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Published byFerdinand Gordon Modified over 9 years ago
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Metabolism Definition: Sum of all chemical reactions in the body
Anabolic versus Catabolic Reactions Anabolic Rxns = use chemical energy to synthesize products Catabolic Rxns = break down substances to generate chemical energy
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Chemical Energy Production
(sunlight) Photosynthesis (plants) CO2 + H2O Carbohydrates + O2 Respiration (animals and plants) Carbohydrates + O CO2 + H20 + ATP
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Food Consumption Food ingested is digested to elementary
units by catabolic reactions that convert: a. Lipids to glycerol and fatty acids b. Proteins to amino acids c. Complex carbohydrates to simple sugars
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Food Utilization Elementary units (glycerol, f.a., a.a., simple sugars) produced by digestion and ab- sorption are: used for energy production stored converted to other cellular products used for production of other cell components
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Carbohydrate Metabolism
Carbohydrates can be used to generate ATP Can be stored as glycogen mostly in liver and skeletal muscle tissue Can be converted to fat and stored
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Fat Metabolism Triglycerides are used to generate energy (ATP)
F.A. generate acetyl Coenzyme A which enters Kreb’s cycle and generates ATP At half of energy used by muscle, liver and kidneys comes from f.a. catabolism Glycerol can be converted to glucose Anaerobic and/or aerobic metabolism of glucose can generate ATP Glucose can be converted to fat and stored
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Fat Metabolism (continued)
Can be stored as fat Accounts for majority of energy stored in body Most cells can store some fat Adipocytes = specialized cells designed for storing fat Body will preferentially convert reserves to fat for storage because gram per gram, fat generates more energy than does protein or carbohydrate
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Protein Metabolism Proteins broken down to amino acids
Amino acids can be used to generate ATP the amino group cannot be used to generate ATP the remainder of most amino acids can generate intermediates that can enter the glycolytic pathway or the Kreb’s cycle H O H - N - C - C - OH H R
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Protein Anabolism Nonessential amino acids are those that can be synthesized by the body glucose and fats can be used to generate some amino acids Essential amino acids (8) cannot be synthesized in body must be obtained from dietary intake
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Energy Considerations
Catabolic reactions release energy Majority released as heat energy Homeostasis strives to maintain constant internal environment, including constant internal temperature Pathways combine multiple reactions, each of which generates small amounts of energy, to minimize heat generation
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Metabolic Pathway Definition: A sequence of enzyme-mediated reactions leading to the formation of a particular product Mechanism for controlling thermal energy release associated with chemical reactions
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Anaerobic versus Aerobic Energy Production
Anaerobic Metabolism DOES NOT Require oxygen Occurs in cytoplasm Converts glucose to pyruvate by glycolysis Generates ATP Generates much lower levels of ATP than aerobic metabolism of glucose Aerobic Metabolism DOES require oxygen Occurs in mitochondria Converts pyruvate to Acetyl CoA Generates ATP via the Kreb’s cycle and electron transport chain Generates much more ATP than anaerobic metabolism
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Chemical Oxidation & Reduction
GER = GAIN OF ELECTRONS gain of an electron equivalent to gain of H atom when a molecule gains electrons it becomes REDUCED LEO = LOSS OF ELECTRONS loss of electron equivalent to loss of H atom when molecule loses electrons it becomes OXIDIZED
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NAD and FAD NAD = nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
derived from vitamin B3 FAD = flavin adenine dinucleotide derived from vitamin B2 Participate in oxidation/reduction reactions NAD and FAD are coenzymes for several reactions in the Kreb’s cycle Become ‘reduced’ when they accept H atoms Become ‘oxidized’ when they donate their H atoms Shuttle hydrogen atoms between molecules by vacillating back and forth between oxidized and reduced forms
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NAD and ATP Production Oxidized form = NAD+ Reduced form = NADH + H+
Each molecule of reduced NAD (NADH + H+) formed produces 3 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria
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FAD and ATP Production Oxidized form = FAD Reduced form = FADH2
Each reduced FAD (FADH2) formed produces 2 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria 2 FADH2 produced in Kreb’s cycle (one per molecule of pyruvate) produces 4 molecules of ATP by oxidative phosphorylation
