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Metabolism . A term referring to all chemical reactions necessary to maintain life. Substances are constantly being broken down and built up.Anabolism: larger molecules are built from small ones (like AA's?proteins)Catabolism: complex structures broken down into simpler ones (digestion). The Nutrient Pool.
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1. Chapter 25: Energetics
2. Metabolism A term referring to all chemical reactions necessary to maintain life. Substances are constantly being broken down and built up.
Anabolism: larger molecules are built from small ones (like AAs?proteins)
Catabolism: complex structures broken down into simpler ones (digestion)
3. The Nutrient Pool Contains all organic building blocks cell needs:
to provide energy
to create new cellular components
Is source of substrates for catabolism and anabolism 6 categories of nutrients
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Vitamins
Minerals
Water
4. Carbohydrates Dietary sources
Predominately plants
Sugars fruits, honey, milk, candy, soda
Starch grains, legumes, root veggies
Cellulose veggies (not digested but provides fiber to facilitate defecation)
Dietary requirements:
When less than 50 grams/day are consumed, tissue proteins and fats are broken down for energy fuel
5. Carbohydrates, cont. Uses in the body
Glucose (monosaccharide) is a major body fuel and is readily used to make ATP
Carbohydrate digestion also yields fructose and galactose but the liver converts them to glucose before entering general circulation
Small amounts are used for nucleic acid synthesis
Various sugars attach to external plasma membrane proteins and lipids
*when glucose is present in excess of what the body needs for ATP synthesis, it is converted to glycogen or fat and stored for later use*
6. Lipids Dietary sources
Saturated fats
Animal products (meat & dairy) & a few plants (coconut, palm, palm kernal oils)
Unsaturated fats
Seeds, nuts, most veggie oils
Dietary requirements
Higher for infants/children than for adults
AHA recommends <30% of total caloric intake
<10% saturated fats
Daily cholesterol should not exceed 200 mg
7. Lipids, cont. Uses in the body
Dietary fats help the body absorb fat-soluble vitamins, triglycerides are the major E source for liver cells & skeletal mm, phospholipids are a major component of the myelin sheaths and ALL cellular membranes
Fat deposits provide: protection around organs, insulation, concentrated E source
Cholesterol is not used as an E source. It is a stabilizer for cell membranes and a precursor to bile salts, steroid Hs, and other essential functional molecules
8. Proteins Most abundant organic components in body
Dietary sources
Primarily animal products (eggs, milk, meat)
Legumes, nuts, & cereals are nutritionally incomplete because they are low in one or more essential AAs
Cereal grains and legumes together provide all of the essential AAs
Dietary requirements
Most Americans eat far more protein than they need
Must ingest essential AAs
9. Proteins, cont. Uses in the body
Structural materials (collagen, elastin, keratin)
Functional proteins (enzymes, hemoglobin, Hs)
Hormonal controls
Anabolic hormones accelerate protein synthesis
i.e. growth hormone, sex hormones, adrenal glucocorticoids, etc
Whether AAs are used to synthesize new proteins or are burned for E depends on a number of factors
10. Proteins, cont. Adequacy of caloric intake
For protein synthesis you must have adequate intake of carbs & fats for ATP production
If notdietary & tissue proteins are used for E
Nitrogen balance of body
Healthy adults: protein synthesis = protein breakdown
The body is in nitrogen balance when the amount of nitrogen ingested in proteins equal the amount excreted in urine & feces
11. Negative nitrogen balance Protein breakdown exceeds amount of protein used for synthesis
Occurs w/physical & emotional stress, when quality of dietary protein is poor, and with starvation Protein synthesis>protein breakdown & loss
Normal for growing children & pregnant women
Normal with rebuilding of tissues following injury or illness
Always more protein going into tissues than amount being broken down for E
12. Carbohydrate Metabolism Generates ATP and other high-energy compounds by breaking down carbohydrates:
glucose + oxygen ? carbon dioxide + water ?
