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'''Metabolism''' (from μεταβολισμος ("metabolismos")) is the [[Biochemistry|biochemical]] modification of [[chemical compound]]s in [[life|living]] [[organism]]s and [[cell (biology)|cell]]s. This includes the [[biosynthesis]] of complex [[Organic molecule|organic]] [[molecule]]s ([[anabolism]]) and their breakdown ([[catabolism]]). Metabolism usually consists of sequences of [[enzyme|enzymatic]] steps, also called [[metabolic pathway]]s. The [[total metabolism]] are all biochemical processes of an organism. The [[cell metabolism]] includes all chemical processes in a cell.
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{{Edboard}}{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{copyedited}}
  
[[Image: Metabolism_Overview.svg|thumb|500px|A visual overview of metabolism emphasizing carbon accounting.]][[Image: Metabolism1.png|thumb|350px|A few of the metabolic pathways in a cell.]]
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[[Image: Metabolism_Overview.svg|thumb|400px|A visual overview of metabolism emphasizing carbon accounting.]] '''Metabolism''' (from μεταβολισμος, "metabolismos") is the biochemical modification of [[chemical compound]]s in [[life|living]] organisms and [[cell (biology)|cell]]s. This includes both anabolism—the biosynthesis of complex organic [[molecule]]s—and catabolism—the breakdown of complex molecules to yield both energy-carrying molecules and essential building-block molecules—with the products of both anabolism and catabolism being required for maintenance, [[growth]], movement, and [[reproduction]].
  
The term is derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word for "change", or "overthrow" ([http://www.etymonline.com Etymonline])).
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Metabolism involves complex and often-interactive biochemical reactions usually aided by [[enzyme]]s and often coordinated by anabolic and catabolic [[hormone]]s. For purposes of analysis and conceptualization, metabolism is commonly characterized in terms metabolic pathways, which are a specific sequence of enzyme-catalyzed steps. The total metabolism includes all biochemical processes of an organism. The cell metabolism includes all chemical processes in a cell.
  
==Cell metabolism==
+
Metabolism is a unifying aspect of all forms of life, with the most complex forms of life relying on some of the same metabolic pathways found in single-celled organisms. Knowledge of metabolism has accumulated over a period of more than 400 years, and especially in the first half of the twentieth century, through the experiments and studies of hundreds of research scientists. The core metabolic processes have been synthesized and standardized into the ''Chart of Intermediary Metabolism''. No organism uses all of the reactions on the Chart, but all organisms use some selection of the reactions. The ''Chart of Intermediary Metabolism'' is posted on the walls of biochemistry and [[molecular biology]] laboratories in a way that is similar to the posting of the ''Periodic Table of the Elements'' on the walls of chemistry labs. 
  
 +
== History ==
 +
[[Image:SantoriosMeal.jpg|thumb|right|120px|Santorio in his steelyard balance]]
 +
The term "metabolism" is derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word for "change," or "overthrow."
  
'''Cell metabolism''' is the process (or really the sum of many ongoing individual processes) by which living [[cell (biology)|cell]]s process nutrient molecules and maintain a living state. Metabolism has two distinct divisions: '''anabolism''', in which a cell uses energy and reducing power to construct complex molecules and perform other life functions such a creating cellular structure; and '''catabolism''', in which a cell breaks down complex molecules to yield energy and reducing power. Cell metabolism involves extremely complex sequences of controlled chemical reactions called [[metabolic pathway]]s.
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The first controlled experiments in [[human]] metabolism were published by [[Santorio Santorio]] (1561-1636) in 1614, in his book, ''Ars de Statica Medecina,'' that made him famous throughout [[Europe]]. He described his long series of experiments in which he weighed himself in a chair suspended from a steelyard balance before and after eating, sleeping, working, sex, fasting, depriving from drinking, and excreting. He found that by far the greatest part of the food he took in was lost from the body through ''perspiratio insensibilis'' (insensible perspiration).
  
== Metabolic pathways ==
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==Cell metabolism==
Important metabolic pathways are:
+
Cell metabolism is the sum of many ongoing individual processes by which living [[cell (biology)|cell]]s process nutrient molecules and maintain a [[life|living]] state.
  
