Glycolysis Clicker
Glycolysis Clicker
Glycolysis Clicker
by
Nancy M. Boury
Department of Animal Science
Iowa State University, Ames, IA
1
Background
You have been chosen for a very competitive paid
under-graduate clinical internship position (uCLIP). You
spent your first weeks becoming a certified nurse
assistant (CNA). You will be paid to work as a CNA at St.
Visintainer’s, assisting the nurses on the suspected
metabolic disorder’s acute-care floor.
As part of your internship, you will also be allowed to
follow Dr. Saccharo as he sees clinic patients. The
doctor is an expert in enzyme deficiency disorders
relating to glycolysis. Because you hope to become a
family physician, you’re excited about the opportunity to
learn about these rare metabolic disorders. To prepare
for your first day on the metabolic ward, Dr. Saccharo
requests that you research normal sugar metabolism,
particularly glycolysis.
2
Monday Morning at the
Metabolic Disorders Clinic
3
Please get into your groups of
four and take out your clickers
4
CQ#1: Which of the following enzymes
catalyzes a reaction that produces ATP
during glycolysis?
A. Hexokinase (HK)
B. Phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI)
C. Phosphofructokinase (PFK)
D. Triosephophate isomerase (TPI)
E. Pyruvate Kinase (PK)
5
CQ#2: Which of the following enzymes
breaks one 6-carbon sugar into two 3-
carbon sugars?
A. Hexokinase (HK)
B. Phosphoglucoisomerase (PGI)
C. Phosphofructokinase (PFK)
D. Aldolase
E. Enolase
6
Dr. Saccharo’s
Review of Glycolysis
Glucose is an important source of
chemical energy, but this energy must be
converted from a large denomination of
energy (~680 kilocalories per mole of
glucose) to more usable forms, such as
ATP (~7.3 kilocalories per mole). Imagine
standing in front of a vending machine with
a $100 bill vs a $1 bill.
7
Dr. Saccharo’s
Review of Glucose Homeostasis
• Your body (particularly your brain) needs glucose as fuel for
cell processes. When you eat, your blood glucose levels will
temporarily rise, signaling the pancreas to release insulin.
When you have gone without food for several hours, your
pancreas will release glucagon, which triggers the liver to
release glucose from glycogen stores.
• If your blood sugars are too high, your blood vessels are
damaged and the organs they supply with blood are
damaged as well. Consistently high levels of blood sugars
lead to kidney, heart, liver, and brain injury over time.
• If your blood sugars are too low, your brain will starve for
energy. As a result, you could pass out, enter a coma, and
potentially die in a matter of hours. 8
Fasting- Fed – Blood
Glucose Glucose
Levels Low Levels High
Pancreas Pancreas
Releases Releases
Glucagon Insulin
Liver
Glucagon Body Cells
Receptors have Insulin
Receptors
Glucose
Levels
Liver Normal Body Cells
Releases Take Up
Glucose into Glucose from
the Blood 9
the Blood
Dr. Saccharo’s
Review of Glucose Homeostasis
• Diabetics either have cells that don’t respond to
insulin properly (Type II diabetes, or late-onset)
or don’t have functional insulin produced (Type I
diabetes, or juvenile).
• This sugar balance, however, isn’t the only thing
we worry about here in the metabolic disorder’s
ward. There are genetic disorders where a
person is missing an enzyme required to break
down the glucose (or other sugar) once it gets
into its target cell.
10
• Once glucose enters the cell, hexokinase
will add a phosphate group to the glucose.
This gives the glucose a negative charge
and traps it within the cell.
11
Please trade papers within your groups
and check each other’s homework
12
Embden-Myerhof Pathway
13
Clicker Survey: How many mistakes
were in the paper you graded?
A. 0-1
B. 2-3
C. 4-5
D. More than 5
15
One reaction – many different
enzymes
• Isoenzymes use the same reactants to
produce the same products.
• They may have:
– Different genes
– Different tissue expression
– Different developmental timing of expression
• They will likely have slightly different
affinities for their substrates.
16
Phosphofructokinase as an example
• Three different forms & three different genes:
– PFK – L is expressed in the liver; the gene for this
isoenzyme is found on chromosome 21
– PFK – M is expressed in the muscle; the gene is found
on chromosome 12
– PFK – P is expressed in platelets; the gene is found on
chromosome 10
• Looking at the homework – this is the same reaction
– Adds a 2nd phosphate to fructose-6-phophate to form
fructose-1,6-bisphosphate
17
CQ#3: If a person would be deficient in
all 3 forms of PFK, this person would __.
21
Patient #2: Marie is a 32-year-old mother of three
complaining of fatigue and muscle cramps with
exercise. She had always blamed her intolerance
to exercise on her sedentary lifestyle. However,
she recently joined a gym and, after a week of
aerobics classes, went to her physician who
ordered a series of blood tests. The blood work
came back with abnormal results, leading to her
muscle biopsy and referral to the metabolic clinic.
22
Marie’s Blood Test Results
Levels (+ = normal, - = decreased levels, ++ = increased levels)
23
CQ#5: The muscle biopsy showed an
excess of glycogen in the muscle tissues.
What is the most likely enzyme deficiency?