13. Energy Yield of Aerobic Metabolism For 1 glucose molecule processed, cell gains 36 molecules of ATP:
2 from glycolysis
4 from NADH generated in glycolysis
2 from TCA cycle (through GTP)
28 from ETS
14. Carbohydrate Breakdown and Synthesis Gluconeogenesis - the synthesis of glucose from noncarbohydrate precursors:
lactic acid, glycerol, & AAs
Stores glucose as glycogen in liver and skeletal muscle
Glycogenesis - the formation of glycogen from glucose
Glycogenolysis - Is the breakdown of glycogen
15. Lipolysis Breaks lipids down into pieces that can be converted to pyruvic acid & channeled directly into TCA cycle
Hydrolysis splits triglyceride into component parts:
1 molecule of glycerol & 3 fatty acid molecules
Different enzymes convert fatty acids to acetyl-CoA (beta-oxidation)
16. 3 Energy Benefits of Beta-Oxidation For each 2-carbon fragment removed from fatty acid, cell gains:
12 ATP from acetyl-CoA in TCA cycle
5 ATP from NADH
Cell can gain 144 ATP molecules from breakdown of one 18-carbon fatty acid molecule
Fatty acid breakdown yields about 1.5 times the energy of glucose breakdown
17. Lipid Synthesis Also called lipogenesis
Can use almost any organic substrate:
because lipids, amino acids, and carbohydrates can be converted to acetyl-CoA
18. Lipid Transport Cells require lipids to maintain cell membranes
Steroid hormones must reach target cells in many different tissues
Most lipids are not soluble in water:
special transport mechanisms carry lipids from one region of body to another
Most lipids circulate through bloodstream as lipoproteins
Free fatty acids are a small percentage of total circulating lipids
19. Free Fatty Acids (FFAs) Are lipids that can diffuse easily across cell membranes
In blood, are generally bound to albumin (most abundant plasma protein)
Are an important energy source:
during periods of starvation when glucose supplies are limited
Liver cells, cardiac muscle cells, skeletal muscle fibers, etc. metabolize free fatty acids
20. Lipid Transport and Utilization
21. Lipoproteins Are used to transport triglycerides & cholesterol (since they do not circulate free in the bloodstream)
They all contain triglycerides, phospholipids, & cholesterol in addition to protein
The higher the % of lipid in the lipoprotein, the lower its densitythe higher the % of protein, the higher its density
5 Classes of Lipoproteins
Chylomicrons
Very low-density lipoproteins (VLDLs)
Intermediate-density lipoproteins (IDLs)
Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs)
High-density lipoproteins (HDLs)
22. Chylomicrons Are produced in intestinal tract & are too large to diffuse across capillary wall
Enter lymphatic capillaries (lacteals)
Travel through thoracic duct:
to venous circulation and systemic arteries
23. Distribution of Other Lipoproteins Lipoprotein lipase removes many triglycerides from VLDLs, leaving IDLs
When IDLs reach liver additional triglycerides are removed & broken down into fatty acids and monoglycerides
protein content of lipoprotein is altered & LDLs are created
LDLs are transported to peripheral tissues to deliver cholesterol
24. Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) Primary source is liver
transports triglycerides from liver to peripheral tissues (mainly adipose tissue)
25. Low-density lipoproteins (LDL) Transports cholesterol to the peripheral tissues
makes it available to tissue cells for membrane or hormone synthesis & stores it for later use
also regulates cholesterol synthesis in the tissue cells
26. High-density lipoproteins (HDL) Transports excess cholesterol from peripheral tissues to the liver
gets broken down & becomes part of bile
27. Plasma cholesterol levels HDL (good-cholesterol)
35-60 is ok; above 60 may protect against heart disease
LDL (bad cholesterol)
levels above 160 is considered bad b/c of propensity to deposit cholesterol in artery walls
28. Factors regulating plasma cholesterol levels Diet modification may help but the liver will still maintain a basal production of cholesterol
saturated fats (+) liver synthesis of cholesterol & (-) secretion from body
unsaturated fats enhance secretion of cholesterol & its catabolism to bile salts
trans-fatty acids (hydrogenated unsat FAs) cause serum changes worse than sat FAs
omega-3 FAs (some cold water fishes) reduce saturated fat & cholesterol levels & have antiarrhythmic effect on heart & make platelets less sticky
