oxidation and biosynthesis of fatty acids

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Oxidation and Oxidation and biosynthesis of biosynthesis of fatty acids fatty acids

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Oxidation and biosynthesis of fatty acids. Stages of fatty acid oxidation. (1) Activation of fatty acids takes place on the outer mitochondrial membrane (2) Transport into the mitochondria - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Oxidation and Oxidation and biosynthesis of biosynthesis of

fatty acidsfatty acids

Page 2: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

(1) Activation of fatty acids takes place on the outer mitochondrial membrane

(2) Transport into the mitochondria

(3) Degradation to two-carbon fragments (as acetyl CoA) in the mitochondrial matrix (-oxidation pathway)

Stages of fatty acid oxidation

Page 3: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

(1) Activation of Fatty Acids •Fatty acids are converted to CoA thioesters by

acyl-CoA synthetase (ATP dependent)

•The PPi released is hydrolyzed by a pyrophosphatase to 2 Pi

•Two phosphoanhydride bonds (two ATP equivalents) are consumed to activate one fatty acid to a thioester

Page 4: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•The carnitine shuttle system.

•Fatty acyl CoA is first converted to acylcarnitine (enzyme carnitine acyltransferase I (bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane).

• Acylcarnitine enters the mitochondria by a translocase.

•The acyl group is transferred back to CoA (enzyme - carnitine acyltransferase II).

(2) Transport of Fatty Acyl CoA into Mitochondria

Page 5: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•Carnitine shuttle system

•Path of acyl group in red

Page 6: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•The -oxidation pathway (-carbon atom (C3) is oxidized) degrades fatty acids two carbons at a time

(3) The Reactions of oxidation

Page 7: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

1. Oxidation of acyl CoA by an acyl CoA dehydrogenase to give an enoyl CoA

Coenzyme - FAD

Page 8: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

2. Hydration of the double bond between C-2 and C-3 by enoyl CoA hydratase with the 3-hydroxyacyl CoA (-hydroxyacyl CoA) formation

Page 9: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

3. Oxidation of 3-hydroxyacyl CoA to 3-ketoacyl CoA by 3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase

Coenzyme – NAD+

Page 10: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

4. Cleavage of 3-ketoacyl CoA by the thiol group of a second molecule of CoA with the formation of acetyl CoA and an acyl CoA shortened by two carbon atoms.

Enzyme - -ketothiolase.

Page 11: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

The shortened acyl CoA then undergoes another cycle of oxidation

The number of cycles: n/2-1, where n – the number of carbon atoms

Page 12: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Fatty acyl CoA-Oxidation of saturated fatty

acids

Page 13: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•One round of oxidation: 4 enzyme steps produce acetyl CoA from fatty acyl CoA

•Each round generates one molecule each of: FADH2

NADHAcetyl CoA Fatty acyl CoA (2 carbons shorter each round)

Fates of the products of -oxidation: - NADH and FADH2 - are used in ETC - acetyl CoA - enters the citric acid cycle - acyl CoA – undergoes the next cycle of oxidation

Page 14: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

ATP Generation from Fatty Acid Oxidation

•The balanced equation for oxidizing one palmitoyl CoA by seven cycles of b oxidation

Palmitoyl CoA + 7 HS-CoA + 7 FAD+ + 7 NAD+ + 7 H2O 8 Acetyl CoA + 7FADH2 + 7 NADH + 7 H+ ATP generated

8 acetyl CoA 10x8=807 FADH2

7x1.5=10.5 7 NADH7x2.5=17.5

108 ATP

ATP expended to activate palmitate -2

Net yield: 106 ATP

Net yield of ATP per one oxidized palmitate

Palmitate (C15H31COOH) - 7 cycles – n/2-1

Page 15: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

LIPID METABOLISM: LIPID METABOLISM: FATTY ACID FATTY ACID OXIDATIONOXIDATION

Page 16: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•Odd-chain fatty acids occur in bacteria and microorganisms

