Carbodydrate For HO
Carbodydrate For HO
Carbodydrate For HO
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Introduction
The most abundant biomolecules found in living organisms
Cn (H2O)n, where n ≥ 3
Function of carbohydrates
The main source of energy for the body
Glycogen
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Excess carbohydrate is converted to fat
Component of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
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Classification of carbohydrates
Based on number of simple sugar, carbohydrates are classified as:
Monosaccharaides
Molecules contain only one sugar groups
Galactose
Make the lactose of milk sugar
Heteropolysaccharides
• Glycosaminoglycan
• Glycoproteins
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Isomerism of monosaccharaides
STEREOISOMERS
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Compounds having same structural formula, but differing in
arrangement of the groups around chiral carbon are known as
stereoisomers
The carbon atom to which four different substituent groups
attached is called a chiral or asymmetric carbon atom
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The second, third, fourth and fifth carbons of glucose are,
therefore, asymmetric
Hexoses: glucose, galactose, mannose, etc. – are stereoisomers
of each other
They have same chemical formula C6H12O6
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a molecule with n chiral centers can have 2n stereoisomers
Glyceraldehyde has 21 = 2
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Reducing sugar: if the anomeric carbon is not attached to any
other group sugar is a reducing sugar
Benedicts test identifies reducing sugar having free ketone or
aldehyde functional group
Benedicts reagent contain
Cupper Sulphate- Provides Cu2+ ions for reduction to Cu+
Sodium citrate- Chelating agent
Sodium carbonate- Provides alkaline pH
Maltose
Composed of two glucose units connected to each other by
glycosidic bond
Maltose is a reducing sugar because it has one free anomeric
hydroxyl group
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Sucrose
Sucrose or cane sugar or common table sugar is a disaccharide of
glucose and fructose
Sucrose does not contain free anomeric carbon hydroxyl group
and is non-reducing sugar
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Lactose
Lactose is a disaccharide that consists galactose joined to glucose
by a β-(14) glycosidic linkage
The principal source of lactose is milk
Lactose is a reducing sugar since it has free anomeric hydroxyl
group on glucose unit
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GAGs are long, unbranched, heteropolysaccharide chains composed
of a repeating disaccharide unit
– Acidic sugar and amino sugar
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ECM is complex inter-digitating meshwork of proteins &
polysaccharides secreted by cells into spaces b/n them
Helps organize cells into tissues
Glycoproteins
Proteins with carbohydrate chains are attached
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DIGESTION
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In the digestive tract, dietary polysaccharides and disaccharides are
converted to monosaccharaides by glycosidase
The monosaccharaides formed by glycosidases are transported
across the intestinal mucosal cells into the interstitial fluid and
subsequently enter the bloodstream
Undigested carbohydrates enter the colon, where they may be
fermented by bacteria
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The digestion of starch begins in the mouth, where chewing mixes
the food with saliva
Saliva contain Salivary - amylase secreted by salivary glands
It breaks -(1 4) bonds and convert polysaccharides into;
Maltose and
α-dextrin (smaller polysaccharides)
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Carbohydrate digestion in the small Intestine
As acidic stomach contents reaches the duodenum, the low pH
stimulates the release of secretin
Secretin simulates exocrine cells of Pancrease to release
bicarbonates which helps to raise pH
Neutral pH is optimum for the action of pancreatic amylase
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The digestion of the disaccharides and digestion of maltose,
maltotriose and limit dextrins, occurs through disaccharidases
attached to the membrane surface of the brush border (microvilli) of
intestinal epithelial cells
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Disorders of Carbohydrate Digestion
Lactose intolerance
Lactose intolerance is a maldigestion syndrome due to the inability
to digest dietary lactose
The patient experiences
abdominal bloating
abdominal cramps
diarrhea and
flatulence upon ingesting such food sources
The inability to digest lactose could be due to the inherited or age-
dependent decline of lactase expression
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Cholera
The cholera toxin, Choleragen that binds to receptor on the cell
surface of intestine called GM1 gangliosides
Choleragen has two subunits called
– β-subunits that binds to GM1 ganglioside
– Catalytic A subunit that enters the cell
PKA then;
– Phosphorylate chloride channel by then opens it
– Phosphorylate Na+-H+ exchanger and then inhibits its activity
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Absorption
Absorption is takes place by:
Secondary active transport and facilitated transport
Active transport
Glucose and galactose are absorbed by energy requiring