=== General pathways ===
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Metabolism has two distinct divisions.
* [[Carbohydrate metabolism]]
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*''Anabolism'' is that set of processes in which a cell uses energy and reducing power (ability to chemically reduce, which is to add electrons to a molecule) to construct complex molecules and perform other life functions such as creating cellular structure.
* [[Fatty acid metabolism]]
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*''Catabolism'' is that set of processes in which a cell breaks down complex molecules to yield molecules carrying energy and reducing power.
* [[Protein metabolism]]
 
* [[Nucleic Acid metabolism]]
 
  
====Carbohydrate metabolism====
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[[Image: Metabolism1.png|thumb|350px|A few of the metabolic pathways in a cell.]]
The smooth [[endoplasmic reticulum]] is responsible for some '''carbohydrate metabolism'''. In the [[liver]], for example, the cell breaks down the polysaccharide [[glycogen]]. Eventually, the glycogen will be turned into [[glucose]], and released into the [[blood]], but first it is broken into [[glucose]] phosphate, an ion that, if released would harm our blood cells. So to remedy this, an [[enzyme]] found in the membrane of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum can remove the phosphate, allowing pure glucose to be released.
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Cell metabolism involves extremely complex sequences of controlled chemical reactions called metabolic pathways.
  
====Fatty acid metabolism====
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== Metabolic pathways ==
'''[[Fatty acid]]s''' are an important source of [[energy]] for many organisms. [[Triglyceride]]s yield more than twice as much energy for the same mass as do [[carbohydrate]]s or [[protein]]s. All [[cell membrane]]s are built up of [[phospholipids]], each of which contains two fatty acids.  Fatty acids are also commonly used for protein modification, and all [[steroid]] [[hormone]]s are ultimately derived from fatty acids.  The metabolism of fatty acids, therefore, consists of [[catabolism|catabolic]] processes which generate energy and [[primary metabolite]]s from fatty acids, and [[anabolic]] processes which create biologically important molecules from fatty acids and other dietary [[carbon]] sources.
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The great variety of metabolic pathways is organized under the two themes, anabolism and catabolism, which are described below.
  
Fatty acids, stored as triglycerides in an organism, are an important source of energy because they are both [[redox|reduced]] and [[anhydrous]]. The energy yield from a [[gram]] of fatty acids is approximately 9 [[kcal]] (39 kJ), compared to 4 kcal/g (17 kJ/g) for proteins and carbohydrates. Since fatty acids are non-polar [[molecule]]s, they can be stored in a relatively anhydrous (water free) environment. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, are more highly hydrated. For example, 1 g of [[glycogen]] can bind approximately 2 g of [[water]], which translates to 1.33 kcal/g  (4 kcal/3 g). This means that fatty acids can hold more than six times the amount of energy. Put another way, if the human body relied on carbohydrates to store energy, then a person would need to carry 67.5 [[pound (mass)|lb]] (31 kg) of glycogen to have the equivalent energy of 10 lb (5 kg) of [[fat]].
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=== Anabolism ===
 +
'''Anabolism''' is the part of metabolism that builds larger molecules.  
  
 +
Anabolism is the set of metabolic processes that construct organic compounds from smaller component molecules and further tend toward assembling these in ways that "build up" organs and tissues. These processes support growth and differentiation of cells, increase in body size, and reproduction. Examples of anabolic processes include growth and mineralization of [[bone]] and increase of [[muscle]] mass.
  
 +
Anabolic pathways that create building blocks and compounds from simple precursors include the following:
 +
* Glycogenesis (conversion of [[glucose]] into glycogen, a storage molecule for glucose)
 +
* Gluconeogenesis (formation of glucose from non-sugar carbon substrates)
 +
* [[Porphyrin]] synthesis pathway (A porphyrin forms a complex with a metal atom, such as the iron-porphyrin complex [[heme]], which is in human blood.)
 +
* HMG-CoA reductase pathway, leading to [[cholesterol]] and isoprenoids.
 +
* Secondary metabolic pathways produce molecules that are not essential for growth, development or reproduction, but that may enhance survival in times of [[environment]]al stress.
 +
* [[Photosynthesis]]
 +
** Light-dependent reaction of green plants (light reaction, or the reaction in photosynthesis that requires light to occur)
 +
** Light-independent reaction of plants(dark reaction, or the reaction in photosynthesis that does not require light to occur)
 +
* Calvin cycle (a reaction in photosynthesis taking place in the [[stroma]] of [[chloroplast]]s)
 +
* Carbon fixation (transformation of [[carbon dioxide]] into larger carbon-based molecules)
 +
* Glyoxylate cycle (reaction involving the conversion of two [[acetyl-CoA]] molecules into [[oxaloacetate]])
  
