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Pathway Description
Vitamin K Metabolism 1610307897
Homo sapiens
Metabolic Pathway
Vitamin K describes a group of lipophilic, hydrophobic vitamins that exist naturally in two forms (and synthetically in three others): vitamin K1, which is found in plants, and vitamin K2, which is synthesized by bacteria. Vitamin K is an important dietary component because it is necessary as a cofacter in the activation of vitamin K dependent proteins. Metabolism of vitamin K occurs mainly in the liver. In the first step, vitamin K is reduced to its quinone form by a quinone reductase such as NAD(P)H dehydrogenase. Reduced vitamin K is the form required to convert vitamin K dependent protein precursors to their active states. It acts as a cofactor to the integral membrane enzyme vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylase (along with water and carbon dioxide as co-substrates), which carboxylates glutamyl residues to gamma-carboxy-glutamic acid residues on certain proteins, activating them. Each converted glutamyl residue produces a molecule of vitamin K epoxide, and certain proteins may have more than one residue requiring carboxylation. To complete the cycle, the vitamin K epoxide is returned to vitamin K via the vitamin K epoxide reductase enzyme, also an integral membrane protein. The vitamin K dependent proteins include a number of important coagulation factors, such as prothrombin. Thus, warfarin and other coumarin drugs act as anticoagulants by blocking vitamin K epoxide reductase.
References
Vitamin K Metabolism 1610307897 References
Greer FR: Vitamin K the basics--what's new? Early Hum Dev. 2010 Jul;86 Suppl 1:43-7. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2010.01.015. Epub 2010 Feb 8.
Pubmed: 20116943
Litwack G. ed. Vitamins and Hormones: Vitamin K. (2008) 78. New York: Academic Press, Elsevier
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