Chem 356 Structure and Function in Biochemistry
Lecture Oct 27-30
Allosteric Control of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis
- glycolytic pathway degrades glucose ATP
provides building blocks
- rate of conversion of glucose into pyruvate is regulated to meet these two cellular needs
In metabolic pathways, enzymes catalyzing irreversible reactions are potential sites of control
Glycolysis—irreversible reactions
- hexokinase
- phosphofructokinase
- pyruvate kinase
- each reaction serves as a control site
- activities are controlled by allosteric effectors, or by covalent modification, or by transcriptional control
Regulation of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis
Phosphofructokinase (PFK)
Fructose 6P + ATP fructose 1,6-bisP + ADP
- most important control element in glycolytic pathway
- 340 kDa tetrameric enzyme, allosteric
- inhibited by high levels of ATP
negative heterotropic effector
- 2 conformational states
T R in equilibrium
- each subunit has 2 binding sites for ATP
substrate site
regulatory site
- substrate site binds ATP in either state
- inhibitor site binds ATP in T state
- other substrate, fructose 6P, binds to R state
- inhibitory action of ATP is reversed by AMP
PFK activity increases when
Glycolysis stimulated as energy charge falls
- Citrate enhances inhibitory effect of ATP
High citrate levels indicate abundance of biosynthetic precursors
Stop glucose degradation via glycolysis
Fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (F1,6BPase)
- Inhibited by AMP
- Activated by citrate
Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate
- Potent allosteric regulator of gluconeogenesis and glycolysis
- 1980 – F2,6-bisP activator of PFK
- 1981 –F2,6-bisP inhibitor of F1,6-BPase
- [F2,6-bisP] in the cell depends on
rate of synthesis by phosphofructokinase-2 (PFK-2)
rate of degradation by fructose2,6- bisphosphatase (FBPase-2)
in starved rat, <1M in liver
in well-fed rat, 20M in liver
fructose 6Pfructose 2,6-bisP
- the 2 enzymatic activities on one protein
bifunctional (or tandem) enzyme
the opposing activities of this bifunctional enzyme are regulated in 2 ways
phosphorylation vs dephosphorylation
- F6P (substrate of PFK and product of F1,6BPase) allosterically activates PFK-2 and inhibits FBP-2ase
[F6P] [F2,6bisP] PFK
feedforward stimulation
- covalent modification
phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)
at Ser residue
dephosphorylation by phosphoprotein phosphatase
phosphorylation inhibitsPFK-2 activity and activatesFBPase-2 activity
dephosphorylation
PFK-2
FBPase-2
Hexokinase
inhibited by G6P
if PFK inactive then F6P
F6P then G6P
inhibition of PFK inhibits hexokinase
However
liver possesses glucokinase an isoform of hexokinase
glucokinase not inhibited by G6P
phosphorylates glucose only when it is abundant because > KM than hexokinase
- 5 mM glucokinase; 0.1 mM hexokinase
role of glucokinase is to provide G6P for the synthesis of glycogen
high KM of glucokinase in liver gives brain and muscle priority for glucose when limited
Pyruvate kinase (PyK)
tetramer of 57 KDa subunits (228 KDa)
catalyzes the third irreversible step in glycolysis
controls product outflow from pathway
pyruvate building block or oxidized (ATP)
exists as isoforms
L-type: liver
M-type: muscle and brain
- allosterically inhibited by
ATP
Alanine
Acetyl CoA
- allosterically activated by
F1,6-bisP
- Catalytic properties of L type (but not M) controlled by reversible phosphorylation
[glucose]
glucagon
cAMP cascade
PK activity
GYLCOLYSIS
Pyruvate carboxylase
- Activated by acetyl CoA
- Inhibited by ADP
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
- Inhibited by ADP
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