What two amino acids are both glucogenic and ketogenic?
- tyrosine
Is there a net loss of nitrogen?
There is not net loss of nitrogen, synthesis = degradation
What are the 3 different metabolic circumstances in which amino acid catabolism occurs?
What proportion of dietary protein is endogenous?
half
What types of amino acids are sent to the muscles?
Branched-chain amino acids
What is the summary of dietary protein breakdown?
What do trypsin and chymotrypsin do in the small intestine?
They cut proteins and larger peptides into smaller peptides.
What do aminopeptidases and carboxypeptidases A and B do in the small intestine?
Degrade peptides into amino acids
Cleavage of dietary protein by proteases secreted from the pancreas starts by?
Enteropeptidase starts the activation by converting trypsinogen to trypsin
The release and activation of pancreatic zymogens is mediated by which hormones?
Cholecystokinin and secretin
How do neutral amino acids transport?
Across a concentration gradient - glucose transporters (GLUT)
How do basic amino acids transport?
Charge dependent transporters - cotransport
How do acidic amino acids transport?
Transported with sodium ions
What is Hartnup disease? (autosomal recessive metabolic disorder)
This is where a person cannot absorb amino acids properly from the intestine and cannot reabsorb them properly from tubules in teh kidneys, particularly tryptophan
How is Hartnup diease tested?
A urine test that checks for high levels of neutral amino acids
SLC6A19 gene
What does the premature activation of trypsinogen lead to?
Results in the activation of trypsin and many other enzymes because trypsin is an activator for many proenzymes
What can the premature activation of trypsinogen lead to?
- detected by increased pancreatic amylase in serum
What are some of the causes of trypsin and pancreatic autodigestion?
What two amino acids make up gluten?
Gliadin and glutenin
What are some of the symptoms of cystinuria?
How are most non-selective proteins degraded?
In the lysosomes, entry by macroautophagy that is the enclosure of a volume of the cytoplasm by an intracellular membrane
Where are all proteins synthesised?
In the cytosol. They are synthesised on ribosomes attached to the ER
Where is mRNA synthesised?
In the nucelus
What are the 2 main pathways in which eukaryotic cellular proteins are degraded?