Functions :Production of DNA and RNA
Energy storage and transfer
– ATP, GTP Coenzymes –
NAD, FAD, Coenzyme A
Activated compounds for
synthesis – UDP sugars, CDP
in phospholipid synthesis
Methyl transfers – SAM
Second messengers – cAMP,
cGMP Enzyme regulation at
allosteric sites
Not from diet, exogenous nucleotide broken down
Made De novo or Savage
pathway, scrap together
pieces
Structure
Nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, and phosphate groups
Mostley made in lover some in brain, then transfer though blood
Lots goes into making a purine ring, see below
Purine synthesis
starts with Ribose-5 P, from pentose phosphate pathway
Add ATP to make PRPP
Then add a bunch of Carbons and Nitrogens
IN DETAIL
1.) Ribose 5P
ATP + PRPP synthetase
2.) PRPP
glutamine
phosphoribosyl
amidotransferase
3.) 5-phosphoribosyl 1 amine
Then add a Glycine molecule to it
+ ATP
4.) Glycinamide Ribosyl 5- Phosphate
ADD a Formyl carbon,
a glutamine nitrogen,
2 ATP's
5.) This closes the linear
structure into a ring
Then you donate a carbon from CO2, a nitrogen from aspartate using ATP, then a formyl carbon
1st purine made IMP
Annotations:
Inosine Monophosphate
Base is Hypoxanthine
Requires 6 ATP's per purine
Can be made into AMP and GMP
AMP Production
aspartate + GTP +
adenylosuccinate synthetase
Adenylosuccinate
Remove a Fumarate
AMP
(-)
Symmetry
GMP production
IMP Dehydrogenase + NADH
XMP
ATP + Glutamine +
GMP synthetase
GMP
(-)
Not in DNA, but is in tRNA
Causes
wobble
effect
Committed Step to becoming a purine
Glutamine give's Nitrogen
Activated by P-,
GDP & ADP inhibit
Pyrimidine Synthesis
First thing is to make the ring
Glutamine + CO2 + ATP
Add aspartate, close the ring
Add side chains
Make Orotic Acid
ADD PRPP
UMP
CTP
dUMP
dTMP
Orotate phosphoribosyl
transferase and orotidylic
acid decarboxylase on
the other, get to UMP
CPS-II, aspartate
transcarbamoylase and
dihydroorotase all on one,
produces orotate
Aspartate is the
majority of the ring,
4/6 C's, the rest is
from carbamoyl
phosphate, N from
glutamine, C from
CO2
Salvage
Free bases converted to
nucleosides Pyrimidine
nucleoside phosphorylase
uses ribose-1-phosphate
Preferred reaction is
synthesis, not degradation
Kinases are more specific, get
more specific as more
phosphates are added
Common Pathway
NDP-> dNDP
Ribonucleotide reductase + thioredoxin
Allosteric Regulation
One site regulates its activity
One regulates its specificity
Purine Degradation
Nucleotide -> nucleoside
loss of amino group from
adenosine
Loss of sugar to free guanine or
hypoxanthine Guanine loses amino,
Xanthine oxidase
converts
hypoxanthine and
xanthine to urate
Excreted in urine, not very
soluble Excess amounts can
precipitate