transporters
o called sodium dependent glucose transporter-1 (SGLT-1)
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Energy for glucose transport
is provided indirectly, by the
active transport of Na+ out
of the cell
1= Na/K -ATPase
2= SGLT-1
3= GLUT-2
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Glucose (Hexose) transporters
Transporter proteins located in cell membrane called GLUT
transport hexose from blood stream to cells
GLUT-1 is located on;
BBB and transport glucose into extracellular cerebrospinal fluid
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Fate of Carbohydrates in Cell
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Glycolysis
– Provide ATP
– Cell lack mitochondria oxidize glucose up to lactate
Glycogen synthesis
– Ribose sugar
• Used for the synthesis of nucleotides
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Living organisms require a continual input of free energy for
three major purposes:
For muscle contraction
The active transport of molecules and ions
The synthesis of macromolecules from simple precursors
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Glycolysis
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Glycolysis is one of the principle pathways for generating ATP in
cells and is present in all cell types
Glycolysis is a reactions in which a molecule of glucose is degraded
to yield two molecules of pyruvate and generation of ATP and
NADH
From Greek Glykys means sweet/sugar, lysis means splitting
The central role of glycolysis in fuel metabolism is related to its
ability to generate ATP with, and without, oxygen
Aerobically
With the presence of oxygen and mitochondria
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Anaerobically
With the absence of oxygen and mitochondria
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Glycolysis occurs in ten steps:
Phosphorylation of glucose
Glucose metabolism begins by phosphorylation of glucose to
glucose-6 phosphate
For the purpose of trapping glucose inside the cell
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Phosphorylated glucose cannot easily pass through cell membrane
B/c it is too polar to pass hydrophobic cell membrane
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There are two possible enzymes for this reactions
Glucokinase
Hexokinase
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Cont…
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Cont….
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Generation of energy
Aerobic Anaerobic
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Cori cycle
Anaerobic glycolysis forms pyruvic acid, which is reduced to lactic
acid
The increased NADH/NAD+ ratio will direct excess pyruvate into
lactate
Lactate accumulations causes lactic acidosis
Lactate released from cells is taken up by the liver, heart, and
skeletal muscle and oxidized back to pyruvate
In the liver, the pyruvate is used to synthesize glucose
(gluconeogenesis), which is returned to the blood
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The heart, use lactate released from other tissues as a fuel
During an exercise such as bicycle riding, lactate released into the
blood from skeletal muscles in the leg might be used by resting
skeletal muscles in the arm
In the brain, glial cells and astrocytes produce lactate, which is used
by neurons
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Rappaport luebering cycle
The RBCs have ability to form 2,3-disphosphogycerate (2,3-DPG)
2,3-DPG decrease affinity of hemoglobin to oxygen, thus good
tissue oxygenation
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Warburg effect
Is dependency of cancer cells on anaerobic glycolysis at a much
higher rate than normal tissue, even when oxygen is available
Cancer cells dependency on anaerobic glycolysis for ATP is due to;
– They lack the capillary network to supply sufficient oxygen
– Cancer cells grow more rapidly than the blood vessels that nourish
them; thus, as solid tumors grow, the oxygen concentration in their
environment falls
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Fructose-2,6-biP is produced by phosphorylation of fructose 6-
phosphate at the 2 position by phosphofructokinase-2
It have two separate domains, a kinase and a phosphatase domain
– At kinase domain, fructose-6-P is phosphorylated to fructose-2,6-bisP and
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Disease associated with glycolysis
Lactic acidosis
Increased glycolysis and lack of oxygen
Hemolytic anemia
Genetic deficiency of pyruvate kinase enzyme in the red blood
cells
results in decreased ATP production in the RBC
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Metabolism of other monosaccharide's
Glycolysis is not exclusively for the catabolism of glucose
Metabolism of fructose
Fructose is found as a free monosaccharide in many fruits, in
honey
Fructose transport into cells is not insulin dependent unlike that
of glucose into certain tissues and, in contrast to glucose, fructose
does not promote the secretion of insulin
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Some of the fructose in the cells is phosphorylated by hexokinase;
To fructose 6-phosphate
Found in muscle and adipose tissue
Affinity of hexokinase for fructose,, is extremely low
is important only when the fructose concentration is very high
Most of the fructose is phosphorylated by the fructokinase;
To fructose 1-phosphate
Found in the liver, kidney, and intestine
Have high affinity for fructose