=== Anabolism ===
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===Catabolism===
'''Anabolism''' is the part of [[metabolism]] that builds larger molecules. One way of categorizing [[metabolic]] processes, whether at the [[cell (biology)|cell]]ular, organ or organism level is as ''anabolic'' or ''catabolic''.
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'''Catabolism''' includes metabolic processes that break down molecules into smaller units often while also yielding energy-carrying molecules. Catabolic chemical reactions in the living cell break down the cell's large polymeric molecules ([[carbohydrate#polysaccharides|polysaccharides]], [[nucleic acid]]s, and [[protein]]s) into their constituent monomeric units (i.e., [[carbohydrates#monosaccharides|monosaccharides]], [[nucleotide]]s, and [[amino acid]]s, respectively).
 
 
Anabolic processes tend toward "building up" organs and tissues. These processes produce growth and differentiation of cells and increase in body size, a process that involves [[chemical synthesis|synthesis]] of complex [[molecule]]s. Examples of anabolic processes include growth and mineralization of [[bone]] and increase of [[muscle]] mass.
 
  
[[Anabolism|Anabolic]] pathways that create building blocks and compounds from simple precursors:
+
Cells use monomers to construct new polymeric molecules or disassemble them to simple cellular metabolites (lactic acid, acetic acid, carbon dioxide, ammonia, urea, etc.).
* [[Glycogenesis]]
 
* [[Gluconeogenesis]]
 
* [[Porphyrin]] synthesis pathway
 
* [[HMG-CoA reductase pathway]], leading to [[cholesterol]] and [[isoprenoid]]s.
 
* [[Secondary metabolite|Secondary metabolism]], metabolic pathways that are not essential for growth, development or reproduction, but that usually have [[Ecology|ecological]] function.
 
* [[Photosynthesis]]
 
** [[Light-dependent reaction]] (light reaction)
 
** [[Light-independent reaction]] (dark reaction)
 
* [[Calvin cycle]]
 
* [[Carbon fixation]]
 
* [[Glyoxylate_cycle]]
 
  
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The creation of cellular metabolites is an oxidation process involving a release of chemical free energy, some of which is lost as heat and some of which is conserved as the released energy drives the synthesis of [[adenosine triphosphate]] (ATP). The [[hydrolysis]] of ATP (i.e., the break down of ATP in reaction with water) is subsequently used to drive almost every energy-requiring reaction in the cell. Thus, catabolism provides the chemical energy necessary for the maintenance of the living cell.
  
===Catabolism===
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Examples of catabolic processes include breakdown of muscle protein in order to use amino acids as substrates for gluconeogenesis, and breakdown of [[fat]] in adipose cells (fat-storage cells) to fatty acids.
'''Catabolism''' is the part of metabolism that breaks down molecules into smaller units. It is made up of degradative chemical reactions in the living cell. Large polymeric molecules ([[polysaccharide]]s, [[nucleic acid]]s and [[protein]]s) are processed into their constituent monomeric units (i.e. [[monosaccharide]]s, [[nucleotide]]s and [[amino acid]]s, respectively).
 
  
Cells use [[monomers]] to construct new [[polymeric]] molecules and disassemble them to simple cellular metabolites (lactic acid, acetic acid, carbon dioxide, ammonia, urea, etc.). The creation of cellular metabolites is an [[oxidation]] process involving a release of chemical free energy, not all of which is lost as heat, but some of which is partially conserved through the coupled synthesis of [[adenosine triphosphate]]. The [[hydrolysis]] of this compound is subsequently used to drive almost every energy-requiring reaction in the cell. Catabolism provides the chemical energy necessary for the maintenance of the living cell. Examples of catabolic processes include breakdown of muscle protein in order to use amino acids as [[substrate_(biochemistry)|substrate]]s for [[gluconeogenesis]] and breakdown of [[fat]] in [[adipose]] to [[fatty acid]]s.
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===Anabolic and catabolic signals===
  
