Metabolism (chemistry) - biology.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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nearly perfect balance.
Although much remains to be revealed about metabolic processes, biochemists now agree that regulatory, or rate-limiting, enzymes figure largely in the reactionsinvolved ( see Enzyme).
Affecting metabolic pathways at the earliest steps, each enzyme molecule has a specific, or active, site that matches, or “fits,” its particular substrate—the compound with which the enzyme forms a product.
The precision with which rate-limiting enzymes and substrates join to set off a particular reactioninhibits reactions from occurring indiscriminately in cells, where so many diverse chemical compounds are in flux.
Tiny amounts of a rate-limiting enzyme can causeprofound changes in the metabolism of a cell.
Another way in which metabolic pathways are controlled is through negative feedback ( see Biofeedback).
Thus, once a cell synthesizes the correct balance of a product, such as ATP, the accumulation of that product will inhibit the enzymes that trigger its production.
Metabolism, especially in higher animals, is also regulated by the nervous system and by the pancreas and the pituitary and adrenal glands of the endocrine system.Hormones ( see Hormone), secreted into the bloodstream, reach target tissues, often altering the permeability of cell membranes and thereby altering the amounts of substances that get into and out of cells.
Hormones, which also affect plant metabolism, change metabolic pathways by altering the catalytic sites of rate-limitingenzymes.
VII METABOLISM OF FOODSTUFFS
Although the three major foodstuffs—proteins, carbohydrates, and fats—have different chemical compositions and follow independent biochemical pathways, at acertain stage in metabolic reactions, they all form carbon compounds.
These compounds follow the same pattern of oxidative reactions that eventually yield carbondioxide and water for excretion from the body.
Each step involves a number of highly complex and coincident biochemical reactions.
A Proteins
Complex proteins are absorbed from the digestive tract and are broken down into about 20 amino acids needed for cellular anabolism.
Amino acids may undergo furtherchemical change to form such internal secretions as hormones and digestive enzymes.
Amino acids in excess of those required to replenish body cells and fluids arecatabolized in two steps.
The first is deamination, in which the nitrogen-containing part of the molecule is removed and united with carbon and oxygen to form urea,ammonia, and uric acid—the nitrogenous products of protein metabolism.
Following deamination, each of the remaining amino acids undergoes further chemicalbreakdown to form other compounds, which are then still further catabolized, often by pathways common to those of similar products from the catabolism ofcarbohydrates and fat.
The end products of these protein portions are carbon dioxide and water.
B Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are absorbed from the digestive tract as simple sugars, chiefly glucose.
Maintained in the blood at an approximately constant level, glucose is readilycatabolized to satisfy the need of the body for energy.
In this process, the glucose molecule breaks down into carbon compounds that are readily oxidized to carbondioxide and water and then excreted.
If not used immediately for energy, glucose is converted to glycogen ( see Starch) and stored in the liver and muscles.
When these reserves are filled, glucose is converted to fat and deposited in adipose tissue.
See also Sugar Metabolism.
C Fats
In digestion, fats are hydrolyzed or decomposed into their component glycerol and fatty acids.
These are then synthesized to neutral fats, cholesterol compounds, andphospholipids—fats, chemically united with phosphorus, that circulate in the blood.
Fat may be synthesized into body structure or stored in the tissues for withdrawalwhen needed.
Like glucose, it is then catabolized to carbon substances that are broken down into carbon dioxide and water.
D Vitamins
Vitamins are accessory organic compounds essential to enhancement of the metabolism of amino acids, carbohydrates, and fats in living organisms.
Some organisms,notably green plants, synthesize vitamins, often in quantities greater than the organisms require.
With few exceptions, animals cannot synthesize these substances andmust obtain them in their food.
See Nutrition, Human; Vitamin.
VIII INBORN METABOLIC ERRORS
If an enzyme is lacking because of some hereditary defect, the chemical transformation in which it would participate is blocked.
As a result, cell products fail to besynthesized or catabolized, too much of a metabolic product accumulates, causing injury to tissues, or intracellular materials fail to cross cell membranes.
Although the effects of some metabolic errors are manifested in early infancy, others may appear only in adulthood.
Some inborn errors may be fatal, some may haveno apparent harmful effects, and some may persist.
A result of error in amino acid metabolism is phenylketonuria (PKU).
This occurs in infants when metabolism of theamino acid phenylalanine is blocked; the accumulated metabolic products may cause brain damage.
In carbohydrate metabolism, one error results in galactosemia, inwhich the enzyme required to convert galactose to glucose is absent.
The consequent inability to metabolize milk sugar results in the accumulation of galactose in theblood, sometimes with damage to the brain and liver and the development of cataracts and mental retardation.
See also Birth Defects; Genetic Disorders.
Contributed By:Mary Lynn HendrixMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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