Protein Catabolism - Biochemistry

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Question

Which of the following statements is false regarding catabolic pathways?

Answer

Both catabolic and anabolic reactions are metabolic reactions. The difference is that catabolism is when complex molecules break down into simpler molecules, and anabolism is when simpler molecules are combined to form complex molecules. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is used to store and transport energy in cells. There is a major difference in how ATP is used in catabolic and anabolic reactions. Anabolic reactions require energy input, and result in a net consumption of ATP. Catabolic reactions produce energy and results in a net synthesis of ATP. Therefore, catabolic pathways do not have a net consumption of ATP.

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Question

What is the purpose of the urea cycle?

Answer

The urea cycle is vital to the excretion of ammonia, a harmful byproduct of amino acid breakdown. Via a series of enzymatic changes, ammonia is converted to urea, which can be excreted into the urine.

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Question

Where does the urea cycle occur?

Answer

The urea cycle occurs primarily in the liver, and to a lesser extent in renal cells. There is no urea conversion performed by the small intestine.

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Question

In the urea cycle, which of the following amino acids condenses with citrulline, yielding argininosuccinate?

Answer

Arginine is the amino acid in the cycle that is converted to urea and ornithine via the enzyme arginase, and is one of the products of the lysis of argininosuccinate. Glutamic acid plays a different role in the cycle; it loses its amino group to the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate, a precursor of citrulline. Asparagine is not present in the urea cycle, but aspartic acid is. It condenses with citrulline, through the action of the enzyme argininosuccinate synthase and ATP, to produce argininosuccinate.

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Question

During the urea cycle, which enzyme catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the mitochondria?

Answer

Triose phosphate isomerase catalyzes the isomerization between dihydroxyacetone phosphate and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is a regulatory enzyme for the pentose phosphate pathway. Citrate synthase is a regulatory enzyme for the Krebs cycle, catalyzing the synthesis of citrate from acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate. PFK catalyzes the rate-limiting step in glycolysis.

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Question

Carbomyl phosphate is a molecule that can enter into the urea cycle. It is formed from the coupling of what two molecules?

Answer

Free and bicarbonate can come together to form carbomyl phosphate which can then enter into the urea cycle.

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Question

All of the following are intermediate molecules in the urea cycle except __________.

Answer

In the urea cycle, carbomyl phosphate first combines with the molecule ornithine. This forms citrulline. Citrulline then reacts with aspartate to form arginosuccinate. Fumarate dissociates from arginosuccinate forming arginine, and then the addition of water forms urea and ornithine once again to complete the cycle. Citrate is not involved in this cycle, it is however in the Krebs cycle.

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Question

What is the difference between ketogenic and glucogenic amino acids?

I. Ketogenic amino acids are degraded to acetyl-CoA and ketones; glucogenic amino acids can be converted to glucose

II. Ketogenic amino acids are alanine and glutamine

III. The ketogenic amino acids are leucine and lysine

IV. Amino acids that are glucogenic and ketogenic are: phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan, isoleucine and threonine

Answer

Ketogenic amino acids are degraded to Acetyl Coenzyme A (CoA) and ketones; glucogenic amino acids can be converted to glucose. Amino acids that are both ketogenic and glucogenic can be metabolized to both glucose and ketone bodies. Purely ketogenic aminoacids are leucine and lysine. Amino acids that are glucogenic and ketogenic are: phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan, isoleucine and threonine. All the other amino acids are glucogenic.

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Question

The urea cycle is vital to the excretion of ammonia, a harmful byproduct of amino acid breakdown.

What enzyme in the urea cycle converts L-ornithine to L-citrulline?

Answer

Ornithine transcarbamylase catalyzes the reaction between the substrates ornithine and carbamoyl phosphate to form citrulline and phosphate. This process occurs primarily in the hepatic mitochondria, and to a lesser extent in the mitochondria of the renal cells.

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Question

What enzyme is deficient in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome?

Answer

Lesch-Nyhan syndrome is an x-linked deficiency of the enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT). HGPRT plays a central role in the generation of purine nucleotides through the purine salvage pathway. Cell breakdown products cannot be reused, and are therefore degraded. This gives rise to increased uric acid, a purine breakdown product. This build-up of uric acid is associated with severe gout and kidney problems, poor muscle control and mental retardation, usually in the first year of life. In the second year of life a common sign is self-mutilating behaviors.

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Question

Which of the following classes of enzymes could possibly breakdown collagen, the most common protein in the human body?

Answer

Because collagen is a protein, it must be broken down by a protease. Proteases exert their effects by hydrolyzing peptide bonds. The specific enzyme that breaks down collagen, predictably, is called collagenase.

The other classes of enzymes listed have actions unrelated to protein breakdown. An isomerase rearranges bonds to form an isomer, a polyermase adds nucleotides to DNA, a lipase breaks down fats, and a ligase creates a chemical bond.

