Term
Describe the basic structure of an amino acid |
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Definition
Carbon with an amino group, carboxylic group, H, and R side group |
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Term
In a polypeptide chain, what is on the left side? What is on the right? |
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Definition
Left: amino-terminal end
Right: carboxyl-terminal end |
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Term
What are three sources for the amino acid pool? |
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Definition
Dietary protein, body protein, synthesis (nonessential amino acids only) |
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Term
Does the body have easy access to amino acids? |
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Definition
No, amino acids aren't stored like glycogen. They are used right away as protein is ingested. |
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Term
Define Zero Nitrogen Balance. What kind of organisms have it? |
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Definition
Nitrogen intake = Nitrogen excretion
Mature healthy animals |
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Term
Define Positive Nitrogen Balance. What kind of organisms have it? |
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Definition
Nitrogen intake > Nitrogen excretion anabolism>catabolism
Growing animals, pregnancy, recovery from starvation or wasting disease |
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Term
Define Negative Nitrogen Balance. What kind of organisms have it? |
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Definition
Nitrogen intake < Nitrogen excretion catabolism>anabolism
Starving, acute injury or infection, senescent animal, or deficiency of an essential amino acid in the diet |
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Term
Define senescence (adj: senescent) |
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Definition
Aging after maturity, as in an elderly person.
"Or an overripe fruit."- Chris Brown |
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Term
How do plants and animals form amino acids? |
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Definition
They incorporate NH4+ into organic molecules.
Many plants and bacteria can synthesize all 20, but humans cannot. |
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Term
List the essential amino acids |
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Definition
Mnemonic device: PVT TIM HALL (Private Tim Hall)
Phenylalanine, Valine, Threonine, Tryptophan, Isoleucine, Methionine, Histidine, Leucine, Lysine
(I originally learned Arginine was one of them. Oh well, I'm not changing my mnemonic device now.) |
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Term
Why are some amino acids conditionally essential? |
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Definition
They are required in young, growing animals and/or during illness. |
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Term
Why are Cysteine and Tyrosine almost considered essential? |
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Definition
Cysteine relies on Methionine for synthesis Tyrosine relies on Phenylalanine
(Met and Tyr are essential) |
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Term
Why is a low pH required to begin protein degradation? |
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Definition
So the protein will denature into a linear form, more susceptible to hydrolysis |
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Term
Why is it important to have inactive zymogens instead of already active enzymes? |
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Definition
The enzymes could degrade the pancreas or stomach if they weren't controlled |
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Term
What does pepsin hydrolyze? |
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Definition
Leucine, aromatic AAs, acidic AAs |
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Term
What activates trypsin from trypsinogen? |
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Definition
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Term
What precursors does trypsin activate? |
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Definition
Itself (positive feedback), chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidases, elastase |
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Term
What specificity does Trypsin cleave? |
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Definition
C-terminal of Arg or Lys
(positive/basic amino acids) |
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Term
What specificity does Chymotrypsin cleave? |
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Definition
C-terminal side of Trp, Tyr, and Phe
(Aromatic residues) |
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Term
What specificity does elastase cleave? |
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Definition
C-terminal of small amino acids |
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Term
What specificity does Carboxypeptidase A cleave? |
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Definition
The terminal residue IF the last residue is aromatic or aliphatic |
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Term
Define aliphatic amino acid |
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Definition
Nonpolar, carbon-only amino acids
Gly, Ala, Val, Leu, Ile, Pro |
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Term
What specificity does Carboxypeptidase B cleave? |
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Definition
The terminal residue IF the residue is Arg or Lys |
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Term
What are the proteases on the intestinal cell lining? |
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Definition
Aminopeptidases (cleaves N-terminal AA) Carboxypeptidases (cleaves C-terminal AA) |
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Term
Describe amino acid absorption in the small intestine |
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Definition
Very rapid, active transport mechanisms, specific transport systems, similar amino acids compete for absorption |
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Term
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Definition
Defect in reabsorption of dibasic amino acids, causes kidney stones made of cystine |
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Term
What is the treatment for Cystinuria? |
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Definition
Increases fluid intake and alkanization of the urine above pH 7.5 (oral potassium citrate is taken) |
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Term
Define dibasic amino acid |
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Definition
Amino acids with a +2 charge under acidic conditions
(They would have an NH3 in the side group) |
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Term
List the dibasic amino acids |
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Definition
Lysine, Arginine, Ornithine, Cystine |
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Term
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Definition
2 cysteines with crosslinked side chains |
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Term
What are the two stages of degradation of cellular proteins? |
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Definition
1. Ubiquitination 2. Proteasome digestion |
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Term
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Definition
4 ubiquitin molecules attach on the protein to be degraded through a multi-enzyme reaction |
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Term
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Definition
A small protein present in all cells that mark protein to be degraded.