Because it is counterproductive to have anabolic and catabolic processes occurring in cells simultaneously, there are many signals that switch on anabolic processes while switching off catabolic processes and vice versa. Most of the known signals are [[hormone]]s and the molecules involved in metabolism itself. [[Endocrinologist]]s have traditionally classified many of the hormones as anabolic or catabolic.
+
Because it is counterproductive to have anabolic and catabolic processes occurring in cells simultaneously, there are many signals that switch on anabolic processes while switching off catabolic processes and vice versa. Most of the known signals are [[hormone]]s and the molecules involved in metabolism itself. Endocrinologists (those who study the [[endocrine system]], the system of ductless [[gland]]s that release certain hormones into the bloodstream) have traditionally classified many of the hormones as anabolic or catabolic.
  
 
*Classic anabolic hormones include
 
*Classic anabolic hormones include
 
**[[Growth hormone]]
 
**[[Growth hormone]]
**[[IGF1]] and other [[insulin-like growth factor]]s
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**IGF1 and other insulin-like growth factors
 
**[[Insulin]]
 
**[[Insulin]]
 
**[[Testosterone]]
 
**[[Testosterone]]
 
**[[Estrogen]]
 
**[[Estrogen]]
 +
 
*Classic catabolic hormones include
 
*Classic catabolic hormones include
 
**[[Cortisol]]
 
**[[Cortisol]]
**[[Glucagon]]
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**Glucagon
**[[Adrenalin]] and other [[catecholamine]]s
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**[[Adrenalin]] and other catecholamines
**[[Cytokine]]s
+
**Cytokines
*Newer hormones associated with the balance of the catabolic and anabolic states include
+
 
**[[Orexin]] and [[Hypocretin]] (a hormone pair)
+
*Hormones more recently identified as being associated with the balance of the catabolic and anabolic states include
 +
**Orexin and Hypocretin (a hormone pair)
 
**[[Melatonin]]
 
**[[Melatonin]]
  
====Carbohydrate catabolism====
+
== General pathways ==
 +
Four fundamental metabolic pathways are the following:
 +
 
 +
* [[Carbohydrate]] metabolism
 +
* [[Fatty acid]] metabolism
 +
* [[Protein]] metabolism
 +
* [[nucleic acid|Nucleic Acid]] metabolism
 +
 
 +
==General catabolic pathways==
 +
The following section discusses carbohydrate catabolism, fat catabolism, protein catabolism, and nucleic acid catabolism.
 +
 
 +
===Carbohydrate catabolism===
 +
 
 +
''Carbohydrate catabolism'' is the breakdown of [[carbohydrate]]s into smaller units. The empirical formula for carbohydrates, like that of their monomer counterparts, is C<sub>X</sub>(H<sub>2Y</sub>O<sub>Y</sub>). Carbohydrates literally undergo combustion as the cell releases and captures the large amounts of energy in their bonds. The cell's [[mitochondrion|mitochondria]] are essential to catabolism, as they are the site of [[oxidative phosphorylation]], an [[electron transport]] process that converts high energy [[NADH]] molecules produced by the catabolism of carbohydrates into the cell's most readily transportable and usable energy molecule, [[adenosine triphosphate]] (ATP).
 +
 
 +
The smooth [[endoplasmic reticulum]] is responsible for some carbohydrate metabolism. In the [[liver]], for example, the cell breaks down the polysaccharide [[glycogen]]. Eventually, the glycogen will be turned into [[glucose]], and released into the [[blood]], but first it is broken into glucose phosphate, an ion that, if released, would damage blood cells. An [[enzyme]] found in the membrane of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum catalyzes removal of the phosphate to yield the pure glucose that is released.
 +
 
 +
===Fat catabolism===
 +
 
 +
''Fat catabolism'', also known as ''lipid catabolism,'' is the process by which [[lipid]]s or [[phospholipids]] are broken down by [[lipase]]s. The opposite of fat catabolism is fat anabolism, involving the storage of energy and the building of membranes.
 +
 
 +
===Protein catabolism===
 +
 
 +
''Protein catabolism'' is the breakdown of proteins into [[amino acid]]s and simple derivative compounds, for transport into the cell through the [[cell membrane|plasma membrane]] and ultimately for polymerization into new [[protein]]s through the joint functioning of ribonucleic acids ([[RNA]]) and ribosomes.
  
