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Transcript
Cellular
Metabolism
Chapter 4
Metabolism
• All the chemical reactions that occur in a cell
Two general types of metabolism
• Anabolic reactions- making larger molecules
from smaller ones
• Catabolic reactions- breaking down larger
molecules into smaller ones
• Anabolism + catabolism = metabolism
Anabolic
• Ex: dehydration synthesis, combines smaller
molecules into bigger molecules (plus water)
Anabolic steroids
• Reaction that increases production of proteins
(and can inhibit catabolism of proteins)
Catabolic
• Example: hydrolysis, breaking down larger
molecules by adding water, produces smaller
molecules
Control of metabolic reactions
• Most reactions proceed at a particular
rate/speed
• Must put in energy to cause a reaction
Amount of energy
put in to start
reaction is called
“Activation energy”
Speeding up reactions
Speeding up reactions
• Enzymes- produced by our bodies, proteins that
speed up reactions by lowering activation energy,
identified by –ase suffix (e.g., protease)
• Not consumed in chemical reactions, so your
body can reuse them
• Highly specific- typically only one enzyme type
only recognizes one molecule
Enzymes
- Makes it easier to break the bonds between molecules
- Substrate is molecule(s) involved in the reaction
- Active site is part of the enzyme that combines with the
substrate
Substrate
Glucose
Sucrose
Active site
Enzyme
Fructose
Optimal conditions for enzymes
• pH and temperature have dramatic effects on
enzymes
• Ex: Too high a temp denatures enzymes and
they can’t work
Getting energy from
metabolism…
Energy
• Capacity to change something, ability to do
work
• Common forms: heat, light, sound, electrical,
chemical energy
• Can transform from one form to another
Why do we eat?. . . To make ATP
ATP (Adenosine triphosphate)—
the energy currency of the cell
ATP
Foods are metabolized (chemical
bonds are broken) to produce ATP
ATP
Eat food.
Digest food.
Transport food to cell. Use to make ATP.
Cellular Respiration
C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + 38 ATPs
(Glucose)
Cellular Respiration—the process of making ATP
Carbohydrates, fats and proteins are all metabolized and fed into
biochemical pathways that make ATP.