Question of the week

Case details

A 54- year-old man with Type 1 diabetes is referred to an ophthalmologist for evaluation of developing cataract. Blood chemistry results are shown below:

Fasting blood glucose   198 mg/dl

Hemoglobin A                  15 gm/dl

Hemoglobin A1c             10% of total Hb

Urine ketones                   Positive

Urine glucose                    Positive

Which of the following enzymes is most strongly associated with ketones formation in this patient?

A) Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex

B) Thioesterase

C) Thiophorase

D) Thiokinase

E) Thiolase

Case discussion

Blood chemistry reveals hyperglycemia, high Hb A1c, ketonuria, and glucosuria. The patient is , therefore, suffering from uncontrolled diabetes mellitus with ketoacidosis.

The enzyme which is most strongly associated with ketone formation is ‘Thiolase’.

Thiolase catalyzes the first step of ketogenesis, which involves condensation of 2 Acetyl Co A molecules to form Acetoacetyl Co A (figure-1).

Figure 1- Steps of ketogenesis- showing the reaction catalyzed by thiolase

Thiolase is also involved in the de novo pathway of cholesterol biosynthesis (figure 2):

Figure 2- Pathway of cholesterol biosynthesis showing the reaction catalyzed by Thiolase

Thiolase is involved in the last step of thiolytic cleavage of Acetoacetyl Co A in the beta-oxidation of fatty acids also (figure 3):

Figure-3 Thiolytic cleavage of Aetoacetyl Co A in the pathway of beta-oxidation of fatty acids

As regards other options:

Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of Pyruvate to Acetyl Co-A (figure 4):

Figure-4- Reaction catalyzed by Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex

Thioesterase is a component of the “ releasing unit of the Fatty acid synthase complex. It catalyzes the release of newly synthesized fatty acid from the Acyl Carrier protein of the fatty acid synthase enzyme complex (figure 5):

Figure- 5 – The reaction catalyzed by Thioesterase

The enzyme Thiophorase is involved in the utilization of ketone bodies. This enzyme is absent in the hepatocytes, which is why ketone bodies can not be utilized by liver cells (figure 6).

Figure-6- The reaction catalyzed by Thiophorase (enzyme2), also called Succinyl co A: Acetoacetate co A transferase.

Thiokinase, for example, catalyzes the activation of fatty acids before their oxidation.  It is also called Acyl Co A synthetase. The reaction catalyzed by thiokinase is shown in figure (7).

Figure-7- The reaction catalyzed by Thiokinase

Another enzyme Succinyl Co Thiokinase catalyzes the conversion of Succinyl Co A to succinate, in the TCA cycle which is an example of Substrate level phosphorylation.

Therefore, the most appropriate option out of the above is thiolase.

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