amino acid is not an essential one. In other words, humans do not have to consume a non-essential amino acid in order to have it for use in the cells. Some non-essential amino acid syntheses are straightforward. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Amino acid biosynthesis Chemistry 256
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Page 1: Amino acid biosynthesis

Amino acid biosynthesis

Chemistry 256

Page 2: Amino acid biosynthesis

Why biosynthesis?

• So that every amino acid is not an essential one. In other words, humans do not have to consume a non-essential amino acid in order to have it for use in the cells.

Page 3: Amino acid biosynthesis

Some non-essential amino acid syntheses are straightforward

• These have been seen else-where in the text.

Page 4: Amino acid biosynthesis

Others less so...

Page 5: Amino acid biosynthesis

Especially the aromatic ones!

Page 6: Amino acid biosynthesis

A study in regulation: Glutamine synthetase

• D6 symmetry; mammalian glutamine synthetase is controlled by α-ketoglutarate to prevent ammonia accumulation.

Page 7: Amino acid biosynthesis

Bacterial glutamine synthetase regulation• Much more complex; requires adenylylation, which is

the addition of an AMP to key tyrosine residues.• The enzyme adenylyltransferase is activated by

uridylylation, the addition of a UMP, a reaction catalyzed by uridylyltransferase.

• So, if there is high [α-ketoglutarate], this triggers uridylylation of adenylyltransferase, which activates it to adenylylate glutamine synthetase, which activates that to produce more glutamine.

• Not a digital system: different levels of uridylylation and adenylylation lead to different rates.

Page 8: Amino acid biosynthesis

Woolfolk C. A., Stadtman E. R. , “Cumulative feedback inhibition in the multiple end-product regulation of glutamine synthetase activity in Escherichia coli”, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. (1964).

Page 9: Amino acid biosynthesis

Some amino acid syntheses are complex

• Glutamate leads to proline, ornithine, arginine (several steps)

• 3-phosphoglycerate (3PG) leads to serine, cysteine, glycine (several steps)

• Plants and microorganisms synthesize aspartate into lysine, methionine and threonine; pyruvate into leucine, isoleucine and valine; and so forth.

• The synthesis of histidine in plants is similar to the synthesis of nucleotides.

Page 10: Amino acid biosynthesis

Westley, J., and Ceithaml, J., “Synthesis of Histidine in Escherichia Coli”, Arch. Biochem. And Biophys. (1955)

Page 11: Amino acid biosynthesis

Heme is synthesized from glycine and succinyl-CoA

• Shemin, D., London, I.M., Rittenberg, D., “The in vitro synthesis of heme from glycine by nucleated red blood cells”, J Biol Chem (1948)

Page 12: Amino acid biosynthesis

Heme is degraded and excreted

Page 13: Amino acid biosynthesis

A variety of neurotransmitters and hormones are synthesized from amino acids

Page 14: Amino acid biosynthesis

Nitrogen fixation by some bacteria (diazotrophs) requires nitrogenase

Yes, molybdenum is a nutrient!(for these bacteria, anyway)


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