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704 23 Energyand Life CHAPTER 2l.I Metaholism AIM: To differentioteomong metobolism,cotobolism,ond onobolism. Metabolism is all the chemical reactions that occur in living organisms. Metabolism meta (Greek): beyond ballein (Greek): to cast or throw Catabolism cata(Greek): down Anabolism ana(Greek): up There are three important terms that describe the chemical reactions in living organisms: metabolism, catabolism, and anabolism. Metabolism is all the chemical reactions that occur in ltuing organisms.Virtually all metabolic reactions are catalyzed by enzymes. Catabolism is a part of metabolism-the breakdown of molecules by an organism. Anabolism ls another part of metabolism-the synthesisof moleculesfor cell growth and multiplication. Nutrients are also converted to their storage forms by anabolic processes.Conversionoffatty acids to triglyceridesfor storagein fatty tissue is one example.Conversionof glucoseto glycogenfor storagein liver and muscle cells is another. Anabolism and catabolism are quite distinct from each other. Cells usually employ different chemical reactions for the breakdown and synthesis of the same molecule. The reactionsused to synthesizeglucose,for example, are not the reverse of the reactions used to degrade it. Apart from being chemically separated, catabolic and anabolic reactions are frequently separated physically. Many important catabolic reactions occur in the mitochondria, whereas many anabolic reactions occur in the cytoplasm. The chemical and physical separation of anabolism from catabolism enablescells to regulate metabolism to make it responsiveto current needs. 2t.2 Photosynthesis AIMS: Towrite o chemicolequotionfor photosynthesis indicotingthe energy-richond energy'Poorcorbon compounds.Todistinguishamong chloroplosts, thyolkoids,ond chlorophyll. Focus The energy of sunlight is harnessed by plants in photoslmthesis. Photosl'nthesis photos (Greek): light synthesis(Greek): to place together Energyproduction by cells involvesthe catabolism of carbon compounds that serve as nutrients-mainly sugars, fats, and amino acids. Oxidation reactions are generally energy-producing. Oxidation reactions that are part of cellular catabolism releasethe energy stored in the chemical bonds of nutrient molecules, making it available to perform the work that cells must do to stay alive. \,Vheredo sugars,fats, and amino acids originate?Carbon dioxide in the Earth'satmosphere is the ultimate source of all carbon compounds. Carbon dioxide is an energy-poor compound becauseit cannot be oxidized further. Animal cells discard it as a waste product. Green plants, blue-green algae, and certain bacteria, however, conduct photosynthesis-harness the energyof sunlight, conuertit to usefulchemical energy,and usethat energyto synthesizeglucose, a nlore reduced molecule, from carbon dioxide. The 23.2 Photosynthesis 705 processesthat occur in photosynthesis are often summarized by a single equation. 6CO2 + Carbon dioxide (more oxidized) 6HrO -!4!:!9q Water c6H12o6 + Glucose (more reduced) 6C,, Oxygen Reoxidation of glucose back to carbon dioxide and water releasesthe energy expended in forming the chemical bonds of the glucose molecule. c6H12o6 Glucose (more reduced) Figure 25.1 Transmission electronmicrograph of a chloroplast. Porphlrin ring CH, tl CH F] H CH. I I CH. tzc", zzc'. lzc" rzc I \ / / ' -C\ -CHz CH: ? cI t_C\/,cCH: /c-N.. ,'N-C' tt\'t\ ;, H ,rMc \ t _C//CH ,2 \ /c:) ,'C:T H N-C. .c--CH. , ,,/z\c/\/ -z C C C ,a t l I H t 'lIn c r c-c:o CHz QH, I I COOCHs oocH3 CC / /"\\ / /,t\ /1 f CHz I )-c:o o-c: I H-C_H H-C I _-E C-CH. ur13 I H-C-H I H-C-H I H-C_H I -CH: H-C-CH. + 6o, Oxygen + 6COz + Carbon dioxide (more oxidized) 6HzO + Energy Water Glucose is an energy-rich molecule and a potential source of chemical energy for any organism that obtains it. The equation for photoslmthesis is deceptively simple. Molecules of carbon dioxide and water do not simply bang together in sunlight and pop out molecules of glucose and oxygen. To carry out photosynthesis, Ceri must be able to absorb light energy and convert it to chemical energy.For this purpose,photosynthetic eukaryotic cells- thoseof green plants are the most familiar example-contain special organelles, rhe chloroplasts, shor,rmin Figure 23.1. chloroplasts can carry out this conversion. Located within the chloroplasts are a large number of connected disks called thyalkoids. The thyalkoids contain the molecules that constitute thelight system of photosynthesis.Responsibility for trapping light energy and converting it to useful chemical energy rests with the light system. chlorophyll-the pigment that giues green plants their color-is a molecule of chief importance to the light system. Its molecular structure is depicted in Figure 23.2. chlorophyll initially absorbs light energy and passesit on to other molecules of the light system. The light systems of prokaryotic cells that are capable of conducting photosynthesis-certain bacteria and the blue-green algae-are located on the interior of the cell mernbranes. The importance of light to life on Earth through photoslnthesis in plants cannot be overemphasized.However, researchersare beginning to find that healthyhuman beings respond to light inways unimaginabte only a few yearsago.The cure rate of certain cancersmay be improved by a treatment involving light. SeeA closer Look phototherapies, for a discussion of some connections between light and health. I H H-- C - H I .. H FI-C-H - I H H-- C - H I -CH= F{-C-CH3 I ,. PRAGTIGE EXERCISE 2I.I (a) Identify the structural feature that is common to vitamin 812 (see Figure 21.3on page 650),hemoglobin, and chlorophyll. (b) lVhat metals are essentialto each of these molecules? T-C-H I rI-C-H I .I-C-H I H{-c-cH3 - I H]-C-H - I H Figure25.2(left) Themolecular structure of chlorophyll. Themagnesium ion is essential for chlorophyll'slight-trapping function,Noticethe similarity betweenthe structure of heme (seeSec.I8.l l) andthe porphyrin ringof chlorophyll. 