Carbohydrate catabolism is the breakdown of carbohydrates into smaller units. The empirical formula for carbohydrates, like that of their monomer counterparts, is C<sub>X</sub>(H<sub>2Y</sub>O<sub>Y</sub>). Carbohydrates literally undergo combustion to retrieve the large amounts of energy in their bonds. Read more about [[mitochondrion|mitochondria]] to find out more about the reaction and how its energy is secured in [[Adenosine triphosphate|ATP]].
+
===Fatty acid catabolism===
 +
[[Fatty acid]]s are an important source of [[energy]] for many organisms. Triglycerides, or molecules that store fatty acids, yield more than twice as much energy for the same mass as do [[carbohydrate]]s or [[protein]]s. All [[cell membrane]]s are built up of phospholipids, each of which contains two fatty acids. Fatty acids are also commonly used for protein modification, and all steroid [[hormone]]s are ultimately derived from fatty acids.  
  
====Fat catabolism====
+
The metabolism of fatty acids, therefore, comprises both catabolic processes, which generate energy and primary metabolites from fatty acids, and anabolic processes, which cconstruct biologically important molecules from fatty acids and other dietary [[carbon]] sources.
  
Fat catabolism, also known as lipid catabolism, is the process of lipids or phospholipids being broken down by [[lipases]]. The opposite of fat catabolism is [[fat anabolism]], involving the storage of energy, and the building of membranes.
+
Fatty acids are an important source of energy because they are both reduced and anhydrous. The energy yield from a gram of fatty acids is approximately 9 kcal (39 kJ), compared to 4 kcal/g (17 kJ/g) for proteins and carbohydrates. Since fatty acids are non-polar [[molecule]]s, they can be stored in a relatively anhydrous (water-free) environment. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, are more highly hydrated and hence more polarized. For example, one gram of [[glycogen]] (from carbohydrate) can bind approximately two grams of [[water]], which translates to 1.33 kcal/g (5.6 kJ/g).This means that fatty acids can hold more than six times the amount of energy.  
  
====Protein catabolism====
+
Put another way, if the [[human body]] relied on carbohydrates to store energy, then a person would need to carry 67.5 lb (31 kg) of glycogen to have the equivalent energy of ten pounds (five kilograms) of [[fat]].
  
Protein catabolism is the breakdown of proteins into [[amino acid]]s and simple derivative compounds, for transport into the cell through the [[plasma membrane]] and ultimately for the polymerisation into new [[protein]]s via the use of ribonucleic acids ([[RNA]]) and [[ribosome]]s.
+
==Other metabolisms==
  
 
=== Drug metabolism ===
 
=== Drug metabolism ===
[[Drug metabolism]] pathways, the modification or degradation of [[Medication|drug]]s and other [[xenobiotic]] compounds through specialized enzyme systems:
+
Drug metabolism pathways use specialized [[enzyme]] systems to modify or degrade drugs and other xenobiotic compounds (chemicals found in an organism that are not normally produced or expected to be present, or which are present at unusually high concentrations). Examples include the following:
* [[Cytochrome P450 oxidase]] system
+
* Cytochrome P450 oxidase system
* [[Flavin-containing monooxygenase system]]
+
* Flavin-containing monooxygenase system
* [[Blood alcohol content|Alcohol metabolism]]
+
* Alcohol metabolism
  
 
=== Nitrogen metabolism ===
 
=== Nitrogen metabolism ===
[[Nitrogen]] metabolism includes the pathways for turnover and [[excretion]] of nitrogen in organisms as well as the biological processes of the [[biogeochemical cycle|biogeochemical]] [[nitrogen cycle]]:  
+
[[Nitrogen]] metabolism includes the pathways for turnover and excretion of nitrogen in organisms as well as the biological processes of the [[biogeochemical cycle|biogeochemical]] [[nitrogen cycle]]:  
* [[Urea cycle]], important for excretion of nitrogen as urea.
+
* Urea cycle, important for excretion of nitrogen as urea.
 
