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Chapter seven Metabolism: Transformations and Interactions Issues to address in this chapter: What is metabolism? What are the types of metabolic reactions and where do they occur? How do we get energy from glucose? What happens if we don’t have enough oxygen? Where do proteins and lipids come in? How does the system adapt to feasting? How does metabolism adjust to fasting? What is metabolism? The sum of all chemical reactions in a living system Our emphasis will be on harvesting energy from nutrient molecules Language of metabolism Pathway Intermediate Anabolic Catabolic Aerobic Anaerobic Coupled reaction Enzyme Coenzyme ATP Catabolism vs. Anabolism Figure 4.1 ATP and Coupled Reactions Where do these reactions occur? Nucleus Cell membrane Mitochondria cytoplasm Results of digestion: counting carbons Carbohydrates glucose (6 carbons) Protein amino acids (2 or 3 carbons) Lipids glycerol (3 C) + fatty acids (even #C) Metabolism of carbohydrates Sugars (6 carbon molecules) enter cell via insulin. In cytoplasm molecule is broken in half—made into two three carbon molecules (pyruvate) Three carbon fragment moves into mitochondria losing a carbon in the process. (acetyl CoA) Inside the mitochondria, the two carbon piece left from the sugar is converted to carbon dioxide, water, and lots of ATP (TCA & ETS) Glycolysis Figure 4.9 TCA ETS Figure 4.5 What if not enough oxygen is present? Cori cycle Glucose pyruvate lactic acid or lactate blood liver new glucose (gluconeogenesis) (process starts all over again.) Protein metabolism Proteins are digested to amino acids in digestive system. Amino acids move into blood, and then to liver. In liver the nitrogen is removed (deamination) and three carbon fragment produced. Three carbon fragment blood cell fits in at pyruvate. Lipid metabolism Most dietary lipids are triglycerides (broken down into glycerol + 3 fatty acids) Fatty acids move from blood into cell (lipoprotein lipase) and into cytoplasm. Progressively broken into two carbon fragments (lipolysis or beta oxidation) Two carbon fragments move into mitochondria as acetyl Co A and are metabolized. Glycerol moves from blood to cell. As 3C molecule is made into pyruvate Figure 4.13 Eating too much feasting Too many carbs Glucose is converted to pyruvate Pyruvate converts to acetyl Co A Acetyl Co A fragments combine to make fatty acids (lipogenesis) Fatty acids stored as fat (triglyceride) Too many proteins Amino acids deaminated in liver Come into metabolic process at pyruvate Pyruvate converted to acetyl Co A Acetyl Co A fragments joined together to make fatty acids Fatty acids stored as fat (triglyceride) Too much fat Fatty acids leave small intestine via lymph Lymph converges with blood stream Fatty acids taken directly to fat cells and stored as fat (triglyceride) No metabolism involved Eating too little Fasting fasting First-- draw sugars from glycogen stored in liver (glycogenolysis) several hours Second-- muscle is degraded, deaminated, and made into glucose (gluconeogenesis) up to 10 days Third—without glucose fatty acid oxidation is abnormal making ketone bodies instead of acetyl Co A (ketosis) from about 10 days to 2 months Figure 4.15 Overall results of fasting These metabolic consequences Depletion of liver glycogen Loss of muscle mass and vital body proteins Ketosis Cause these symptoms Wasting Slowed heart rate, metabolism, respiration Lower body temp. Impaired vision Organ failure Decreased disease resistance Overview of Metabolism Some Important Coenzymes Figure 4.20