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102711 Phospholipid and Glycolipid Metabolism
UC MED 2015
80
Medical
Graduate
10/28/2011

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Term
What are the neutral glycerolipids?
Definition
1) monoacylglycerol
2) diacylglycerol
3) triacylglycerol
Term
What are some of the membrane lipids?
Definition
-phospholipids
-glycolipids(no phosphate group)
-cholesterol
Term
What are the types of phospholipids and what differentiates the two?
Definition
1) Glycerophospholipids-backbone of glycerol-3phosphate

2) Sphingolipids-backbone of sphingosine
Term
What are the 3 roles of phospholipids?
Definition
1) structural components of the membranes
2) receptors for small molecules
3) participate in signal transduction (esp- PI (phosphatidylinositol) derivatives
Term
All phospholipids except for sphingomyelin are derived from?
Definition
glycerol-3-phosphate
Term
When you addy any fatty acids to C1 and C2 of glycerol-3-phosphate, what is produced?
Definition
Phosphatidic acid
Term
What type of fatty acid is typically added to position 1 and position 2 in phosphatidic acid?
Definition
1-saturated fatty acid
2-unsaturated fatty acid
Term
Sphingolipids are are based on a backbone of?
Definition
sphingosine- made from palmitic acid and serine
Term
All sphingolipids are built on?
Definition
Ceramide
Term
What is a ceramide?
Definition
sphingosine plus an acyl group added to the serine nitrogen
Term
Sphingomyelin has an addition of what?
Definition
phosphoorylcholine group to produce the only sphingosine based phospholipid
Term
What do you call the addition of one carbohydrate to ceramide?
Definition
Cerebroside (also can be called a glycosphingolipid)
Term
What do you call a cerebroside which contains more sugars, including sialic?
Definition
Ganglioside
Term
If a ganglioside is mising the sialic acid, what is is called?
Definition
asialo-
Term
What contains an alcohol attached by a phosphodiester linkage to either diacylglycerol or sphingosine?
Definition
Phospholipid
Term
Only one phospholipid uses the sphingosine base, what is it called?
Definition
sphingomyelin
Term
A phospholipid containing an alcohol attached by a phosphodiester linkage to diacylglycerol is called?
Definition
phosphoglycerides
Term
What are some of the head groups added to the phosphate of a phospholipid?
Definition
1) glycerol
2) serine
3) inositol
4) phosphatidylglyercol
4) choline
5) ethanolamine
Term
What do you call it when lipids are connected by ester bonds in a phospholipid?
Definition
acyl-type lipid
Term
What do you call it when one of the acyl groups is attached by an ether linkage?
Definition
alkyl-type lipid
Term
What do you call it when one of the acyl chains is attached via a vinyl ether linkage?
Definition
alkenyl-type lipid (plasmalogen)
Term
What do you call it when you have a loss of an acyl group from either position 1 or 2 of a phospholipid?
Definition
Lysolipid
Term
Most of our phospholipids are of what type?
Definition
acyl-type lipids
Term
What adds an acyl group to a glycerol backbone?
Definition
Acyltransferase
Term
What enzyme makes glycerol-3-phosphate from glycerol?
Definition
Glycerol kinase (uses ATP)
Term
