Amino Acid Metabolism and Urea Cycle Overview
Transamination
- Definition: Removal of nitrogen from amino acids by transferring the α-amino group to α-ketoglutarate, forming glutamate and an α-ketoacid.
- Enzyme: Aminotransferases (e.g., Alanine aminotransferase (ALT), Aspartate aminotransferase (AST)).
- Cofactor: Pyridoxal phosphate.
- Substrates: Pyruvate, oxaloacetate, α-ketoglutarate.
Oxidative Deamination
- Enzyme: Glutamate dehydrogenase.
- Cofactors: Uses NAD+ or NADP+.
- Process: Occurs in liver and kidneys, resulting in α-ketoacids and ammonia (NH3).
- Importance: Ammonia is toxic and converted to urea in the liver.
Urea Cycle
- Purpose: Major disposal form of amino groups from amino acids, primarily derived from ammonia, aspartate, and carbon dioxide.
- Urea Production:
- Occurs in the liver.
- Transported to the kidneys for excretion in urine.
- Special Details:
- Bacterial urease in the intestine can convert urea back to ammonia.
Nitrogen Elimination
- Processes Involved:
- Transamination, oxidative deamination; the amino group (NH3) is toxic, leading to conversion to urea for urine elimination.
Types of Amino Acids
- Essential Amino Acids: Required from the diet (e.g., phenylalanine, valine, tryptophan).
- Non-Essential Amino Acids: Synthesized by the body (e.g., alanine, glutamate).
- Categories Based on Metabolism:
- Glucogenic Amino Acids: Yield pyruvate or TCA cycle intermediates (substrates for gluconeogenesis).
- Ketogenic Amino Acids: Yield acetoacetate or acetyl CoA (substrates for ketogenesis).
- Some amino acids are both glucogenic and ketogenic.
Amino Acid Biosynthesis Families
- Six Families of Pathways:
- Glutamate family
- Aspartate family
- Serine family
- Alanine family
- Aromatic amino acids family
- Histidine family
- Sources of Pathways:
- Glutamate: α-ketoglutarate
- Aspartate: oxaloacetate
- Serine: 3-phosphoglycerate
- Alanine: pyruvate
- Aromatic AAs: other precursors (some not covered).