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Nucleotide Metabolism. Bases/Nucleosides/Nucleotides. Base= Base. Base + Sugar + Phosphate= Nucleotide. Base + Sugar= Nucleoside. Deoxyadenosine 5’-triphosphate (dATP). Adenine. Deoxyadenosine. Cellular Roles of Nucleotides. Energy metabolism (ATP)*
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Bases/Nucleosides/Nucleotides Base= Base Base + Sugar + Phosphate= Nucleotide Base + Sugar= Nucleoside Deoxyadenosine 5’-triphosphate (dATP) Adenine Deoxyadenosine
Cellular Roles of Nucleotides • Energy metabolism (ATP)* • Monomeric units of nucleic acids* • Regulation of physiological processes • Adenosine controls coronary blood flow • cAMP and cGMP serve as signaling molecules • Precursor function-GTP to tetrahydrobiopternin • Coenzyme components- 5’-AMP in FAD/NAD+ • Activated intermediates- UDP Glucose • Allosteric effectors- regulate themselves and others
How I hope to make this at least bearable if not mildly interesting • Purines and Pyrimidines • Synthesis (de novo and salvage pathways) • Degradation • Relevant disease states • Relevant clinical applications (Friday) You are not responsible for any structures
Two Purines Adenine Guanine Two Pyrimidines Thymine/Uracil Cytosine Purines and Pyrimidines
Salvage Pathway de novo Pathway Synthesis Pathways • For both purines and pyrimidines there are two means of synthesis (often regulate one another) • de novo (from bits and parts) • salvage (recycle from pre-existing nucleotides)
X de novo Synthesis • Committed step: This is the point of no return • Occurs early in the biosynthetic pathway • Often regulated by final product (feedback inhibition)
X Inhibited by AMP, GMP, IMP Purine Biosynthesis (de novo) • Atoms derived from: • Aspartic acid • Glycine • Glutamine • CO2 • Tetrahydrofolate • Also requires • 4 ATP’s Committed Step Purines are synthesized on the Ribose ring
Purine Biosynthesis (de novo) (A bunch of steps you don’t need to know) IMP (Inosine Monophosphate) ATP GTP AMP GMP Feedback Inhibition
Sequential removal of bits and pieces End product is uric acid Uric acid is primate-specific Purine Degradation Other species further metabolize uric acid Excreted in Urine Xanthine Oxidase Xanthine Uric Acid
X Allopurinol Avoid: Offal foods such as liver, kidneys, tripe, sweetbreads and tongue Excess Uric Acid Causes Gout • Primary gout (hyperuricemia) • Inborn errors of metabolism that lead to overproduction of Uric Acid • Overactive de novo synthesis pathway • Leads to deposits of Uric Acid in the joints • Causes acute arthritic joint inflammation Xanthine Oxidase Xanthine Uric Acid
Immunodeficiency Diseases Associated with Purine Degradation • Defect in adenosine deaminase • Removes amine from adenosine • SCID- severe combined immunodeficiency • “Bubble Boy” Disease • Defect in both B-cells and T-cells (Disease of Lymphocytes) • Patients extremely susceptible to infection - hence the Bubble Lymphocyte
Therapies for SCID • Can be diagnosed in infants through a simple blood test (white cell count) • Bone marrow transplant for infants • Familial donor • Continued administration of adenosine deaminase (ADA-PEG) • Gene therapy- repair defective gene in T-cells or blood stem cells
Salvage Pathway for Purines Hypoxanthine or Guanine + PRPP = IMP or GMP + PPi Hypoxanthineguanosylphosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRTase) Adenine + PRPP = AMP + PPi Adeninephosphoribosyl transferase (APRTase)
Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome • Absence of HGPRTase • X-linked (Gene on X) • Occurs primarily in males • Characterized by: • Increased uric acid • Spasticity • Neurological defects • Aggressive behavior • Self-mutilation