706 23 Energyand Life CHAPTER Phototherapies You may recall that the transformation of steroids in the skin by sunlight is important in the formation of vitamin D2, but medical specialists and researchersare just beginning to recognizemany of the human body's responsesto light. Several conditions, including some forms of disturbed sleep, "'1etlag," and seasonal affective disorder (SAD),appearto be relatedto the biological cycles of wakefulness and sleep called the circadian rhythms. A small portion of the hypothalamus, a symptomsof the distressing oftenrelieves Phototherapy region at the base of the brain, supervises our disorder. affective SAD,seasonil bodies' clocks, telling us when it is time to eat, sleep, and wake up. This small portion of the than the tired, run-dornrnfeeling many people hlpothalamus, called the suprachiasmatic nuhave during the winter months. Preliminary cleus, responds to light and darkness to affect resultsindicate that light treatmentalso may be body temperature fluctuations, hormone release, effective against some nonseasonal forms of blood pressure, heart rate, and the sleep-wake depression.Light treatments are also important cycle. Light treatment is proving useful in the in the treatment ofjaundice, oryellowing, in newtreatment of severalhuman conditions related to ;;r;;, ;r ;" *lr t.. i" a cr*"t l-oof, uypetthe circadian rhlthm. More than half of all Amerbilirubinemia, in Chapter 25. icans over age 65 suffer from disturbed sleep, Recent studies indicate that synchronizing waking too early in the morning and becoming cancer treatment with the body's internal sleepy early in the evening. Experts suggestthat rhyhms gives chemotherapy drugs a stronger this sleep disorder is causedby a speedingup of effect, perhaps as much as doubling their power the body's circadian rhi,thms in older people. To to fight tumors. Some chemotherapy drugs work combat this troublesome shift, researchersare better at night; others seem more potent when exposingolder patients to bright light in the early given during the day. Light is also being pressed evenlng to delay their sleep-wake cycles.]et lag into serviceagainstcertain blood cell cancersby a similarly affectspeople who fly by jet acrossintertechnology called photopheresls.In photopherenational time zones and shift workers, such as sis,mixtures of normal and cancerousLrloodcells nurses, who rotate shifts. The body's sleep-wake are removed from the patient and treated with a cycle is set to have night during the day in the new drug such as psoralen. location or on the new shift. A person respondsby feeling exhausted during the day and wide awake o at night until the cycle is reset. This usually happens after a few days in the new location, but researchers suggest it can be speeded up by spending the first 2 days after a trip in sunlight. Psoralen Exposureto bright light is also said to exert a posThe psoralen is selectivelyabsorbed by the canitive effect on SAD (seefigure), the name given to cerous cells. The interaction of light with the a form of depression experiencedby some peopsoralen cross-linksthe DNA in the cancerous ple. SAD people may feel fine in summer but cells, making it impossible for the cells to reprobecome depressed during the winter months, duce. The treated blood is then returned to the when the days are short and sunshine may be scarce.SAD is an emotional illness more severe patient. 23.3 The Energyand Carbon Cycle 707 2t.t Theenergyond corhon cycle AIM: To describethe energyond corboncycle. Focus Photosynthesis is a key step in the energy and carbon cycle. Environmentalists are extremely troubled over the rapid destruction of vast areas of the world's rain forests.What do you think are some of their concerns?Do you share these concerns? Life depends on the energyand carbon cycle(Fig.23.3). In the energy arrd carbon cycle, the photosynthetic organisms in the Earth'sforestsand oceans produce glucoseand use it as a sourceof chemical energy and to build the carbon skeletonsof carbohydrates,fats, amino acids, aid other biological molecules.Animals obtain these substancesby eating plants, by eatinginimals that eat plants, or by a combination of both. Animals and plants in need of energy unleash the energy stored in the chemical bonds of these carbon nutrients by oxidizing themback to carbon dioxide and water. The energy is used for the work that plant and animal cells must do, and the carbon dioxide and water can be recycled in photosynthesis.Plant life on Earth could probablysurvive without animals. However, animal life could never survive without plants, since without photosynthesis there would be no new supply of the crucial carbon compounds needed by animals for energy production. .., PRACT|CE EXERCTSE 25.2 :: Explain why our existencedepends on photosynthesis. '"*tt'*#**u err"rgyno- Water Atmospheric CO2 (oxidized carbon) *:.=+ \g "i" \N*RdosYnthesis rffi * € Glucose (reduced carbon) €.€= e ft$ Figure25.5 The energyand carbonrycle. oxidationofglucoseand othercarboncompounds byplantsandanimals