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Phosphorylation Definition: Addition of phosphate group to an organic molecule Two types of phosphorylation Substrate level The process of transferring a phosphate group between two organic molecules i.e. make ATP by transferring a phosphate group from some organic molecule to ADP to form ATP Oxidative The process of adding an inorganic phosphate to an organic molecule i.e. make ATP by adding a free phosphate group (unattached to any organic molecule) to ADP
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Oxidative Phosphorylation
Formation of ATP by adding inorganic phosphate to ADP Occurs in mitochondria Energy used to drive the production of ATP comes from the production of water (H2O) by the combining of H atoms and oxygen H + O H2O ADP + Pi ATP Reduced NAD and FAD provide the H atoms that combine with oxygen to form water
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Glycolysis Conversion of glucose pyruvate Occurs in the cytoplasm
one 6-carbon sugar two 3-carbon molecules Occurs in the cytoplasm USES 2 ATP molecules transfers 2 phosphates from ATP to ‘trap’ glucose and later intermediates inside the cell Gross ATP production = 10 ATP Net ATP production = 6 ATP per molecule of glucose utilized (8 ATP in heart and liver)
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Gross ATP Production by Glycolysis
4 ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation (SLP) 6 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation (OP) 2 molecules of reduced NAD (NADH + H+) 3 ATP per molecule of reduced NAD Gross ATP = ATP by SLP + ATP by OP Gross ATP = = 10 ATP
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Glycolysis and ATP Consumption
2 ATP molecules used for each molecule of glucose converted to pyruvate One to trap glucose inside cell One to energize intermediate 2 ATP molecules used to supply energy to transport reduced NAD to mitochondria Exception: liver and heart, which move reduced NAD to mitochondria by non-ATP dependent process
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Net ATP Production by Glycolysis
Net ATP = Gross ATP produced – ATP used In Most Tissues = 10 – 4 = 6 ATP In liver and heart = 10 – 2 = 8 ATP
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Fate of Pyruvate Generated in Glycolysis
If oxygen is present pyruvate is converted to Acetyl CoA 1 molecule glucose yields 2 molecules pyruvate in glycolysis and so can produce 2 molecules of Acetyl CoA Acetyl CoA enters mitochondria and is shuttled into the Kreb’s cycle If oxygen is absent pyruvate is converted to lactate and handled by Cori cycle
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Kreb’s Cycle Occurs in mitochondria Acetyl CoA feeds into cycle that
1. Generates 3 reduced NAD and 1 reduced FAD per revolution -reduced NAD yields 9 ATP per revolution -reduced FAD yields 2 ATP per revolution 2. Generates one ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation per revolution Two revolutions occur per molecule glucose metabolized
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ATP Production via Kreb’s Cycle
Per revolution = 12 ATP 11 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation 1 ATP by substrate level phosphorylation Two revolutions per glucose molecule yields 24 (I.e. 12 X 2 = 24) ATP total per molecule of glucose metabolized via Kreb’s cycle
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ATP per glucose molecule
Anaerobic Metabolism Anaerobic Metabolism By glycolysis 4 by SLP 6 by OP Gross = 10 ATP Net = 6 (or 8 in liver and heart) ATP 2 used to trap and energize 2 used to transport reduced NAD to mitochondria (except in liver and heart) 6 (8 in liver and heart) by glycolysis 6 by OP in conversion of pyruvates to Acetyl CoA 24 by Kreb’s cycle 22 by OP 2 by SLP
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Cori Cycle In the absence of oxygen, pyruvate is converted to lactate (lactic acid) Cori cycle = cycle by which lactate is handled in the body
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Cori Cycle Lactate moves from muscle to blood; pyruvate cannot leave muscle Lactate moves from blood to liver in liver, lactate is converted back to pyruvate pyruvate is converted back to glucose glucose can enter bloodstream and return to muscle for energy production or be stored in liver as glycogen
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Cori Cycle MUSCLE BLOOD LIVER Glycogen Glycogen Glucose Glucose
Pyruvate Pyruvate Lactate Lactate Lactate
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Metabolic States Absorptive state Post-absorptive state
period when ingested nutrients are entering the bloodstream from the G.I. Tract takes around 4 hours to completely absorb average meal Post-absorptive state period when G.I. tract is empty of nutrients and energy must be supplied by body’s stored reserves
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Absorptive State Glucose = major energy source
Blood glucose levels high Insulin secreted from beta cells of pancreas insulin = protein hormone stimulates transport of glucose from bloodstream into cells all cells except brain and liver require insulin action to move glucose into cells Net synthesis of glycogen, fat, and protein occurs