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Metabolism of galactose
Entry of galactose into peripheral cells is independent of insulin
Galactose is phosphorylated at C-1 by the enzyme galactokinase
to form galactose 1-phosphate
Galactose 1-phosphate is converted to glucose 1-phosphate by
the action of galactose 1-phosphate uridyl transferase
The net reaction of the pathway is the ATP-dependent conversion
of galactose to glucose 1-phosphate
The latter enters glycolytic sequence via glucose 6-phosphate
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Polyol pathway
An alternate mechanism for metabolizing a monosaccharide is to
convert it to a polyol (sugar alcohol)
Synthesis of sorbitol: Aldose reductase reduces glucose, producing
sorbitol
found in lens, retina, Schwann cells of peripheral nerves, liver,
kidney, placenta, RBC, and ovaries and seminal vesicles cells
Oxidation of sorbitol to produce fructose by sorbitol
dehydrogenase
In cells of the liver, ovaries, and seminal vesicles
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Krebs cycle
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The metabolism of glucose through glycolysis harvests only a fraction
of ATP available from glucose
Most of the ATP generated in metabolism is provided by the aerobic
processing of glucose
H2O
Krebs cycle is the final common pathway for the oxidation of fuel
molecules; carbohydrates, fatty acids, and amino acids
– b/c all generate acetyl CoA, which is the substrate for the TCA cycle
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The citric acid cycle removes electrons from acetyl CoA and uses
these electrons to form NADH and FADH 2
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• E1-pyruvate decarboxylase
• E2-dihydrolipoyl transacetylase
• E3-dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase
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The energy generated
Number of ATP or reduced Overall number of ATP formed
Coenzyme A formed
2NADH 2X3=6
6NADH 6X3=18
2 FADH 2X2=4
2 ATP 2
30 ATP
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Regulations
Krebs cycle is regulated at:
Pyruvate dehydrogenase
Isocitrate dehydrogenase
α- ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
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The metabolic pathways donate electrons to NAD+ and FAD to
form energy rich reduced forms NADH and FADH
These reduced forms intern donate their electron to electron
carriers collectively called ETC
These electrons travel down the ETC, and combine with final
electron acceptor oxygen
The ETC is the final common pathway by which electrons
derived from different fuels of the body flow to oxygen (O2)
As electrons are passed down the ETC, they lose much of their
free energy
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This energy is used to move protons a cross the inner
mitochondrial membrane from matrix to IMS
Creating a proton gradient that drives the production of ATP
from ADP and inorganic phosphate (P i)
The flow of electrons along electron transport chain and
generation of ATP is called oxidative phosphorylation
Electron transport chain is located in the inner mitochondrial
membrane
Mitochondria contains inner and outer membrane separated by
intermembrane space
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Outer membrane is freely permeable to ions and small
molecules because of porin channels
Inner membrane is impermeable to small ions and molecules
such as ATP, ADP and pyruvate
Mitochondrial matrix is the space enclosed by the inner
mitochondrial membrane
It contains a gel-like solution in which several catabolic pathways
occur
Krebs cycle, Fatty acid oxidation, amino acid oxidation
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The inner mitochondrial membrane contains five separate protein
complexes, called Complexes I, II, III, IV, and V
Complexes I–IV each contain part of the ETC
Complex I and III each pumps 4H+ and IV pumps 2H+
There is no pumping of protons at complex II
These complexes accept or donate electrons to the relatively
mobile electron carriers:
Coenzyme Q and cytochrome c
Each carrier in the ETC can receive electrons from an electron
donor and donate electrons to the next acceptor in the chain
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Chemiosmotic hypothesis
Explains how free energy generated by the transport of electrons
used to generate ATP from ADP+Pi
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ATP synthase has two subunit:
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Uncouplers
When protons leak back into the matrix without going through the
ATP synthase pore, they dissipate the electrochemical gradient
across the membrane without generating ATP
This phenomenon is called “uncoupling” oxidative phosphorylation
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Chemical Uncouplers, are lipid-soluble compounds that rapidly
transport protons from the cytosolic to the matrix side
– Dinitrophenol and aspirin in high dose
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Membrane transporters
Two electrons of NADH are transported from the cytosol into the
matrix using substrate shuttles:
Glycerol phosphate
Present in Brain and skeletal muscle
Malate-aspartate
Present in liver and heart muscle
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Energy produced
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Glycogen is the storage form of glucose found in most types of cells.
