Metabolism of Lipids - 2-Lecture Note - Africa - 2023 - 2
Metabolism of Lipids - 2-Lecture Note - Africa - 2023 - 2
Metabolism of Lipids - 2-Lecture Note - Africa - 2023 - 2
Triacylglycerol lipolysis in
adipose
↓
Fatty acid release to blood
↓
May results in
Complete oxidation (in
extrahepatic tissues)
Ketone bodies (Most
liver fatty acid)
2
KETONE BODIES
Formation
&
Oxidation
3
Ketone bodies: Formation, utilization, and excretion
during fasting state
4
Ketone body
synthesis
5
Key Steps for Regulation of Ketogenesis
CPT I: Carnitine
palmitoyl transferase I
(Carnitine:acyl
carnitine translocase I/
CAT-1)
6
Regulation of ketone body synthesis
Mainly by Insulin/Glucagon Ketogenesis during fasting
Insulin promotes fatty acid synthesis by
increasing Acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity.
Malonyl CoA inhibit Carnitine palmitoyl
transferase I (CPT I)
9
Ketogenesis in disease condition
10
FATTY ACID SYNTHESIS
• Carbon source
• Dietary carbohydrate (major) Acetyl CoA
• Excess dietary protein Acetyl CoA/ TCA intermediate
Acetyl-CoA NADPH
12
Sources and Fates of Acetyl CoA
Sources of active acetate
- Pyruvate (from glucose)
- Oxidation of ethanol,
- Oxidation of fatty acids
- Ketolysis
- Amino acids
13
Carboxylation of Acetate
14
Synthesis (cont.)
• Synthesis of palmitate in cytosol
• Further elongation in ER
15
Fatty acid synthase
Reduction unit
Condensing unit
16
Fatty acid synthesis on Fatty acid synthase (simplified
form)
Steps of Biosynthesis
a`. Precursors loading
b. Condensation
c. Reductions
d. Traslocation
e. Cycling:
f. Thiolysis
ii.Types of Thiolases
- Low carbon atom fatty acids
( 10 C)
- Intermediate chain (C12 &
C14)
- Specific for C16 17
Steps of fatty acid synthesis on Fatty acid synthase
Mammary gland has thioesterases that can releases the synthesized 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 or
14 carbons 18
Summary of fatty
acid synthesis
19
Regulation of FA synthesis
Rapid short term regulation
Insulin
- Enhance uptake of glucose by adipocytes
- Increase PDH activity
- Decrease cAMP by activating phosphatase
Glucagon - Increase cAMP
- deactivate ACoA carboxylase
- activates phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibitor-1
22
The fate of TG synthesized in Liver: VLDL synthesis
23
Fatty Liver (hepatic steatosis)
26
Mitochondrial chain elongation
27
Desaturation of Fatty Acids
• Requirement
• O2, NADH, and cytochrome b5, non-heme iron containing mixed-
function oxygenases.
• Intracellular Site – Endoplasmic reticulum
• Reaction
Oxidation of both the Fatty acid & NADH
Common desaturation at C9, but also at C4, C5 & C6
Linoleic acid (6 FA) Elongation & Desaturation
↓
Prostaglandins & other Eicosanoids Arachidonic
acid
-linolenic acid (3 FA) Elongation & Desaturation
↓
Eicosanoids precursor Eicosapentaenoic acid
28
Unsaturated FAs
Linoleic (ω6) or α-linolenic (ω3)
acids required for the synthesis of the
other members of the ω6 or ω3
families must be supplied in the diet.
Required in the diet for at least two
reasons:
It serves as a precursor of
arachidonic acid from which
eicosanoids are produced.
It covalently binds another
fatty acid attached to
cerebrosides in the skin, forming
an unusual lipid
(acylglucosylceramide) that
helps to make the skin
impermeable to water.
Deficiency leads to red, scaly
dermatitis and other skin problems
29
Desaturation of fatty acids
33
Trans-fatty acids compete with cis-fatty acids
Large amounts of trans-unsaturated fatty acids in partially
hydrogenated vegetable oils (e.g., margarine) raises the
question of their safety as food additives.
• They are metabolized more like saturated than like the cis-
unsaturated fatty acids.
