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Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology Fifth edition Seeley, Stephens and Tate Chapter 17: Cellular Metabolism Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 2.1 Processes of the Digestive System Figure 14.11 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.46 Control of Digestive Activity • Mostly by reflexes via the parasympathetic division • Chemical and mechanical receptors trigger reflexes Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.47a Control of Digestive Activity • Stimuli include: • Stretch of the organ • pH of the contents • Presence of breakdown products Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.47b Control of Digestive Activity • Reflexes include: • Activation or inhibition of glandular secretions • Smooth muscle activity Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.47b Digestion and Absorption in the Stomach • Proteases act on: • Pepsin –protein digestion • Rennin –milk protein digestion • Absorption of: •Water, alcohol and aspirin Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.55 Digestion in the Small Intestine • Pancreatic enzymes provide… • Complete digestion of starch • Amylase • Other carbohydrases • About half protein digestion (trypsin, etc.) Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.57a Digestion in the Small Intestine • Pancreatic enzymes, cont… • Fat digestion (lipase) • Nucleic acid digestion (nucleases) • Alkaline content neutralizes acidic chyme Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.57b Stimulation of the Release of Pancreatic Juice • Vagus nerve • Local hormones • Secretin • Cholecystokinin Figure 14.15 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.58 Absorption in the Small Intestine • Water • Products of digestion • Most molecules absorbed by active transport • Lipids absorbed by diffusion • Nutrients transported to the liver Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.59 Nutrition • Nutrient – substance used by the body for growth, maintenance, and repair • Categories of nutrients • Carbohydrates • Lipids • Proteins • Vitamins • Mineral • Water Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.63 Cellular Metabolism • “All the chemical reactions necessary to maintain life” • Anabolism: a constructive process during which larger molecules are built from smaller ones • Usually involves condensation •AKA dehydration synthesis Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Carbohydrates •Monosaccharides = simple sugars •Glucose, fructose •Disaccharides = Combinations of monosaccharides, removal of water •Sucrose, lactose, maltose • Polysaccharides: usually polymers of glucose •Starch, cellulose, chitin Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Lipids •1 glycerol + 3 fatty acids neutral fat + 3 H2O •These are triglycerides •Further modifications produce: •Phospholipids (cell membrane) •glycolipids (cell membrane) •Lipoproteins (cell membrane, blood) Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Proteins •Two amino acids a dipeptide + H2O •Covalent bond formed is a peptide bond •Unique to proteins •Polypeptides: 2-100 amino acids •Protein: >100 amino acids •Require additional modification to become functional Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Proteins •Modification occurs on four levels •Primary: string of amino acids •Secondary: helix or “pleat” structures •Tertiary: 3-D folding •Quarternary: two or more 3-D proteins that act as a functional unit •i.e., hemoglobin, collagen Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Proteins •Recall from Chemistry: •Proteins each have a unique 3-D shape •Shape determines function •Loss of shape leads to loss of function •“denaturing” proteins with heat, pH changes Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Proteins •May be structural or functional •Structural: •Play a role in cellular architecture •Collagen, fibrin, actin, myosin, etc. •Functional: •Play a role in cell metabolism •Enzymes, neurotransmitters, antibodies, etc. Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Enzymes: •Biological catalysts •Highly specific for a substrate •Substrate: substance upon which an enzyme acts • i.e., peptidases act only on peptide bonds in small polypeptides •Produced only in presence of substrate Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Enzymes: •Huge protein molecules •Alter shape to conform to shape of substrate (“wrap around” effect) •Average 1500/cell (>5000 in liver cells) •Most require co-enzymes Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Enzymes: •Recognize substrate by shape of binding site •Serve to lower energy required for reaction to occur (activation energy) •therefore speed up reactions •Not changed or used up during reaction Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism, con’t… •Co-Enzymes: •Required to activate enzymes •Facilitate enzymatic reactions •May be a metal ion (Zn++, Cu++, Fe++) •May be a vitamin •Vitamins are co-enzymes •Only function if “their” enzyme is available Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.67 Cellular Metabolism • Catabolism: substances are broken down into molecules • “destructive” process • Large molecules broken down into smaller molecules • Usually by hydrolysis • “splitting with water” • Adds H2O back into molecule • Breaks covalent bonds Cellular Metabolism • Catabolism • Energy is released when bonds break • Reverse of dehydration synthesis (condensation) • Hydrolysis = chemical digestion • Occurs simultaneously (and continuously) with anabolism • Processes controlled by enzymes Cellular Energy • Cellular energy is chemical energy • Derived from breaking chemical bonds • ~ ½ Energy is stored as ATP • ~ ½ Energy is released as heat • Helps maintain body temperature • Enzymes control in the process Cellular Energy • All nutrient molecules are ultimately degraded or converted to glucose • Only glucose can be used to make ATP • Oxidation: cellular process of chemically breaking apart a glucose molecule to release energy Cellular Energy • Glucose oxidation occurs in 2 phases • Anerobic metabolism • Occurs in cytoplasm • Without oxygen • AKA glycolysis • Splits glucose into two 3-Carbon molecules: pyruvate Cellular Energy • Glycolysis • Process also produces 2 ATPs • In yeast, plant cells: • Pyruvate can undergo alcoholic fermentation • In bacteria, animal cells: • Pyruvate can produce lactic acid Cellular Energy • Aerobic metabolism • Uses oxygen • AKA Kreb’s Cycle or Citric Acid cycle or Tricarboxylic Acid (TCA) Cycle • Occurs in mitochondria • Makes more ATP than anerobic processes Cellular Energy • Aerobic metabolism • CO2 and H2O are waste products • CO2: • Diffuses out of cells • Dissolves in plasma • Produces HCO3- in blood • Exhaled from lungs Cellular Energy • Aerobic metabolism • H2O: • “metabolic” water • Exhaled from lungs • Final products of glucose oxidation: • CO2, H2O, ATP Cellular Energy • Aerobic metabolism • For each molecule of glucose: • 2 ATP formed in glycolysis • 36 ATP formed in TCA cycle • Energy stored in phosphate bonds • A reversible reaction Metabolic Pathways • “A particular sequence of enzymatic reactions” • Such as glycolysis, TCA cycle • Carbohydrate pathways • Carbos should comprise most of our diet (~ 50% complex carbs) • Used as a primary energy source • Produce 4kcal/gm Metabolic Pathways • Carbohydrate pathways • Excess carbs converted to energy storage forms • Glycogen (muscle, liver) • Adipose tissue (hips) • Process is anabolism Metabolic Pathways • Lipid pathways • Metabolism controlled by liver • Should comprise <30% of calories in diet • Get 9 kcal/gm (more ATP!) • Must be degraded into glycerol, fatty acids, then pyruvate • A reversible catabolic process Metabolic Pathways • Protein pathways • Proteins should comprise ~30% of diet • Get 4 kcal/gm • Catabolism is more complex • Proteins contain nitrogen Metabolic Pathways • Protein pathways • Deamination: removal of nitrogen from amino acids • Occurs in liver • Nitrogen is converted to urea » A nitrogenous waste product • Sent to kidneys for excretion Metabolic Pathways • Protein pathways • After deamination: • amino acid “skeleton” is processed • in TCA cycle • May produce CO2, H2O, ATP • May form glucose or fat Metabolic Pathways • Protein pathways • Glucose formed from amino acid skeletons may be re-converted to amino acids • “Essential” amino acids: • Body cannot make these • Must obtain in the diet Regulation of Metabolic Pathways • Enzyme “saturation” • Too much substrate for number of enzyme molecules • Reaction rate cannot increase • A single enzyme can control an entire metabolic pathway • “rate limiting” enzyme Digestive System: Disorders • Ulcers: bacterial infection with H. pylori • Vomiting: controlled by center in medulla oblongata • Activity of tract slows in old age • Fewer digestive juices • Peristalsis slows • Diverticulosis and cancer more common Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.92b Digestive System: Disorders • IBS: irritable bowel syndrome • Crohn’s disease (autoimmune) • Constipation • Diarrhea • Colitis • Colon polyps/cancers Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slide 14.92b