•Final cleavage product is propionyl CoA rather than acetyl CoA

•Three enzymes convert propionyl CoA to succinyl CoA (citric acid cycle intermediate)

-OXIDATION OF ODD-CHAIN FATTY ACIDS

Page 17: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Propionyl CoA Is Converted into Succinyl CoA

1. Propionyl CoA is carboxylated to yield the D isomer of methylmalonyl CoA. The hydrolysis of an ATP is required.Enzyme: propionyl CoA carboxylaseCoenzyme: biotin

Page 18: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

2. The D isomer of methylmalonyl CoA is racemized to the L isomer Enzyme: methylmalonyl-CoA racemase

Page 19: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

3. L isomer of methylmalonyl CoA is converted into succinyl CoA by an intramolecular rearrangementEnzyme: methylmalonyl CoA mutaseCoenzyme: vitamin B12 (cobalamin)

Page 20: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

OXIDATION OF FATTY ACIDS IN PEROXISOMES

Peroxisomes - organelles containing enzyme catalase, which catalyzes the dismutation of hydrogen peroxide into water and molecular oxygen Acyl CoA

dehydrogenase transfers electrons to O2 to yield H2O2 instead of capturing the high-energy electrons by ETC, as occurs in mitochondrial -oxidation.

Page 21: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

METABOLISM METABOLISM OF LIPIDS: OF LIPIDS:

SYNTHESIS OF SYNTHESIS OF FATTY ACIDSFATTY ACIDS

Page 22: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Fatty Acid Synthesis•Occurs mainly in liver and adipocytes, in mammary glands during lactation

•Occurs in cytoplasm

•FA synthesis and degradation occur by two completely separate pathways

•When glucose is plentiful, large amounts of acetyl CoA are produced by glycolysis and can be used for fatty acid synthesis

Page 23: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Three stages of fatty acid synthesis:

A. Transport of acetyl CoA into cytosol

B. Carboxylation of acetyl CoA

C. Assembly of fatty acid chain

Page 24: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

A. Transport of Acetyl CoA to the Cytosol

•Acetyl CoA from catabolism of carbohydrates and amino acids is exported from mitochondria via the citrate transport system

•Cytosolic NADH also converted to NADPH

•Two molecules of ATP are expended for each round of this cyclic pathway

Page 25: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Citrate transport system

Page 26: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Sources of NADPH for Fatty Acid Synthesis

1. One molecule of NADPH is generated for each molecule of acetyl CoA that is transferred from mitochondria to the cytosol (malic enzyme).

2. NADPH molecules come from the pentose phosphate pathway.

Page 27: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

B. Carboxylation of Acetyl CoA

Enzyme: acetyl CoA carboxylase Prosthetic group - biotin

A carboxybiotin intermediate is formed. ATP is hydrolyzed. The CO2 group in carboxybiotin is transferred to acetyl CoA to form malonyl CoA.Acetyl CoA carboxylase is the regulatory enzyme.

Page 28: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

C. The Reactions of Fatty Acid Synthesis

• Five separate stages:(1) Loading of precursors via thioester derivatives(2) Condensation of the precursors(3) Reduction(4) Dehydration(5) Reduction

Page 29: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

During the fatty acid synthesis all intermediates are linked to the protein called acyl carrier protein (ACP-SH), which is the component of fatty acyl synthase complex.

The pantothenic acid is a component of ACP.

Intermediates in the biosynthetic pathway are attached to the sulfhydryl terminus of phosphopantotheine group.

Page 30: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

The elongation phase of fatty acid synthesis starts with the formation of acetyl ACP and malonyl ACP.

Acetyl transacylase and malonyl transacylase catalyze these reactions.

Acetyl CoA + ACP acetyl ACP + CoA Malonyl CoA + ACP malonyl ACP + CoA

Page 31: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Condensation reaction.

Acetyl ACP and malonyl ACP react to form acetoacetyl ACP.