• Trans-polyunsaturated fatty acids do not possess essential
fatty acid activity and may antagonize the metabolism of
essential fatty acids and enhance essential fatty acid
deficiency.
• Trans-fatty acids raise plasma LDL levels and lower HDL
levels.
34
Comparison of fatty acid oxidation and fatty acid synthetic pathways
36
EICOSANOIDS - General
Paracrine and autocoids with potent effects on virtually every
tissue in the body.
38
EICOSANOIDS - General
Synthesis can be very tissue specific:
41
Lipooxygenase pathway
• Produce leukotrienes
from eicosanoic acids
in leukocytes,
platelets, and
macrophages in
response to both
immunologic and
non-immunologic
stimuli.
• Lipoxygenases add
both oxygen atoms
to arachidonate to
synthesize
leukotrienes
42
Lipoxins
• The lipoxins are derived
from AA and are potent
anti-inflammatory
molecules.
• Lipoxin synthesis requires
coordinated activity of
neutrophil 5-lipoxygenase
and a related enzyme
(either 12-lipoxygenase or
15-lipoxygenase) from
another cell type—either
platelets or endothelial cells
• Lipoxins are endogenous
anti-inflammatory pro-
resolving molecules. 43
Biological Action
• Vascular smooth muscle
• PGE2 and PGI2 are potent vasodilators in most vascular beds.
• Thromboxane is a potent vasoconstrictor.
• Leukotrienes are vasoconstrictors, increase vascular permeability
• Inflammation
• PGE2 and PGI2 cause an increase in blood flow and promote, but do not
cause, edema.
• Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs) and LTs cause chemotaxis of
neutrophils and eosinophils.
– Gastrointestinal tract
• PGE2 and PGF2a increase the rate of longitudinal contraction in the
gut and decrease transit time.
• The leukotrienes are GI smooth muscle constriction and mucus
secretion.
• PGE2 and PGI2 inhibit acid and pepsinogen secretion in the
stomach.
• Prostaglandins increase mucus, water, and electrolyte secretion in
the stomach and the intestine. 45
Biological Action
Blood
– TXA2 is a potent inducer of platelet aggregation.
– PGI2 and PGE2 inhibit platelet aggregation.
– PGEs induce erythropoiesis by stimulating the
renal release of erythropoietin.
– 5-HPETE stimulates release of histamine
– PGI2 and PGD inhibit histamine release.
46
Therapeutic uses
Induction of labor at term
Induction of labor is produced by:
Infusion of PGF2a (carboprost tromethamine) [Hemabate] or PGE2
(dinoprostone) [Prostin E].
Therapeutic abortion:
A. Inducing abortion in the second trimester
B. Inducing first-trimester abortion
Treatment of peptic ulcer: Misoprostol [Cytotec], a methylated
derivative of PGE1
is approved for use in patients taking high doses of nonsteroidal
antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) to reduce gastric ulceration.
Erectile dysfunction:
Alprostadil (PGE1) can be injected directly into the corpus cavernosum or
administered as a transurethral suppository to cause vasodilation.
47
METABOLISM OF
GLYCEROPHOSPHOLIPIDS
AND
SPHINGOLIPIDS
48
Biosynthesis of Acylglycerols -Overview
49
Overview of Acylglycerol Biosynthesis
50
Glycerophospholipids
• Function:
Activation of diacylglycerol
52
Summary: Synthesis of phosphatidylcholine,
phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylserine
54
Degradation of Glycerophospholipids
• By Phospholipases located in cell
membranes or in lysosomes
• C2 contain usually unsaturated, frequently
arachidonic acid and removed usually in
response to signals for eicosanoids
biosynthesis
• PLC hydrolyzes PIP2 to produce DAG and
IP3
• PLA2 provides the major repair mechanism
for membrane lipids damaged by oxidative
free radical reactions.
55
Ether Glycerolipids Summary of ether lipids biosynthesis
- Synthesized in peroxisomes
- PAF is released from phagocytic
blood cells in response to various
stimuli.
- It causes platelet aggregation,
edema and it is involved in the allergic
56
response.
Sphingolipids
• Source: dietary or de novo synthesis
• Function:
– Serve in intracellular communication (signaling) including
apoptosis and cell senescence,
– differentiation, and opposes some of the actions of
diacylglycerol.