76 units long each, so 4 are very noticeable for |
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Term
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Definition
A trashcan-shaped barrel that degrade proteins attached to polyubiquitin |
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Term
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Definition
A rule that states that a protein's half-life is related to it's amino-terminal amino acid |
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Term
Why would some proteins have a half-life of only 2 minutes? |
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Definition
Ex. neuropeptides that would need to be degraded rapidly |
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Term
What is the first step to breakdown amino acids? |
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Definition
Removing the α-amino group |
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Term
What are the two major mechanisms involved in removing the α-amino group |
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Definition
1. Transamination 2. Oxidative deamination |
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Term
Describe the passage of the ammonia group in transamination |
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Definition
1. Transfer from L-Amino Acid to PLP 2. PLP is now PMP 3. PMP transfer to α-Ketoglutarate 4. α-Ketoglutarate is now L-Glutamate |
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Term
What do PLP and PMP stand for? |
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Definition
PLP- pyridoxal phosphate PMP- pyridoxamine phosphate
(enzymes in transamination) |
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Term
What does alanine aminotransferase reversibly catalyze? |
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Definition
The transamination of alanine, forming glutamate and pyruvate |
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Term
What does aspartate aminotransferase reversibly catalyze? |
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Definition
The transamination of aspartate to glutamate and oxaloacetate |
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Term
What happens to the L-glutamate after transamination? |
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Definition
In the liver, it reversibly undergoes oxidative deamination |
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Term
What enzyme makes L-glutamate undergo reversible oxidative deamination back to α-Ketoglutarate? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some regulators of glutamate dehydrogenase? |
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Definition
ATP or GTP inhibits, ADP or GDP activates
(would make sense so more α-Ketoglutarate could be formed for Krebs cycle) |
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Term
Why is NH4+ toxic to the body? |
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Definition
1. It depletes α-Ketoglutarate, inhibiting Krebs cycle, inhibiting ATP formation
2. It depletes glutamate, lowering GABA formation, harming the CNS |
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Term
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Definition
Liver ONLY. One of the reasons why liver damage is so bad. |
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Term
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Definition
The major form of NH4+ disposal, soluble non-toxic compound excreted in the urine |
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Term
How many high energy phosphate bonds are needed for the urea cycle? |
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Definition
4
(2 ATP -> ADP and 1 ATP -> AMP) |
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Term
What is the first enzyme to incorporate NH4+ into the urea cycle? |
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Definition
Carbamoyl phosphate binds CO2 and NH4+ into Carbamoyl Phosphate |
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Term
What enzyme converts Carbamoyl phosphate and L-Ornithine into L-Citrulline? |
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Definition
Ornithine trans-carbamoylase |
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Term
What molecules in the urea cycle can pass back and forth from the matrix to the cytosol? |
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Definition
L-Citrulline and L-Ornithine |
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Term
Once L-Citrulline crosses into the matrix, what does it bind with? |
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Definition
L-aspartate, to form Arginosuccinate |
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Term
What catalyzes the binding of L-Citrulline and L-Aspartate (forming Arginosuccinate)? |
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Definition
Arginino succinate synthase |
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Term
What is Arginosuccinate essentially composed of? |
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Definition
An arginine and an aspartate |
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Term
What is L-arginine essentially composed of? |
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Definition
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Term
What is arginosuccinate broken down into by arginosuccinase? |
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Definition
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Term
What enzyme converts L-arginine to urea and L-ornithine? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two enzymes that require ATP in the urea cycle? |
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Definition
Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I and Arginosuccinate synthetase |
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Term
How is the Urea cycle regulated? |
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Definition
After a protein-rich meal, glutamate and arginine active N-acetylglutamate synthase.
N-acetylglutamate activates carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 |
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Term
What is the rate-limiting step of the urea cycle? |
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Definition
The first reaction, catalyzed by carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I |
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Term
What condition results from genetic defects in the Urea cycle? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the symptoms of hyperammonemia? |
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Definition
Tremors, slurring of speech, and blurred vision (due to CNS issues) |
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Term
What are the two types of hyperammonemia? |
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Definition
Acquired (from liver damage) and hereditary (genetic defects in urea cycle enzymes) |
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Term
What are the two treatments for hyperammonemia? |
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Definition
1. Low protein diet
2. Alternate pathways for nitrogen excretion (more short-term treatment) |
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Term
Describe how one would treat hyperammonemia by providing alternate pathways for nitrogen excretion |
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Definition
Sodium benzoate and phenylacetate are given to the patient to push normal, nitrogen-eliminating reactions forward |
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Term
How does benzoate provide a pathway to remove nitrogen without the urea cycle? |
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Definition
Benzoate binds to glycine to form Hippurate, which is then excreted in the urine |
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Term
How does phenylacetate provide a pathway to remove nitrogen without the urea cycle? |
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Definition
Phenylacetate binds to glutamine to form phenylacetylglutamine, which is then excreted in the urine |
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