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Chapter 16 (Part 2)

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Chapter 16 (Part 2). Fatty acid Catabolism ( b -oxidation). Beta Oxidation of Fatty Acids. Process by which fatty acids are degraded by removal of 2-C units b -oxidation occurs in the mitochondria matrix The 2-C units are released as acetyl-CoA, not free acetate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chapter 16 (Part 2) Fatty acid Catabolism (-oxidation)
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Page 1: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Fatty acid Catabolism(-oxidation)

Page 2: Chapter 16 (Part 2)
Page 3: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Beta Oxidation of Fatty Acids

• Process by which fatty acids are degraded by removal of 2-C units

• -oxidation occurs in the mitochondria matrix

• The 2-C units are released as acetyl-CoA, not free acetate

• The process begins with oxidation of the carbon that is "beta" to the carboxyl carbon, so the process is called"beta-oxidation"

Page 4: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Fatty acids must first be activated by formation of acyl-

CoA• Acyl-CoA synthetase condenses fatty acids

with CoA, with simultaneous hydrolysis of ATP to AMP and PPi

• Formation of a CoA ester is expensive energetically

• Reaction just barely breaks even with ATP hydrolysis Go’ATP hydroysis = -32.3 kJ/mol, Go’ Acyl-CoA synthesis +31.5 kJ/mol.

• But subsequent hydrolysis of PPi drives the reaction strongly forward (Go’ –33.6 kJ/mol)

Page 5: Chapter 16 (Part 2)
Page 6: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Import of acyl-CoA into mitochondria

• -oxidation occurs in the mitochondria, requires import of long chain acyl-CoAs

• Acyl-CoAs are converted to acyl-carnitines by carnitine acyltransferase.

• A translocator then imports Acyl carnitine into the matrix while simultaneously exporting free carnitine to the cytosol

• Acyl-carnitine is then converted back to acyl-CoA in the matrix

Page 7: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Deficiencies of carnitine or carnitine transferase or translocator activity

are related to disease state• Symptons include muscle cramping during

exercise, severe weakness and death.• Affects muscles, kidney, and heart tissues.• Muscle weakness related to importance of

fatty acids as long term energy source• People with this disease supplement diet

with medium chain fatty acids that do not require carnitine shuttle to enter mitochondria.

Page 8: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

-oxidation• Strategy: create a

carbonyl group on the -C • First 3 reactions do that;

fourth cleaves the "-keto ester" in a reverse Claisen condensation

• Products: an acetyl-CoA and a fatty acid two carbons shorter

Page 9: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

-oxidation• B-oxidation of palmitate (C16:0) yields 106

molecules of ATP• C 16:0-CoA + 7 FAD + 7 NAD+ + 7 H20 + 7 CoA 8

acetyl-CoA + 7 FADH2 + 7 NADH + 7 H+

2.5 ATPs per NADH = 17.51.5 ATPs per FADH2 = 10.5 10 ATPs per acetyl-CoA = 80

Total = 108 ATPs

• 2 ATP equivalents (ATP AMP + PPi, PPi 2 Pi) consumed during activation of palmitate to acyl-CoA

• Net yield = 106 ATPs

Page 10: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase

• Oxidation of the C-C bond

• Mechanism involves proton abstraction, followed by double bond formation and hydride removal by FAD

• Electrons are passed to an electron transfer flavoprotein, and then to the electron transport chain.

Page 11: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase

Page 12: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Enoyl-CoA Hydratase• aka crotonases • Adds water across the double

bond • Uses substrates with trans-2-

and cis 2 double bonds (impt in b-oxidation of unsaturated FAs)

• With trans-2 substrate forms L-isomer, with cis 2 substrate forms D-isomer.

• Normal reaction converts trans-enoyl-CoA to L--hydroxyacyl-CoA

Page 13: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Hydroxyacyl-CoA Dehydrogenase

• Oxidizes the -Hydroxyl Group to keto group

• This enzyme is completely specific for L-hydroxyacyl-CoA

• D-hydroxylacyl-isomers are handled differently

• Produces one NADH

Page 14: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Thiolase • Nucleophillic

sulfhydryl group of CoA-SH attacks the -carbonyl carbon of the 3-keto-acyl-CoA.

• Results in the cleavage of the C-Cbond.

• Acetyl-CoA and an acyl-CoA (-) 2 carbons are formed

Page 15: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

-oxidation of odd chain fatty acids

• Odd chain fatty acids are less common

• Formed by some bacteria in the stomachs of rumaniants and the human colon.

• -oxidation occurs pretty much as w/ even chain fatty acids until the final thiolase cleavage which results in a 3 carbon acyl-CoA (propionyl-CoA)

• Special set of 3 enzymes are required to further oxidize propionyl-CoA

• Final Product succinyl-CoA enters TCA cycle

Page 16: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

-oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids

• -oxidation occurs normally for 3 rounds until a cis-3-enoyl-CoA is formed.

• Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase can not add double bond between the and carbons.

• Enoyl-CoA isomerase converts this to trans- 2 enoly-CoA

• Now the -oxidation can continue on w/ the hydration of the trans-2-enoyl-CoA

• Odd numbered double bonds handled by isomerase

Page 17: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

-oxidation of fatty acids with even numbered double bonds

Page 18: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Ketone Bodies• A special source of fuel and energy for

certain tissues • Produced when acetyl-CoA levels exceed the

capacity of the TCA cycle (depends on OAA levels)

• Under starvation conditions no carbos to produced anpleorotic intermediates

• Some of the acetyl-CoA produced by fatty acid oxidation in liver mitochondria is converted to acetone, acetoacetate and -hydroxybutyrate

• These are called "ketone bodies"• Source of fuel for brain, heart and muscle • Major energy source for brain during

starvation • They are transportable forms of fatty acids!

Page 19: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

Formation of ketone bodies

Re-utilization

of ketone bodies

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Ketone Bodies and Diabetes

• Lack of insulin related to uncontrolled fat breakdown in adipose tissues

• Excess b-oxidation of fatty acids results in ketone body formation.

• Can often smell acetone on the breath of diabetics.

• High levels of ketone bodies leads to condition known as diabetic ketoacidosis.

• Because ketone bodies are acids, accumulation can lower blood pH.

Page 21: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

The Glyoxylate Cycle• A variant of TCA for plants and bacteria • Acetate-based growth - net synthesis of

carbohydrates and other intermediates from acetate - is not possible with TCA

• Glyoxylate cycle offers a solution for plants and some bacteria and algae

• The CO2-evolving steps are bypassed and an extra acetate is utilized

• Isocitrate lyase and malate synthase are the short-circuiting enzymes

Page 22: Chapter 16 (Part 2)
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Glyoxylate Cycle• Rxns occur in specialized organelles

(glycoxysomes)• Plants store carbon in seeds as oil• The glyoxylate cycle allows plants to

use acetyl-CoA derived from B-oxidation of fatty acids for carbohydrate synthesis

• Animals can not do this! Acetyl-CoA is totally oxidized to CO2

• Malate used in gluconeogenesis

Page 24: Chapter 16 (Part 2)

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