Tryptophan degradation via kynurenine (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)
From WikiPathways
Description
While Saccharomyces cerevisiae can use most amino acids as their sole nitrogen source, they can only use a few amino acids as a carbon source to support growth (CITS:[Large86][Cooper82]). This is in contrast to most eukaryotes and some fungi, which can metabolize amino acids completely, utilizing them as sole sources of carbon and nitrogen (CITS:[Stryer88][Large 86]). S. cerevisiae degrade the aromatic amino acids (tryptophan, phenylalanine, and tyrosine) and the branched-chain amino acids (valine, leucine, and iso-leucine) via the Ehrlich pathway (CITS:[Sentheshanmuganathan60][10989420]). This pathway is comprised of the following steps: 1) deamination of the amino acid to the corresponding alpha-keto acid; 2) decarboxylation of the resulting alpha-keto acid to the respective aldehyde; and, 3) reduction of the aldehyde to form the corresponding long chain or complex alcohol, known as a fusel alcohol or fusel oil (CITS:[10989420][Large 86]). Fusel alcohols are important flavor and aroma compounds in yeast-fermented food products and beverages (as reported in (CITS:[9546164]). The primary aminotransferase in tryptophan degradation is postulated to be Aro9p (CITS:[6763508]). In vitro studies demonstrated that Aro9p is active with phenylpyruvate, pyruvate, or p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate, but not 2-oxoglutarate as the amino acceptor (CITS:[6763508]). Aro9p is induced by aromatic amino acids and is subject to nitrogen regulation (CITS:[6763508][10207060]). The decarboxylase encoding gene ARO10 appears to be transcriptionally regulated in a similar fashion(CITS:[10207060]). Gap1p, a general amino acid permease, and Wap1p, an inducible amino acid permease with wide substrate specificity, appear to be the main uptake systems for utilizing aromatic amino acids (CITS:[10207060]).
SOURCE: SGD pathways, http://pathway.yeastgenome.org/server.html
Based on http://pathway.yeastgenome.org/biocyc/Quality Tags
Ontology Terms
Bibliography
- Panozzo C, Nawara M, Suski C, Kucharczyka R, Skoneczny M, Bécam AM, Rytka J, Herbert CJ; ''Aerobic and anaerobic NAD+ metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.''; FEBS Lett, 2002 PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
History
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External references
DataNodes
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Name | Type | Database reference | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
2-Amino-3-carboxymuconate semialdehyde | Metabolite | CHEBI:995 (ChEBI) | |
3-hydroxy-L-kynurenine | Metabolite | 606-14-4 (CAS) | |
3-hydroxyanthranilate | Metabolite | CHEBI:36559 (ChEBI) | |
BNA1 | GeneProduct | S000003786 (SGD) | |
BNA2 | GeneProduct | S000003839 (SGD) | |
BNA3 | GeneProduct | S000003596 (SGD) | |
BNA4 | GeneProduct | S000000194 (SGD) | |
BNA5 | GeneProduct | S000004221 (SGD) | |
BNA6 | GeneProduct | S000001943 (SGD) | |
CO2 | Metabolite | HMDB01967 (HMDB) | |
H2O | Metabolite | HMDB02111 (HMDB) | |
L-alanine | Metabolite | CHEBI:16977 (ChEBI) | |
L-formylkynurenine | Metabolite | 1022-31-7 (CAS) | |
L-tryptophan | Metabolite | 73-22-3 (CAS) | |
NADPH | Metabolite | 53-57-6 (CAS) | |
NADP | Metabolite | HMDB00217 (HMDB) | |
O2 | Metabolite | CHEBI:25805 (ChEBI) | |
PRPP | Metabolite | 97-55-2 (CAS) | |
formate | Metabolite | CHEBI:15740 (ChEBI) | |
kynurenine | Metabolite | 343-65-7 (CAS) | |
pyrophosphate | Metabolite | 2466-09-3 (CAS) | |
quinolinate | Metabolite | CHEBI:29959 (ChEBI) |
Annotated Interactions
No annotated interactions