What enzyme makes Glycerol-3-phosphate from DHAP?
Definition
Glycerol-3-Phosphate DH (Uses NADH)
Term
What is different between liver and all other tissues when it comes to making phospholipids?
Definition
Only liver can use glycerol
Term
What is a biological signal, released from cells under appropriate conditions (ether lipid); leads to platelet aggregation, blood vessel dilation, and bronchoconstriction?
Definition
Platelet activating factor
Term
What are the only plasmalogens found in human?
Definition
1) choline plasmalogen
2) ethanolamine plasmalogen
3) serine plasmalogen
Term
Where are the plasmalogens found? What is their function?
Definition
mitochondria membrane; function unknown
Term
The key for ether lipid synthesis is?
Definition
An exchange of a fatty alcohol for an ester linkage
Term
What is a fatal disease where the liver and brain mitochondria are depleted of plasmalogens?
Definition
Zellweger Syndrome
Term
What happens in Zellweger Syndrome?
Definition
1) Inability to transport peroxisomal enzymes into the peroxisomes
2) Initial steps of plasmalogen synthesis occurs in the peroxisomes
3) More of a disease of peroxisome biosynthesis than plasmalogen synthesis
Term
B6 is required for sphingosine synthesis because of what reaction?
Definition
amino acid decarboxylation
Term
What are the precursors for sphingosine synthesis?
Definition
serine and palmitoyl-CoA
Term
The amide in ceramide is derived from?
Definition
An acyl CoA and the nitrogen from sphingosine
Term
Sphingomyelin is derived from?
Definition
Ceramide plus a phosphocholine
Term
The phosphocholine can come from either?
Definition
1) PC-Phosphatidylcholine (donation of choline, found more often in the brain)
2) CDP choline (head group activation rxn)
Term
What produces phospho-choline and ceramide from sphingomyelin?
Definition
Sphingomyelinase- lack of this results in Niemann-Pick disease
Term
What can only work on ceramide and it would take a Sphingomyelin and make sphingosine and a fatty acid?
Definition
Ceramidase-lack of this enzyme results in Farber's disease
Term
Glycerophospholipid Degradation: What results when Phospholipase A1 cleaves?
Definition
produces free fatty acid an 1-lysophospholipid
Term
Glycerophospholipid Degradation: What results when Phospholipase A2 cleaves?
Definition
Produces free fatty acid and 2-lysophospholipid
Term
Glycerophospholipid Degradation: What results when Phospholipase C cleaves?
Definition
DAG and phosphorylated head group
Term
Glycerophospholipid Degradation: What results when Phospholipase D cleaves?
Definition
Produces are a free head group and phosphatidic acid
Term
What Phospholipase has a cominined activity of A1 and A2?
Definition
Phospholipase B
Term
What are the ganglioside functions?
Definition
1) primarily found in the nervous system
2) receptors (bacterial toxins)
3) antigenic specificity
4) Hypothesized functions
-a-important for intracellular communication and signal transduction
-b-modulators of membrane enzyme activities
-c-ganglioside composition of cells altered when they becomes transferred(cancer;significance unknown)
Term
The biosynthesis of gangliosides is similar to?
Definition
O-linked oligosaccharides
Term
Biosynthesis of GM1