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Question

Which of the following is a possible consequence of an arginase deficiency?

Answer

Arginase catalyzes the conversion of arginine to ornithine and urea. Therefore, if there is a deficiency in arginase, there will be a buildup of arginine, and a deficiency in ornithine and urea. Without the ability to form urea, the ammonium waste from protein and amino acids degradation will not be able to be converted to urea safely. The buildup of ammonium will cause hyperammonemia, which results in some unfavorable physiological scenarios.

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Question

Which of the following describes the role of glutamine synthetase in protein catabolism?

I. Glutamine synthetase converts glutamate and ammonia to glutamine using one molecule of ATP

II. The reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase is reversible

III. The reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase removes excess nitrogen (in the form of toxic ammonia) from protein degradation

IV. Glutamine synthetase converts glutamine to glutamate

Answer

Glutaminase synthetase is present predominately in the brain, liver and kidneys.The importance of the reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase is that excess nitrogen (in the form of toxic ammonia) from protein degradation can be removed from tissues, especially the brain. The reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase is irreversible. It converts glutamate to glutamine.

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Question

Which of these describe(s) the role of aminotransferases in protein catabolism?

I. They are present in the liver and muscle

II. They transfer the amino group from one amino acids to alpha-ketoglutarate

III. In the muscle, these enzymes move the amino group to glutamate, which can be further converted to glutamine which is a excess nitrogen carrier from tissues

IV. They catalyze irreversible reactions and release amino groups as free ammonium

Answer

Aminotransferases do not release amino groups, but rather transfer them to other amino acids. The reactions catalyzed by aminotransferases are reversible. Their blood concentrations can be used as clinical indicators for damage to liver or muscle.

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Question

Which of the following regarding mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase are true?

I. Mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase forms intermediates in the urea cycle

II. Mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase utilizes adenosine triphosphate (ATP)

III. A decrease in normal levels of the enzyme leads to a decrease in ammonium ions in the blood

IV. Mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase converts ammonium ions to carbamoyl phosphate

Answer

Mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is important in excretion of ammonium ions as urea. Without it there is an increase in blood ammonium levels (which are toxic to the brain), as well as decreased blood urea levels and increased levels of glutamine (the transporter of ammonium in the blood).

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Question

Which of these describe the role of ornithine transcarbamoylase in protein degradation?

I. Ornithine transcarbamoylase converts carbamoyl phosphate to citrulline in the presence of ornithine

II. Ornithine transcarbamoylase is present in the mitochondria

III. Deficiency of the enzyme leads to a decrease of ammonium ions in the blood

IV. Deficiency of the enzyme leads to an increase in urea in the blood

Answer

Ornithine transcarbamoylase is part of the urea cycle; it converts carbamoyl phosphate to citrulline in the presence of ornithine. It participates in the pathway that transforms toxic ammonium ions released in amino acid degradation to non-toxic urea that can be eliminated in urine. Ornithine transcarbamoylase is a mitochondrial membrane and its deficiency not only affects urea production, but also leads to accumulation of nucleotide bases such as uracil in the blood and urine. The levels of urea in the blood decrease (not increase) in ornithine transcarbamoylase deficiency.

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Question

The enzyme responsible for the reaction that produces ammonia during amino acid deamination is ___________.

Answer

The correct answer is "glutamate dehydrogenase." Glutamate is the only amino acid that has an enzyme that removes its amino group as ammonia, rather than just transferring the amino group to a α-keto acid and forming a new amino acid. The transfer of amino groups, which may form glutamate, is performed by aminotransferases that require pyridoxal-5’-phosphate as a cofactor. Cathepsins are a type of proteases contained in lysosomes, and they break down proteins into amino acids rather than metabolize the amino acids themselves. Carbamoyl phosphate synthase is not involved in deamination, but rather condenses ammonia with bicarbonate to enter the urea cycle.

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Question

Phenylketonuria is a genetic disorder resulting in a lack of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity. During the first step of phenylalanine metabolism, phenylalanine is hydroxylated into what amino acid?

Answer

The first step in phenylalanine metabolism is conversion of phenylalanine to tyrosine. Tyrsoine is simply a hydroxylated version of phenylalanine.

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Question

Which enzyme catalyzes the rate-limiting step of the urea cycle?

Answer

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is the rate-limiting step of the urea cycle. It is the first step of the urea cycle and occurs exclusive in the mitochondria of hepatic and renal cells.

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Question

What is produced in one turn of the urea cycle?

Answer

2 molecules of ammonia and 1 molecule of carbon dioxide are converted into 1 molecule of urea in every turn of the urea cycle. In addition, each cycle regenerates 1 molecule of ornithine for use in the next turn.

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