Pyruvate kinase

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pyruvate Kinase 1

Enzyme Pyruvate Kinase
PDB Code PDB 1A3W
Organism Yeast
Complexed molecules FBP, PG, Mn2+ and K+
Symbol(s): PKLR
Genetic data
Locus: Chr. 1 q21
Database Links
Codes: EntrezGene 5313, RefSeq NM_000298, UniProt P30613, Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) 266200 EC 2.7.1.40
Pyruvate kinase 2
Symbol(s): PKM2
Genetic data
Locus: Chr. 15 [1]
Database Links
Codes: EntrezGene 5315, RefSeq NM_182470, UniProt P14618, Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) 179050 EC 2.7.1.40

Pyruvate kinase is an enzyme involved in glycolysis. It catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate group from phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to ADP, yielding a pyruvate molecule and producing one molecule ATP.

The reaction with pyruvate kinase:

        pyruvate 
         kinase
   PEP ----------> pyruvate 
         /     \
       ADP     ATP 
                                    

This process also requires magnesium ion. The enzyme is a hydrolase under the international classification of enzymes.

This step is the final one in the glycolytic pathway, which produces pyruvate molecules that can be converted, as acetyl CoA, to ATP. It is also one of the three steps in glycolysis that regulate the activity of the pathway overall, therefore an irreversible reaction that has a high net drop of energy.

Pyruvate kinase activity is regulated by:

  • its own substrate PEP and Fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, an intermediate in glycolysis, which both upregulate pyruvate kinase. In so doing, it drives glycolysis to operate faster when more substrate is present.
  • citrate and ATP, which allosterically inhibit it. This accounts for parallel regulation with PFK 1.
  • Insulin, which activates pyruvate kinase during the fed state by dephosphorylating it (i.e. removing a phosphate group)
  • glucagon, which inactivates the enzyme through phosphorylation during fasting when gluconeogenesis occur, so that both processes don't occur simultaneously, resulting in a futile cycle.
  • Alanine, which inhibits pyruvate kinase.

Genetic defects of this enzyme cause the disease known as pyruvate kinase deficiency. In this condition, a lack of pyruvate kinase slows down the process of glycolysis. This effect is especially devastating in cells that lack mitochondria, because these cells must use anaerobic glycolysis as their sole source of energy because the TCA cycle is not available.

One example is red blood cells, which in a state of pyruvate kinase deficiency rapidly become deficient in ATP and can undergo hemolysis. Therefore, pyruvate kinase deficiency can cause hemolytic anemia.

Pyruvate kinase also serves as a regulatory enzyme for gluconeogenesis, a biochemical pathway in which the liver generates glucose from pyruvate and other substrates. When pyruvate kinase is inhibited by phosphorylation (which occurs in the fasting state, via glucagon), phosphoenolpyruvate is prevented from conversion to pyruvate. Instead, it is converted to glucose in a series of gluconeogenesis reactions that are mostly (but not exactly) the reverse sequence of glycolysis.

The glucose thus produced is expelled from the liver, providing energy for vital tissues in the fasting state.

This metabolism related enzyme article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
This article is of interest to the Metabolic Pathways WikiProject.


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