It is composed of glucosyl units linked by -1,4 glycosidic bonds, with
-1,6 branches
Blood glucose is can be obtained from diet, degradation of glycogen
and from gluconeogenesis
Dietary source of glucose is sporadic so not reliable source for falling
level of blood glucose
Gluconeogenesis is slow in responding to a falling blood glucose
level
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Glycogen synthesis (Glycogenesis)
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Glycogen is synthesized from molecules of α-D-glucose
The process occurs in the cytosol and requires energy supplied by ATP
and uridine triphosphate (UTP)
For glycogen synthesis, glucose first must be activated by reacting with
UTP and forms UDP-glucose
UDP-glucose is activated form of glucose donor
Glycogen synthase can add glucose to only chains already containing
more than two glucosyl residues
Thus, it requires a primer such as;
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Degradation of glycogen
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The enzyme of glycogen breakdown is;
– Glycogen phosphorylase
– Debranching enzyme
Glycogen phosphorylase
– Cleaves the α(1→4) glycosidic bonds between the glucosyl
residues by the addition of phosphates
• This process is called phosphorolysis
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glycogen phosphorylase become inhibited when four glucosyl
residues is remained after a branch point
– because the branching chain hinders a proper fit into the active site of
the enzyme
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Regulation of glycogen synthesis and degradation occurs at two
levels:
Hormonal regulations
Glucagon and epinephrine: glycogenesis & glycogenolysis
Insulin: glycogenesis and glycogenolysis
Allosteric regulations
Glucose, ATP, glucose 6-phosphate
o Increase glycogenesis and decrease glycogenolysis
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The regulation of skeletal muscle glycogen synthesis and
degradation differs from that in liver in several important respects:
– Glucagon has no effect on muscle, and thus glycogen levels in
muscle do not vary with the fasting/feeding state
– AMP is an allosteric activator of the muscle glycogen
phosphorylase, but not liver glycogen phosphorylase
• Muscle G. Phosphorylase has purine nucleotide binding site for AMP
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Maintaining blood glucose level is important
Because brain and red blood cells need continuous supply of glucose
Lactate
Pyruvate,
Glucogenic amino acids and Glycerol
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The only organs that can synthesize glucose by gluconeogenesis are;
Liver and
Renal cortex
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Seven gluconeogenic reactions are reversible and are used in the
synthesis of glucose
However, three of the reactions are irreversible
Irreversible reaction of gluconeogenesis are the following;
B. Allosteric regulation
Citrate and ATP: increase gluconeogenesis
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Quiz-1 (11/17/2023/
1. Write two difference between glycogen stored in liver and
skeletal muscle
2. Write the raw materials to synthesize glucose
3. Why skeletal musce cannot produce free glucose from
glycogen?
4. A protein primer to initiate glycogen formation is
called_________
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THANK YOU
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