A. Pyruvate kinase
B. Hexokinase
C. Phosphofructokinase
D. Triosephosphate Isomerase
E. Aldolase
24
CQ#6: If you wanted to test red blood cells
for their ability to complete glycolysis,
what compound would you try to detect?
A. Fructose-6-phosphate
B. Aldolase
C. Pyruvate
D. Phosphofructokinase
E. Dihydroxyacetone phosphate
25
CQ#7: If you had some of Ann’s red blood
cells in a test tube, what compound could
you add to enable these cells to produce
pyruvate?
A. Glucose
B. Fructose-1,6,bisphosphate
C. Insulin
D. Glucagon
E. Fructose-6-phosphate
26
Patient #3: Leo is a 25-year-old accountant. He is
not anemic, has perfect teeth, and experienced two
fainting spells recently. One happened after
accidentally drinking a non-diet soda, the other after
eating “naturally sweetened” fruit salad. His dentist
referred him to Dr. Saccharo’s clinic. Dr. Saccharo
suspected Leo may have hereditary fructose
intolerance (HFI) and recommended a closely
monitored fructose tolerance test. Leo was
scheduled for the test and an observation bed at the
local hospital the next day.
27
Hereditary Fructose Intolerance
• HFI is a recessive disorder where individuals with HFI lack a
functional copy of Aldolase B.
• Individuals with HFI normally become symptomatic with
weaning – as babies switch from breast-milk with lactose to
formula with sucrose or sorbitol. The HFI may go undetected
until adulthood, with adults self-regulating their diet to be low
in sugars.
• They are able to metabolize glucose, because they have
Aldolase A and C. However, in the liver, it is Aldolase B that
breaks down fructose-1-phosphate, sending
dihydroxyacetone phosphate and glyceraldehyde-3
phosphate to glycolytic pathway. Since HFI patients lack
Aldolase B, they are unable to break down fructose.
28
Fructose metabolism Glycogen
– In the liver
Inside the
Blood stream
cell Fructose -
1-
Phosphate Inhibits
Fructokinase
Fructose Aldolase B
Glucose-6-
phosphate
Dihydroxyacetone Glyceraldehyde-3-
phosphate phosphate
(DHAP) (G3P)
29
CQ#8: Glycogen phosphorylase is an
enzyme required to release the glucose
stored as glycogen. A person with HFI who
ingested fructose would have:
A. High levels of blood fructose.
B. High levels of blood fructose-1-phosphate.
C. High levels of blood glucose.
D. Low levels of blood fructose.
E. Low levels of blood glucose.
30
Regulation of glycolysis
• Glycolysis is reversible. Most of the enzymes can work to
break down glucose (gycolysis) or build more glucose
(gluconeogenesis).
• Products of a particular enzymatic reaction will generally
inhibit that enzyme.
• Several points of control exist. For example:
– Hexokinase is inhibited by glucose-6-phosphate and
activity is boosted by free phosphate.
– Phosphfructokinase is inhibited by ATP and fructose-1,6,-
bisphosphate
– Pyruvate kinase is inhibited by ATP, but activated by
fructose-1,6,bisphosphate and phosphoenolpyruvate.
31
Tuesday at the Hospital
32
Leo’s Last Morning
Leo’s nurse is occupied with the charge
nurse and security guard. You overhear her
saying, “Just an hour ago, he was fine. He
told me the fructose tolerance test was
exhausting. He planned to nap until lunch.
When I went to check his vitals, I saw him
lying in his bed, dead.”
34
CQ#9: What was the effect of giving Leo
intravenous fructose?
35
Explanation of Test Results
• The lack of Aldolase B causes a build-up of
fructose-1-phosphate.
– This will trap phosphate in the liver.
– Fructose-1-phosphate will inhibit glycogen
phosphorylase.
• Glycogen phosphorylase is required for the
liver to break glycogen into glucose-6-
phosphate.
36
CQ#10: If Leo had been given too much
fructose, he would be at serious risk of
coma or death. If caught in time, what
treatment would you recommend to rescue
him?
A. Insulin
B. Glucagon
C. Glucose
D. Fructose
E. Phosphofructokinase
37
So what happened to Leo
AFTER the test?
38
A few drops of blood were found in the
sink and a syringe was found in the
biohazard trash instead of the Sharps
disposal bin.
39
While the hospital awaits the results of the
DNA analysis of the blood and the
chemical analysis of the syringe, Dr.
Saccharo reserves a small sample of the
blood to test for metabolic activity.
40
Dr. Saccharo’s blood test results
Levels (+ = normal, - = decreased or absent levels, ++ = increased levels)
A. Insulin
B. Glucagon
C. Fructose
D. Aldolase
E. Glucose
42
CQ#12: Dr. Saccharo reports his lab results
to the police, saying in his expert opinion
that they should look for someone with ___.
43
Did Dr. Saccharo’s tip
solve the case?
Later that week, you pick up the newspaper and
read that police arrested an individual for Leo’s
murder. It seems that the murderer had some
questionable business practices that Leo noticed
during tax season. The murderer was also a
patient at the clinic. He saw Leo walking into the
clinic and overheard the nurse scheduling Leo’s
fructose test. He knew the test was dangerous and
thought his actions would be considered an
unfortunate complication or medical accident.
44