618
chapter 27 
Nucleotide Metabolism
N '.N '-M ethenyi F H 4
N1 -Form im ino FH .
FIGURE 27-4
The six one-carbon substituents of tetrahydrofolate. The oxidation state is 
the same in the one-carbon moiety of N
5
-formyl, NK)-formyI, and 
N
5
,N10-methenyl FH4. Nlo-Formyl FH4 is required for 
de novo
synthesis 
of purine nucleotides, whereas N
5
,Nl0-methylene FH4 is needed for 
formation of thymidilic acid.
FH
4
are shown below.
3. Hydrolysis of N
5
,N10-methenyl FH
4
by a
cyclohydrolase yields N5-formyl FH
4
(folinic acid) 
and N10-formyl FH4. The oxidation state of the 
one-carbon moiety is the same in all three species.
N10-Formyl FH4
N5,N10-Methenyl F 14
Ns-Formyl FH4
4. N10-Formyl FH
4
can be formed directly from formate 
in an ATP-requiring reaction.
FH
4
+ HCOO 
+ ATP
NI0-formyl FH
4
-----------
>
synthetase
N5-formyl FH
4
+ ADP + P,
5. The formimino group (-CH=NH) of
formiminoglutamate (Figlu), a catabolite of histidine 
(Chapter 17), forms formimino FH4.
O
‘ O—C—CH2—CH2—CH—C—O’ + FH4 ■
I
NH
I
HC=NH
Formiminoglutamate (Figlu)
1. Serine is the principal source of one-carbon units.
serine hydroxymethyltransferase
FH
4
+ serine , 
— ^
pyridoxal phosphate
N
5
,NI0-methylene FH
4
+ glycine + H
2
O
2. N
5
,NI0-Methylene FH
4
plays a central role, since it 
can be reduced to N5-methyl FH
4
or oxidized to 
N
5
,N10-methenyl FH4.
Red. 
reductase
N5, N
1
°-Methylene FH
4
+ NADH + H+ ------ ^
N5-methyl FH
4
+ NAD+
Ox
c 
. dehydrogenase
N
5
,N10-Methylene FH
4
+ NADP+ , . 
-
N
5
,N10-methenyl FH
4
+ NADPH + H+
where “Ox.” is oxidation and “Red.” is reduction.
N5-Formimino FH4
II 
H 
||
’ O—C—CH2—CH2—C—C—O’
I
nh2
Glutamate
N5-Formiminoglutamate undergoes deamination to N5, 
N10-methenyl FH4. If a loading dose of histidine is given 
to a patient who is deficient in folic acid, urinary excretion 
of Figlu is increased. This 
Figlu excretion test
is useful 
in the diagnosis of folate deficiency, which clinically is 
manifested as a megaloblastic anemia (Chapter 38).
The various catalytic roles of folate-mediated one- 
carbon 
transfer reactions 
in 
anabolic 
and 
catabolic