What are the important enzymes?
Definition
1) Acyl-transferase (makes ceramide from sphingosine)
2) Glucosyl-transferase-adds Glucose to Ceramide
3) Galactosyl-transferase-adds Galactose to growing chain

-each step catalyzed by a different enzyme
-at least four distinct spingosine acyltransferases, each differing in fatty acid chain length specificity
Term
What is so important about glycosphingolipid degradation?
Definition
-Defects in degradation lead to disease due to accumulation of intermediates with the lysosomes and other cellular structures
Term
What are the basic principles of glycosphingolipid degradation?
Definition
-There is a step wise removal of sugars from the glycosphingolipids(different enzyme for each step)
-Defect in enzyme leads to accumulation of substrate within lysosome, loss of lysosome function and disease
Term
What is the general name for glycosphingolipid degradation disorders?
Definition
Sphingolipidoses
Term
What are the symptoms for Tay-Sachs disease?
Definition
It is an autosomal recessive disorder and will be fatal, but
also have these symptoms before death...
1) mental retardation and blindness
2) muscular weakness and seizures
Term
How type of genetic diseases are the sphingolipidoses?
Definition
All are recessive disorders except for Fabry's disease which is x-linked
Term
Does the rate of synthesis of the sphingolipids change when you have a disorder in the degradative pathway?
Definition
No, remains unchanged so you will have a continual accumulation of the intermediate product lead to lysosomal loss of function and disease
Term
Which pathways have a lysosomal disease associated with it?
Definition
1) Glycogen metabolism
2) Protein synthesis/sorting
3) Sphingolipid Degradation
Term
In a person with Tay-Sachs, what accumulates?
Definition
GM2- levels up to 300 times normal
GA2- levels up to 20 times normal
Term
GM2 is different from GA2 because?
Definition
GA2 lacks NANA- it is the asiaolo- derivative of GM2
Term
Hexosaminidase removes what from glycosphingolipids?
Definition
N-acetylgalactosamine
Term
How many different subunits in Hexosaminidase A?
Definition
-two subunits, a and ß, which are encoded by different genes (Hex A and Hex B, respectively)
-The number of a chains in the complex is unknown, so the molecule is represented as anß2
Term
Hex A is active against?
Definition
GM2, GA2, and globoside
Term
Where is globoside found?
Definition
RBCs
Term
What are the biochemical properties of HexB?
Definition
-it is a ß4 tetramer, encoded by the Hex B gene
Term
What does HexB do?
Definition
It removes N-acetylgalactosamine from GA2 and globoside (Hex A is required fro GM2)
Term
If a patient has Tay-Sachs symptoms, but in a test tube both Hex A and Hex B are active, what is wrong?
Definition
-Sandhoff's Activator Disease
-It was discovered that Hex A (but not Hex B) requires an activator protein for maximal activity. The newly diagnosed patients were missing the activator, and therefore were having trouble degrading GM2. This led to the Tay-Sachs like symptoms
Term
What is synthesized from CDP-DAG and Inositol?
Definition
Phosphatidyl-Inositol
Term
Where is Phosphatidyl-Inositol found?
Definition
In the inner leaflet of plasma membranes; the outer leaflet of cytoplasmic organelles(ie- it is always facing the cytoplasm)
Term
What is the PI cycle?
Definition
PI-> PIP-> PIP2-> inositol-phosphate->IP3(inositol-triphosphate)-> DAG

then repeat this continual cycle
Term
The cycling of PI intermediates is important in?
Definition
1) Histamine secretion by mast cells
2) serotonin release by blood platelets
3) aggregation of blood platelets
4) insulin secretion by pancreatic islet cells
5) epinephrine secretion by adrenal chromaffin cells
6) smooth muscle contraction
7) visual signal transduction by invertebrate photo receptors
Term
What are the second messengers from the PI cycle?
Definition
DAG and IP3
Term
Tell me about the second messenger generation with PIP2?
Definition
1) agonist binds to a receptor
2) PIP2 is broken down to DAG and IP3
3) DAG activates Protein kinase C
4) IP3 activates calcium mobilization
5) cellular response occurs
Term
IP3 induces the release of calcium from?
Definition
ER
Term
What can interupt the PI cycle? What happens?
Definition
Lithium- second messengers can't be generated at the sam rate
Term
What does this?
1) Activates, with phosphatidylserine, protein kinase C
2) Phosphorylation required for the response, but specific substrates difficult to identify
Definition
DAG
Term
What is this?
1) PI, at the two position has large levels of this C20:4 fatty acid
2) It is released by phospholipase A2
3) Leads to increases in thromboxane and prostaglandin production
Definition
Arachidonic acid
Term
What is this?
1) Releases calcium ions from the intracellular stores(ER)
2) calcium binds to calmodulin, regulates activity of enzyme via this subunit
Definition
IP3
Term
Tumor promoters do what?
Definition
AId in tumor growth by binding and activating protein kinase C
Term
What does Aspirin do?
Definition
Inhibits prostaglandin production by forming a covalent bond with cyclo-oxygenase
Term
What does Platelet activating factor do?
Definition
-It's release results in platelet aggregation
-Affects muscle, brain, liver and kidney as well
Term
What is a misture of proteins and lipids required for lung elasticity?
Definition
Lung surfactant- lack of results in respiratory distress syndrome in newborns caused by a lack of surfactant
Term
What is the major lipid in lung surfactant?
Definition
dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine
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