* Biological [[nitrogen fixation]]
 
* Biological [[nitrogen fixation]]
* [[Nitrogen assimilation]]
+
* Nitrogen assimilation
* [[Nitrification]]
+
* Nitrification
* [[Denitrification]]
+
* Denitrification
  
=== Other===
+
==References==
* [[Human iron metabolism]]
+
* Alberts, B. 2002. ''Molecular Biology of the Cell,'' fourth edition. Garland Science. ISBN 0-8153-3577-6
 
+
* Mittendorfer, B. Sexual dimorphism in human lipid metabolism. ''J. Nutr.'' 135:681-686.
== History ==
+
* Radziuk, J. 1991. The liver and glycogen metabolism. ''Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition'' 15(3): 77S-81S
[[Image:SantoriosMeal.jpg|thumb|right|150px|[[Santorio Santorio]] (1561-1636) in his steelyard balance, from ''[[Ars de statica medecina]]'', first published 1614]]
 
The first controlled experiments in human metabolism were published by [[Santorio Santorio]] in [[1614]] in his book ''[[Ars de statica medecina]]'' that made him famous throughout [[Europe]]. He describes his long series of experiments in which he weighed himself in a chair suspended from a steelyard balance (see image), before and after eating, sleeping, working, sex, fasting, depriving from drinking, and excreting. He found that by far the greatest part of the food he took in was lost from the body through ''[[perspiratio insensibilis]]'' (insensible perspiration). While these experiments came to show that there was an impact on the body's metabolic processes through direct intake the rate was not fully understood till Dr. Johan Musk's (1940-2003) work on learned genological metabolism, which was published in 1984 (revised 1992), showed the process of teaching the body how to burn dietary intake. He used multiple sets of mice, both from maternal and fraternal subgroups to show that a body's metabolism rate is a taught response that may be flucuated by various dietary methods. These experiments show that a metabolic rate is a learned response not based on gene responses.
 
  
== External links ==
 
* [http://www2.ufp.pt/~pedros/bq/integration.htm Interactive Flow Chart of the Major Metabolic Pathways]
 
* [http://www.biochemweb.org/metabolism.shtml Metabolism, Cellular Respiration and Photosynthesis - The Virtual Library of Biochemistry and Cell Biology]
 
* [http://www.rpi.edu/dept/bcbp/molbiochem/MBWeb/mb1/MB1index.html The Biochemistry of Metabolism at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute]
 
* [http://www.expasy.org/cgi-bin/show_thumbnails.pl Flow Chart of Metabolic Pathways at ExPASy]
 
* [http://www.istrianet.org/istria/illustri/santorio/ Santorio Santorio's experiments]
 
* [http://www.genome.ad.jp/kegg/ KEGG: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes]
 
  
{{credit5|Metabolism|94442716|Cell_metabolism|47816927|Anabolism|57593807|Carbohydrate_metabolism|50389445|Fatty_acid_metabolism|50483155}}
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{{credit6|Metabolism|94442716|Cell_metabolism|47816927|Anabolism|57593807|Carbohydrate_metabolism|50389445|Fatty_acid_metabolism|50483155|Xenobiotic|96916050}}
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 +
[[Category:Health and disease]]
 +
[[Category:Biochemistry]]

Latest revision as of 16:01, 12 September 2008


A visual overview of metabolism emphasizing carbon accounting.

Metabolism (from μεταβολισμος, "metabolismos") is the biochemical modification of chemical compounds in living organisms and cells. This includes both anabolism—the biosynthesis of complex organic molecules—and catabolism—the breakdown of complex molecules to yield both energy-carrying molecules and essential building-block molecules—with the products of both anabolism and catabolism being required for maintenance, growth, movement, and reproduction.

Metabolism involves complex and often-interactive biochemical reactions usually aided by enzymes and often coordinated by anabolic and catabolic hormones. For purposes of analysis and conceptualization, metabolism is commonly characterized in terms metabolic pathways, which are a specific sequence of enzyme-catalyzed steps. The total metabolism includes all biochemical processes of an organism. The cell metabolism includes all chemical processes in a cell.

Metabolism is a unifying aspect of all forms of life, with the most complex forms of life relying on some of the same metabolic pathways found in single-celled organisms. Knowledge of metabolism has accumulated over a period of more than 400 years, and especially in the first half of the twentieth century, through the experiments and studies of hundreds of research scientists. The core metabolic processes have been synthesized and standardized into the Chart of Intermediary Metabolism. No organism uses all of the reactions on the Chart, but all organisms use some selection of the reactions. The Chart of Intermediary Metabolism is posted on the walls of biochemistry and molecular biology laboratories in a way that is similar to the posting of the Periodic Table of the Elements on the walls of chemistry labs.

