Beta-oxidation Fatty Acids
Big picture
- Fatty acids (FA) are turned into energy in muscle and into triacylglycerol in fat cells .
- FA are not used by brain and RBC for energy, and not used by the majority of liver .
Lipolysis (mobilizing fatty acids)
Triggers :
- low glucose level
- low ATP
- hormone-sensitive control
Hormone-sensitive lipase control
-
controlled by hormone-sensitive lipase
-
activated by epinephrine / glucagon (phosphorylated)
- inhibited by insulin
- PKA phosphorylates triacylglycerol lipase and activates it.
- converts triacylglycerol (TG) → fatty acids + glycerol (glycerol goes back to liver)
Transport in blood
- FA binds to albumin and moves to target tissue in the blood.
- albumin releases FA into the cytoplasm of the target cell.
Fatty acid activation (forming fatty acyl-CoA)
Occurs on the mitochondrial outer membrane .
Steps:
- ATP binds to FA with fatty acyl-CoA synthase (outer mitochondrial membrane)
- fatty acyl-CoA synthase kicks off AMP and attaches CoA-SH
- formed FA–CoA (activated fatty acid)
Carnitine shuttle (long-chain FA transport)
- Long-chain FA require transport into the mitochondrial matrix.
- Small-chain FA with < 12 carbons do not need transport .
Steps
- CPT-1 (outer membrane): converts FA–CoA + carnitine → fatty acylcarnitine + CoA
- fatty acylcarnitine enters via TIM while carnitine leaves matrix
- CPT-2 (inner membrane): converts fatty acylcarnitine + CoA → FA–CoA + carnitine
Regulation
- CPT-1 is inhibited by malonyl-CoA (from the fatty acid synthase pathway).
Beta-oxidation spiral (activated fatty acid)
- cuts between C2 and C3
- uses repeated “spirals” (cycles)
One cycle
- alpha and beta carbon (C2 and C3) form a double bond via acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, converting FAD → FADH\(_2\)
- add –OH to beta carbon and –H to alpha carbon via enoyl-CoA hydratase
- beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase forms a double bond of the C and –OH, converting NAD\(^+\) → NADH + H\(^+\)
- cleavage via beta-keto-thiolase between alpha–beta carbon with CoA-SH, leaving acetyl-CoA
Then restart with the new shortened acyl-CoA.
Energy yield: palmitoyl-CoA (16C)
Beta-oxidation outputs
- 7 FADH\(_2\)
- 7 NADH
- 8 acetyl-CoA
TCA outputs (from acetyl-CoA)
- 8 GTP
- 8 FADH\(_2\)
- 2 NADH
Grand total
- 15 FADH\(_2\)
- 31 NADH
- 8 GTP
- 108 ATP
Energy yield of palmitoyl (16C):
- \(108 - 2 = 106\) ATP
Isoenzymes
- first three enzymes of beta-oxidation have isoenzymes for different chain lengths.
Special cases
Unsaturated fatty acids
-
only when there is a double bond at \(C_3=C_4\):
-
use enoyl-CoA isomerase to convert to a double bond at \(C_2=C_3\)
Odd-chain fatty acids
-
last five carbon yields:
-
acetyl-CoA (2C) and propionyl-CoA (3C)
Propionyl-CoA → succinyl-CoA
-
propionyl-CoA carboxylase (biotin):
-
input: ATP + HCO\(_3^-\)
- output: ADP
- forms D-methylmalonyl-CoA
- epimerized and isomerized
- forms succinyl-CoA
Clinical / toxicology notes
MCAD deficiency (MCADD)
- medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (autosomal recessive)
- affects isoenzyme for medium chain
- unable to harvest energy from fatty acids → causes inability to gluconeogenesis in liver
Jamaican vomiting sickness
- ackee fruit contains hypoglycin (if prepared improperly)
- hypoglycin binds to carnitine and affects carnitine shuttle (lysine analog)
-
metabolized into methylene cyclopropyl acetic acid (MCPA)
-
inhibits acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (short-chain and medium-chain)
Ketogenesis (liver production of ketone bodies)
Sequence :
- fatty oxidation → beta-oxidation → acetyl-CoA
-
2 acetyl-CoA
-
beta-ketothiolase (CoA release) → acetoacetyl-CoA
- HMG-CoA synthase (takes acetyl-CoA, releases CoA) → HMG-CoA
-
HMG-CoA lyase (releases acetyl-CoA) → acetoacetate
-
acetoacetate can be released into blood as a ketone body
-
D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (NADH + H\(^+\) → NAD\(^+\)) → D-beta-hydroxybutyrate
-
can be released into blood as a ketone body
- acetoacetate can spontaneously form acetone
Key note:
- ketone bodies can power the brain and the muscle.
Ketone body utilization
- D-beta-hydroxybutyrate → acetoacetate (NAD\(^+\) → NADH + H\(^+\))
-
acetoacetate → acetoacetyl-CoA using succinyl-CoA: acetoacetate CoA transferase
-
succinyl-CoA → succinate
- liver has minimal activity of this enzyme
- acetoacetyl-CoA → 2 acetyl-CoA via thiolase (uses CoA)
Energy content
- acetoacetate yields 19 ATP
-
D-beta-hydroxybutyrate is produced in a higher ratio and has more energy:
-
21.5 ATP