Galactolysis

Galactolysis refers to the catabolism of galactose.

In the liver, galactose is converted through the Leloir pathway to glucose 6-phosphate in the following reactions:

       galacto-                uridyl                phosphogluco-
        kinase               transferase                mutase
   gal --------> gal 1 P ------------------> glc 1 P -----------> glc 6 P
                            ^           \
                           /             v
                        UDP-glc       UDP-gal
                           ^             /
                            \___________/
                              epimerase

Metabolic disorders

There are 3 types of galactosemia or galactose deficiencies:

NameEnzymeDescription
galactokinase deficiencyGalactokinaseCauses cataracts, which are treatable by restricting galactose from the diet.
UDPgalactose-4-epimerase deficiencyUDPgalactose-4-epimeraseIs extremely rare (only 2 reported cases). It causes nerve deafness.
Galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase deficiencyGalactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferaseIs the most problematic, as galactose-free diets are not effective in treating neurocognitive deficiencies (in particular language disorders such as verbal dyspraxia) and ovarian failure. If a galactose-free diet is administered, cataracts and acute symptoms such as kidney and liver failure respond immediately.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.