History

Santorio in his steelyard balance

The term "metabolism" is derived from the Greek word for "change," or "overthrow."

The first controlled experiments in human metabolism were published by Santorio Santorio (1561-1636) in 1614, in his book, Ars de Statica Medecina, that made him famous throughout Europe. He described his long series of experiments in which he weighed himself in a chair suspended from a steelyard balance before and after eating, sleeping, working, sex, fasting, depriving from drinking, and excreting. He found that by far the greatest part of the food he took in was lost from the body through perspiratio insensibilis (insensible perspiration).

Cell metabolism

Cell metabolism is the sum of many ongoing individual processes by which living cells process nutrient molecules and maintain a living state.

Metabolism has two distinct divisions.

  • Anabolism is that set of processes in which a cell uses energy and reducing power (ability to chemically reduce, which is to add electrons to a molecule) to construct complex molecules and perform other life functions such as creating cellular structure.
  • Catabolism is that set of processes in which a cell breaks down complex molecules to yield molecules carrying energy and reducing power.
A few of the metabolic pathways in a cell.

Cell metabolism involves extremely complex sequences of controlled chemical reactions called metabolic pathways.

Metabolic pathways

The great variety of metabolic pathways is organized under the two themes, anabolism and catabolism, which are described below.

Anabolism

Anabolism is the part of metabolism that builds larger molecules.

Anabolism is the set of metabolic processes that construct organic compounds from smaller component molecules and further tend toward assembling these in ways that "build up" organs and tissues. These processes support growth and differentiation of cells, increase in body size, and reproduction. Examples of anabolic processes include growth and mineralization of bone and increase of muscle mass.

Anabolic pathways that create building blocks and compounds from simple precursors include the following:

  • Glycogenesis (conversion of glucose into glycogen, a storage molecule for glucose)
  • Gluconeogenesis (formation of glucose from non-sugar carbon substrates)
  • Porphyrin synthesis pathway (A porphyrin forms a complex with a metal atom, such as the iron-porphyrin complex heme, which is in human blood.)
  • HMG-CoA reductase pathway, leading to cholesterol and isoprenoids.
  • Secondary metabolic pathways produce molecules that are not essential for growth, development or reproduction, but that may enhance survival in times of environmental stress.
  • Photosynthesis
    • Light-dependent reaction of green plants (light reaction, or the reaction in photosynthesis that requires light to occur)
    • Light-independent reaction of plants(dark reaction, or the reaction in photosynthesis that does not require light to occur)
  • Calvin cycle (a reaction in photosynthesis taking place in the stroma of chloroplasts)
  • Carbon fixation (transformation of carbon dioxide into larger carbon-based molecules)
  • Glyoxylate cycle (reaction involving the conversion of two acetyl-CoA molecules into oxaloacetate)

Catabolism

Catabolism includes metabolic processes that break down molecules into smaller units often while also yielding energy-carrying molecules. Catabolic chemical reactions in the living cell break down the cell's large polymeric molecules (polysaccharides, nucleic acids, and proteins) into their constituent monomeric units (i.e., monosaccharides, nucleotides, and amino acids, respectively).

Cells use monomers to construct new polymeric molecules or disassemble them to simple cellular metabolites (lactic acid, acetic acid, carbon dioxide, ammonia, urea, etc.).

The creation of cellular metabolites is an oxidation process involving a release of chemical free energy, some of which is lost as heat and some of which is conserved as the released energy drives the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). The hydrolysis of ATP (i.e., the break down of ATP in reaction with water) is subsequently used to drive almost every energy-requiring reaction in the cell. Thus, catabolism provides the chemical energy necessary for the maintenance of the living cell.

Examples of catabolic processes include breakdown of muscle protein in order to use amino acids as substrates for gluconeogenesis, and breakdown of fat in adipose cells (fat-storage cells) to fatty acids.

Anabolic and catabolic signals

Because it is counterproductive to have anabolic and catabolic processes occurring in cells simultaneously, there are many signals that switch on anabolic processes while switching off catabolic processes and vice versa. Most of the known signals are hormones and the molecules involved in metabolism itself. Endocrinologists (those who study the endocrine system, the system of ductless glands that release certain hormones into the bloodstream) have traditionally classified many of the hormones as anabolic or catabolic.

