Biochemistry - Amino Acid Metabolism - Discussion
Discussion Forum : Amino Acid Metabolism - Section 1 (Q.No. 1)
1.
Histidine is degraded to α-ketoglutarate and is described as a
Discussion:
8 comments Page 1 of 1.
Avicenna said:
1 decade ago
Histidine is deaminated to urocanic acid, which is converted to 4-imidazolone 5-propionate. Hydrolysis of the later gives N-formiminoglutamate (FIGlu, which donates its formimino group to tetrahydrofolate, leaving glutamate which is then converted to alpha-ketoglutarate. Alpha-ketoglutarate is an intermediate in the Kreb's Cycle. Any amino acid whose catabolism gives pyruvate or one of the intermediate of Citric Acid Cycle is glycogenic amino acid.
Neydee said:
4 years ago
I agree histidine is glucogenic amino acid since it has the ability to release the intermediate (α ketoglutarate) that can be used in the glycolytic pathway in the mitochondria.
Nikki said:
10 years ago
Histidine give alpha-ketoglutarate which can be used to produce glucose through reverse steps of glycolysis with specific enzyme.
So it is a glycogenic amino acid.
So it is a glycogenic amino acid.
(1)
Joaness said:
8 years ago
Histidine is a glucogenic amino acid since it is converted to an intermediate alpha-ketoglutarate which is an intermediate in glucose metabolism in TCA cycle.
Apra said:
7 years ago
Glucogenic amino acids are those amino acids which can be converted into glucose by gluconeogenesis.
(2)
Jemimah Mansibang said:
1 decade ago
Histidine is an essential and a glucogenic amino acid.
NAMARA DAVE J said:
1 decade ago
Ketoglutarate is an intermediate in the TCA cycle.
(1)
Khan Arabi said:
1 decade ago
So it gives a glycogenic amino acid x-tics.
Post your comments here:
Quick links
Quantitative Aptitude
Verbal (English)
Reasoning
Programming
Interview
Placement Papers