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Insulin Actions in Liver
Glucose can enter liver cells without insulin Promotes conversion of glucose to glycogen (storage form of carbohydrates) Promotes conversion of fatty acids and amino acids to fat
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Insulin Action in Muscle
Essential for transport of glucose into cells skeletal muscle = majority of body mass and major consumer of metabolic fuel, even at rest Promotes conversion of glucose to glycogen
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Insulin Action in Fat Promotes uptake of glucose from bloodstream
Promotes conversion of glucose and fatty acids to fat (triacylglycerols)
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Insulin Action in Most Cells
Promotes uptake of glucose from bloodstream and use for energy (ATP) production Promotes uptake of fatty acids and their use for energy (ATP) production Promotes uptake of amino acids and their conversion to protein
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Glucose and the Brain Glucose can enter brain without insulin action
Brain cannot synthesize or store enough glucose to provide energy from ATP for more than a few minutes Body strictly regulates blood glucose to meet brain’s needs
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Post-absorptive State
Several hours after a meal Blood glucose levels are low Body must obtain glucose from reserves Glucagon = main hormone in circulation, produced by alpha cells of pancreas
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Post-absorptive State (continued)
Catabolic reactions occur to: 1. Provide blood glucose a. Glycogen converted to glucose b. Gluconeogenesis = production of glucose from non-carbohydrate sources (i.e. Cori cycle lactate to glucose) 2. Promote glucose sparing (preferential use of fat over glucose in most tissues)
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Actions of Glucagon in Liver
Stimulates glycogenolysis (glycogen to glucose) Stimulates fats to fatty acids Stimulates proteins to amino acids
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Glucagon Action in Fat Stimulates fat conversion to fatty acids
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Glucagon Action in Most Cells
Stimulates protein conversion to amino acids
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Sources of Glucose Intestinal absorption
Glycogen breakdown (glycogenolysis) Biosynthesis from non-carbohydrate sources (gluconeogenesis) Most cells can synthesize glycogen from and hydrolyze glycogen to glucose Only LIVER and KIDNEY can release glucose into bloodstream
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Enzymes and Glucose Metabolism
Insulin and Glucagon Glycogen Synthetase needed to synthesize glycogen from glucose found in most cells Phosphorylase needed to hydrolyze glycogen to glucose
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Enzymes and Glucose Metabolism
Pyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate, and fructose 1,6 diphosphatase enzymes needed for gluconeogenesis found only in liver and kidney Glucose-6-phosphatase needed to release glucose into circulation
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Liver and Glucose Production
Liver can produce glucose by gluconeogenesis Liver can release synthesized glucose for use by other cells When liver is producing and releasing glucose for use by other tissues it uses ketone bodies as source of energy metabolic products produced by acetyl CoA acetoacetate, b-hydroxybutyrate, and acetone
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Caloric Content of Major Food Groups and Ethanol
Group cal/gm carbohydrate protein fat * ethanol *fat provides most energy per unit weight of all foods; is best storage form of food
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Exercise and Metabolism
At rest skeletal muscle uses fatty acid metabolism to provide energy blood glucose is reserved primarily for brain Exercise increases glucose utilization by muscle
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Exercise and Metabolism (continued)
Endogenous glucose production increased to meet demands of low intensity exercise Exhaustive high demand exercise first depletes glycogen stores then depletes liver-derived glucose eventually results in utilization of fatty acids
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Regulation of Food Intake
Hypothalamus site of feeding center (on switch for food intake) site of satiety center (off switch for food intake) Leptin protein hormone produced by fat cells acts at level of hypothalamus to decrease food intake may be part of negative feedback loop that monitors body fat levels (lipostat)
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Set-Point Theory ‘Predetermined’ weight optimum
body strives to maintain setpoint and will defend attempts to alter it (i.e. diets) Rhythm method of ‘girth’ control repeated cycles of alternating weight gain followed by weight loss when body has reason to anticipate episodes of starvation it adjusts metabolic processes to more efficiently absorb and store food when it is available
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