  • Classic catabolic hormones include
    • Cortisol
    • Glucagon
    • Adrenalin and other catecholamines
    • Cytokines
  • Hormones more recently identified as being associated with the balance of the catabolic and anabolic states include
    • Orexin and Hypocretin (a hormone pair)
    • Melatonin

General pathways

Four fundamental metabolic pathways are the following:

General catabolic pathways

The following section discusses carbohydrate catabolism, fat catabolism, protein catabolism, and nucleic acid catabolism.

Carbohydrate catabolism

Carbohydrate catabolism is the breakdown of carbohydrates into smaller units. The empirical formula for carbohydrates, like that of their monomer counterparts, is CX(H2YOY). Carbohydrates literally undergo combustion as the cell releases and captures the large amounts of energy in their bonds. The cell's mitochondria are essential to catabolism, as they are the site of oxidative phosphorylation, an electron transport process that converts high energy NADH molecules produced by the catabolism of carbohydrates into the cell's most readily transportable and usable energy molecule, adenosine triphosphate (ATP).

The smooth endoplasmic reticulum is responsible for some carbohydrate metabolism. In the liver, for example, the cell breaks down the polysaccharide glycogen. Eventually, the glycogen will be turned into glucose, and released into the blood, but first it is broken into glucose phosphate, an ion that, if released, would damage blood cells. An enzyme found in the membrane of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum catalyzes removal of the phosphate to yield the pure glucose that is released.

Fat catabolism

Fat catabolism, also known as lipid catabolism, is the process by which lipids or phospholipids are broken down by lipases. The opposite of fat catabolism is fat anabolism, involving the storage of energy and the building of membranes.

Protein catabolism

Protein catabolism is the breakdown of proteins into amino acids and simple derivative compounds, for transport into the cell through the plasma membrane and ultimately for polymerization into new proteins through the joint functioning of ribonucleic acids (RNA) and ribosomes.

Fatty acid catabolism

Fatty acids are an important source of energy for many organisms. Triglycerides, or molecules that store fatty acids, yield more than twice as much energy for the same mass as do carbohydrates or proteins. All cell membranes are built up of phospholipids, each of which contains two fatty acids. Fatty acids are also commonly used for protein modification, and all steroid hormones are ultimately derived from fatty acids.

The metabolism of fatty acids, therefore, comprises both catabolic processes, which generate energy and primary metabolites from fatty acids, and anabolic processes, which cconstruct biologically important molecules from fatty acids and other dietary carbon sources.

Fatty acids are an important source of energy because they are both reduced and anhydrous. The energy yield from a gram of fatty acids is approximately 9 kcal (39 kJ), compared to 4 kcal/g (17 kJ/g) for proteins and carbohydrates. Since fatty acids are non-polar molecules, they can be stored in a relatively anhydrous (water-free) environment. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, are more highly hydrated and hence more polarized. For example, one gram of glycogen (from carbohydrate) can bind approximately two grams of water, which translates to 1.33 kcal/g (5.6 kJ/g).This means that fatty acids can hold more than six times the amount of energy.

Put another way, if the human body relied on carbohydrates to store energy, then a person would need to carry 67.5 lb (31 kg) of glycogen to have the equivalent energy of ten pounds (five kilograms) of fat.

Other metabolisms

Drug metabolism

Drug metabolism pathways use specialized enzyme systems to modify or degrade drugs and other xenobiotic compounds (chemicals found in an organism that are not normally produced or expected to be present, or which are present at unusually high concentrations). Examples include the following:

  • Cytochrome P450 oxidase system
  • Flavin-containing monooxygenase system
  • Alcohol metabolism

Nitrogen metabolism

Nitrogen metabolism includes the pathways for turnover and excretion of nitrogen in organisms as well as the biological processes of the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle:

  • Urea cycle, important for excretion of nitrogen as urea.
  • Biological nitrogen fixation
  • Nitrogen assimilation
  • Nitrification
  • Denitrification

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Alberts, B. 2002. Molecular Biology of the Cell, fourth edition. Garland Science. ISBN 0-8153-3577-6
  • Mittendorfer, B. Sexual dimorphism in human lipid metabolism. J. Nutr. 135:681-686.
  • Radziuk, J. 1991. The liver and glycogen metabolism. Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition 15(3): 77S-81S


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