Total Aside on X-linked Diseases • Why are X-linked diseases generally found only in males? • Females have two X chromosomes - would need to mutate both copies to see a recessive phenotype • Males have a single X chromosome XY XX Think about Fragile X Syndrome
Biosynthesis of Pyrimidines • Synthesized from: • Glutamine • CO2 • Aspartic acid • Requires ATP Uracil Cytosine • Pyrimidine rings are synthesized independent of the ribose and transferred to the PRPP (ribose) • Generated as UMP (uridine 5’-monophosphate)
X Inhibited by UTP If you have lots of UTP around this means you won’t make more that you don’t need Feedback Inhibition Regulation of Pyrimidine Biosynthesis • Regulation occurs at first step in the pathway (committed step) • 2ATP + CO2 + Glutamine = carbamoyl phosphate
Hereditary Orotic Aciduria • Defect in de novo synthesis of pyrimidines • Loss of functional UMP synthetase • Gene located on chromosome III • Characterized by excretion of orotic acid • Results in severe anemia and growth retardation • Extremely rare (15 cases worldwide) • Treated by feeding UMP
Disease (-UMP) No UMP/excess orotate Disease (+UMP) Restore depleted UMP Downregulate pathway via feedback inhibition (Less orotate) X UMP Synthetase Why does UMP Cure Orotic Aciduria? UMP Carbamoyl Phosphate Orotate Feedback Inhibition UTP
Synthesized on PRPP Regulated by GTP/ATP Generates IMP Requires Energy Synthesized then added to PRPP Regulated by UTP Generates UMP/CMP Requires Energy Biosynthesis: Purine vs Pyrimidine Purine Pyrimidine Both are very complicated multi-step process which your kindly professor does not expect you to know in detail
Pyrimidine Degradation/Salvage • Pyrimindine rings can be fully degraded to soluble structures (Compare to purines that make uric acid) • Can also be salvaged by reactions with PRPP • Catalyzed by Pyrimidine phosphoribosyltransferase Degradation pathways are quite distinct for purines and pyrimidines, but salvage pathways are quite similar
Wait a minute:So far we’ve only made GMP, AMP, and UMP So how the heck are we supposed to make DNA? We need the dNTPs according to the Know-it-All Professor who taught us that a couple of months ago
Two Problems • These are monophosphates (i.e. GMP)- we need triphosphates (i.e. GTP) for both DNA and RNA synthesis • These are ribonucleotides- that’s fine for RNA but we also need to make DNA Synthesis of ribonucleotides first supports the RNA world theory
AMP + ATP GMP + ATP 2ADP GDP + ADP Specific Kinases Convert NMP to NDP Nucleoside Monophosphates Nucleoside Diphosphates Monophosphate Kinases NMP NDP • Monophosphate kinases are specific for the bases Adenylate Kinase Guanylate Kinase
5´ 1´ 4´ 5´ 1´ 3´ 2´ 4´ 3´ 2´ Conversion of Ribonucleotides to Deoxyribonucleotides BASE BASE Ribonucleotide Reductase Deoxyribonucleoside Ribonucleoside Somehow we need to get rid of this oxygen
Ribonucleotide Reductase • Catalyzes conversion of NDP to dNDP • Highly regulated enzyme • Regulates the level of cellular dNTPs • Activated prior to DNA synthesis • Controlled by feedback inhibition
dNDP to dNTP (the final step) • Once dNDPs are generated by ribonucleotide reductase a general kinase can phosphorylate to make the dNTP’s • So far we’ve made GTP, ATP, and UTP (which can be aminated to form CTP) • What about TTP? You’ll have to tune in tomorrow
Plan for Tomorrow • Brief Explanation of how dUMP is converted to dTMP • Some clinically relevant treatments based on these pathways that are used to combat: • Cancer • Bacterial Infections • Viral Infections
Take Home Concepts from Today’s Lecture • Nucleotides can be made through two pathways • (de novo and salvage) • Pathways are regulated by feedback inhibition • Specific degradation pathways exist • Molecular basis of metabolic diseases mentioned • What steps are necessary to generate a dNTP from the initial NMP made