Enzyme - acyl-malonyl ACP condensing enzyme.

Page 32: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Reduction.

Acetoacetyl ACP is reduced to D-3-hydroxybutyryl ACP.

NADPH is the reducing agent

Enzyme: -ketoacyl ACP reductase

Page 33: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Dehydration.

D-3-hydroxybutyryl ACP is dehydrated to form crotonyl ACP(trans-2-enoyl ACP).

Enzyme: 3-hydroxyacyl ACP dehydratase

Page 34: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Reduction.

The final step in the cycle reduces crotonyl ACP to butyryl ACP.

NADPH is reductant.

Enzyme - enoyl ACP reductase.

This is the end of first elongation cycle (first round).

Page 35: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

In the second round butyryl ACP condenses with malonyl ACP to form a C6--ketoacyl ACP.

Reduction, dehydration, and a second reduction convert the C6--ketoacyl ACP into a C6-acyl ACP, which is ready for a third round of elongation.

Page 36: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

•Rounds of synthesis continue until a C16 palmitoyl group is formed

•Palmitoyl-ACP is hydrolyzed by a thioesterase

Final reaction of FA synthesis

Acetyl CoA + 7 Malonyl CoA + 14 NADPH + 14 H+

Palmitate + 7 CO2 + 14 NADP+ + 8 HS-CoA + 6 H2O

Overall reaction of palmitate synthesis from acetyl CoA and malonyl CoA

Page 37: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Organization of Multifunctional Enzyme Complex in Eukaryotes

The synthase is dimer with antiparallel subunits.

Each subunit has three domains.

ACP is located in domain 2.

Domain 1 contains transacylases, ketoacyl-ACP synthase (condensing enzyme)

Domain 2 contains acyl carrier protein, -ketoacyl reductase, dehydratase, and enoyl reductase.

Domain 3 contains thioesterase activity.

Page 38: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids
Page 39: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Fatty Acid Elongation and Desaturation

The common product of fatty acid synthesis is palmitate (16:0).

Cells contain longer fatty acids and unsaturated fatty acids they are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum.

The reactions of elongation are similar to the ones seen with fatty acid synthase (new carbons are added in the form of malonyl CoA).

For the formation of unsaturated fatty acids there are various desaturases catalizing the formation of double bonds.

Page 40: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

THE CONTROL OF FATTY ACID METABOLISM

Acetyl CoA carboxylase plays an essential role in regulating fatty acid synthesis and degradation.

The carboxylase is controlled by hormones: glucagon, epinephrine, and insulin.

Another regulatory factors: citrate, palmitoyl CoA, and AMP

Page 41: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Insulin stimulates fatty acid synthesis causing dephosphorylation of carboxylase.

Glucagon and epinephrine have the reverse effect (keep the carboxylase in the inactive phosphorylated state).

Global Regulationis carried out by means of reversible phosphorylation

Acetyl CoA carboxylase is switched off by phosphorylation and activated by dephosphorylation

Protein kinase is activated by AMP and inhibited by ATP.

Carboxylase is inactivated when the energy charge is low.

Page 42: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Local Regulation Acetyl CoA carboxylase is allosterically stimulated by citrate.

The level of citrate is high when both acetyl CoA and ATP are abundant (isocitrate dehydrogenase is inhibited by ATP).

Palmitoyl CoA inhibits carboxylase.

Page 43: Oxidation and biosynthesis of  fatty acids

Fed state: • Insulin level is increased

• Inhibits hydrolysis of stored TGs

• Stimulates formation of malonyl CoA, which inhibits carnitine acyltransferase I

• FA remain in cytosol (FA oxidation enzymes are in the mitochondria)

Starvation:

• Epinephrine and glucagon are produced and stimulate adipose cell lipase and the level of free fatty acids rises

• Inactivate carboxylase, so decrease formation of malonyl CoA (lead to increased transport of FA into mitochondria and activate the b-oxidation pathway)

Response to Diet