Main Page

encyclopedia.codeboy.net

 

Porphyrin

\nA porphyrin is a heterocyclic macrocycle made from 4 pyrrole subunits linked on opposite sides through 4 methine bridges. The macrocycle, therefore, is completely aromatic, unlike the related corrins or chlorins.

Table of contents
1 Types of porphyrins
2 Porphyrin synthesis
3 See also
4 External links

Types of porphyrins

\nPorphyrins combine readily with metals, coordinating with them in the central cavity. Iron, zinc, copper, nickel, and cobalt containing porphyrins are known, and many other metals can be inserted. A porphyrin in which no metal is inserted in its cavity is called "free base". Some iron containing porphyrins are called hemes, and heme-containing proteins, or hemoproteins, are found extensively in biochemistry. If one of the four pyrrole subunits is reduced, a chlorin is produced, the ring structure found in chlorophyll. If two of the four pyrrole subunits are reduced, then either a bacteriochlorin (as found in some photosynthetic bacteria), or an isobacteriochlorin, depending on the relative positions of the reduced pyrroles, is formed.

Porphyrin synthesis

\n

Table

\nThis is a schematic representation of porphyrin biosynthesis, with references by EC number and the
OMIM database. The porphyria associated with the deficiency of each enzyme is also shown: {| cellpadding=3 cellspacing=0 border=1 style="border-collapse:collapse"\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| Enzyme\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| Substrate\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| Product\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| Chromosome\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| EC\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| OMIM\n|bgcolor="#eeeeee"| porphyria\n|-\n| ALA synthase\n| Glycine, succinyl CoA\n| D-Aminolevulinic acid\n| 3p21.1\n| 2.3.1.37\n| 125290\n| none\n|-\n| ALA dehydratase\n| D-Aminolevulinic acid\n| Porphobilinogen\n| 9q34\n| 4.2.1.24\n| 125270\n| acute hepatic\n|-\n| PBG deaminase\n| Porphobilinogen\n| Hydroxymethyl bilane\n| 11q23.3\n| 2.5.1.61\n| 176000\n| acute intermittent\n|-\n| Uroporphyrinogen III synthase\n| Hydroxymethyl bilane\n| Uroporphyrinogen III\n| 10q25.2-q26.3\n| 4.2.1.75\n| 606938\n| congenital erythropoietic\n|-\n| Uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase\n| Uroporphyrinogen III\n| Coproporphyrinogen III\n| 1q34\n| 4.1.1.37\n| 176100\n| cutanea tarda\n|-\n| Coproporphyrinogen III oxidase\n| Coproporphyrinogen III\n| Protoporphyrinogen IX\n| 3q12\n| 1.3.3.3\n| 121300\n| coproporphyria\n|-\n| Protoporphyrinogen oxidase\n| Protoporphyrinogen IX\n| Protoporphyrin IX\n| 1q22\n| 1.3.3.4\n| 600923\n| variegate\n|-\n| Ferrochelatase\n| Protoporphyrin IX\n| Heme\n| 18q21.3\n| 4.99.1.1\n| 177000\n| protoporphyria\n|}

In brief

\nPlease see the articles on individual enzymes and some in the
mitochondrion (yellow)]]\nThe committed step for porphyrin synthesis is the formation of D-Aminolevulinic acid from glycine (an abundant amino acid) and succinyl-CoA (from the citric acid cycle). Two dALA molecules are combined into porphobilinogen (PBG), which contains the pyrrole ring. Four PBGs are then combined through deamination into hydroxymethyl bilane (HMB), which is hydrolysed to form the circular tetrapyrrole uroporphyrinogen III. This molecule undergoes a number of further modifications. Intermediates are used in different species to form particular substances, but in humans, the main end product protoporphyrin IX is combined with iron to form heme.

See also

\n*
Porphyria\n* Heme

External links

\n*
The Porphyrin Page\n* Porphynet - the porphyrin portal Category:BiochemicalsCategory:Heterocyclic bases\n

"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home." - Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977