– myelin sheath (nerve conduction)
– As antigenic determinants of ABO blood group
• Synthesis
– Degradation is by lysosomal enzymes 57
Biosynthesis of ceramide
58
Synthesis of sphingolipids from ceramide
– Addition of phosphocoline OR carbohydrates to ceramide
59
CLINICAL ASPECTS
• Deficiency of Lung Surfactant Causes Respiratory Distress
Syndrome
• Lung surfactantis composed mainly of lipid with some
proteins and carbohydrate and prevents the alveoli from
collapsing.
• Surfactant activity is largely attributed to
dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, which is synthesized shortly
before parturition in full-term infants.
• Deficiency of lung surfactant in the lungs of many preterm
newborns gives rise to respiratory distress syndrome.
• Administration of either natural or artificial surfactant has
been of therapeutic benefit.
60
Sphingolipidoses (lipid storage diseases)
• Group of inherited diseases that are often manifested in
childhood.
• These diseases are part of a larger group of lysosomal disorders
and exhibit several constant features:
62
CHOLESTEROL SYNTHESIS, TRANSPORT, AND
EXCRETION
• Present in tissues and in plasma lipoproteins as free cholesterol or as cholesteryl ester (two-
third).
• Synthesized in many tissues mainly by liver to distribute as VLDL, although the gut, the
adrenal cortex, the gonads as well as the placenta in pregnant women produce significant
quantities of the sterol.
• It is the precursor of all other steroids, such as sex hormones, bile acids, and vitamin D.
• It occurs in foods of animal origin such as egg yolk, meat, liver, and brain.
• A little more than half the cholesterol of the body arises by synthesis (about 700 mg/d), and
the remainder is provided by the average diet.
• The liver accounts for 10% of total synthesis in humans, the intestine for about another
10%.
• Free cholesterol also enters the gut lumen via the biliary tract (approximately 1,000 mg /day,
which mixes with 300 mg of dietary cholesterol to form an intestinal pool, roughly 55% of
which is resorbed by the enterocytes and enters the bloodstream daily).
63
• Eliminated in the bile as cholesterol or bile salts.
Processes that determine the cholesterol balance
● Intestinal uptake of dietary cholesterol
● de novo cholesterol synthesis
● Synthesis of steroid hormones from cholesterol
● Synthesis of bile acids from cholesterol, and their biliary secretion
● Biliary secretion of surplus cholesterol in unmodified form.
64
Formation of mevalonate
from acetyl-CoA
66
Condensation of 6 activated 5C
Isoprenes to form the 30-
CSqualene
- Head-to-tail condensation of
isopentenylpyrophosphate and
dimethylallyl pyrophosphate
67
Cyclization of squalene form lanosterol
68
Metabolic Fates of Cholesterol
72
C. Hormonal regulation
Glucagon
Activators: Insulin
+
+
Dephosphorylate cAMP- Adeny late Cyclase
the enzyme phosphodiesterase
AMP cAMP ATP
Insulin +
Phosphatase Inhibitor-1
thyroid Reductase
hormone ATP
Kinase
Pi
- -
Reductase (inactive)
+2
Kinase Kinase Mg Phosphatase
Inhibitors: ADP
+
Insulin
Reductase H2O
Kinase
Phosphorylate the HMG-CoA Reductase
(active) HMG-CoA Reductase
(active) (inactive)
enzyme Mg+2
ATP ADP
Glucagon
- Phosphatase
Glucocorticoids Cholesterol H2O
and its
derivatives Pi +
Insulin
73
Dietary and life style factors for Serum Cholesterol Level
• Starvation
75
BILE ACID – A C-24 steroid from Cholesterol
Types
• Cholic acid (31% of bile acids) & Chenodeoxy cholic acid (45% of bile acids)
• Mainly 2 types: Deoxycholic acid (from cholic acid) & Lithocholic acid (from
chenodeoxycholic cholic acid)
Most of the gut bile acids (95%) recycle through the enterohepatic
circulation into the liver through the portal vein bound to serum
albumin to be reconjugated (but not rehydroxylated) and then
resecreted, and, so on. 77
Rate limiting
78
Functions Bile Acids
79
Gall Stones: Cholelithiasis (bile gallbladder
stones)