smoking, stress, coffee, increase LDL levels
aerobic exercise lowers LDLs & increases HDLs
apples have higher cholesterol than pears typically
29. Proteins The body synthesizes 100,000 to 140,000 proteins:
each with different form, function, and structure
All proteins are built from the 20 amino acids
30. Protein Metabolism Cellular proteins are recycled in cytosol:
peptide bonds are broken
free amino acids are used in new proteins
If other energy sources are inadequate:
mitochondria generate ATP by breaking down amino acids in TCA cycle
Not all amino acids enter cycle at same point, so ATP benefits vary
31. Proteins and ATP Production When glucose and lipid reserves are inadequate, liver cells:
break down internal proteins
absorb additional amino acids from blood
Amino acids are deaminated:
carbon chains broken down to provide ATP
32. 3 Factors Against Protein Catabolism Proteins are more difficult to break apart than complex carbohydrates or lipids
A by-product, ammonium ion, is toxic to cells
Proteins form the most important structural and functional components of cells
33. Protein Synthesis The body synthesizes half of the amino acids needed to build proteins (Nonessential AAs)
amino acids made by the body on demand
10 essential AAs:
8 not synthesized: isoleucine, leucine, lysine, threonine, tryptophan, phenylalanine, valine, and methionine
2 insufficiently synthesized: arginine and histidine
34. Summary: Pathways of Catabolism and Anabolism
35. Metabolic Interactions Body has 2 patterns of daily metabolic activity:
absorptive state
postabsorptive state
36. The Absorptive State Is the period following a meal when nutrient absorption is under way
Primarily an anabolic phase w/glucose as main E source
most excess metabolites will be converted to fat for storage if not used in anabolism
carbs-->liver to covert to glu-->released to blood or makes & stores glycogen & makes fat to release to blood for storage by adipocytes
triglycerides-->FAs + glycerol-->sk mm, liver cells, & adipocytes use FAs as primary E source-->most FAs & glycerol re-enter adipose tissue & reconvert to triglycerides for storage
AAs-->some to liver for deamination to keto acids-->Krebs for ATP formation or conversion to liver fat stores; liver uses some AAs for plasma protein synthesis but most go into general circulation for uptake by other body cells to use for anabolism
37. The Postabsorptive State When nutrient absorption is not under way (fasting state)
Primarily catabolic to maintain blood glucose levels w/in normal range b/t meals
glycogenolysis in liver can maintain blood glu levels for ~ 4 hrs
glycogenolysis in skeletal mm - glucose cannot be released to blood as w/liver (lacks all necessary enzymes) butpartial oxidation to pyruvic acid (or lactic acid) occurs-->goes to liver for conversion back to glucose & is released to blood
lipolysis in adipose tissue & liver -->leads to glycerol-->liver converts to glucose & releases to the blood
catabolism of cellular protein - primary source of blood glucose w/fasting (glycogen stores are depleted)-->AAs are deaminated & coverted to glucose in liver & are released to blood
38. Regulatory Hormones: Effects on Peripheral Metabolism
39. Lipid and Amino Acid Catabolism Generates acetyl-CoAIncreased [ ] of acetyl-CoA causes ketone bodies to form
Ketone Bodies are acids that dissociate in solution
Fasting produces ketosis: a high concentration of ketone bodies in body fluids
Liver cells do not catabolize ketone bodies:
compounds diffuse into general circulation
peripheral cells absorb ketone bodies
Cells reconvert ketone bodies to acetyl-CoA for TCA cycle
40. Ketonemia is the appearance of ketone bodies in bloodstream
Lowers plasma pH, which must be controlled by buffers
Ketoacidosis is a dangerous drop in blood pH:
caused by high ketone levels exceeding buffering capacities
Severe Ketoacidosis - Circulating concentration of ketone bodies can reach 200 mg dl:
pH may fall below 7.05
may cause coma, cardiac arrhythmias, death
41. 4 Types of Nitrogen Compounds Amino acids:
framework of all proteins, glycoproteins, and lipoproteins
Purines and pyrimidines:
nitrogenous bases of RNA and DNA
Creatine:
energy storage in muscle (creatine phosphate)
Porphyrins:
bind metal ions
essential to hemoglobin, myoglobin, and cytochromes
42. Nitrogen Balance Occurs when:
nitrogen absorbed from diet
balances nitrogen lost in urine and feces
Nitrogen atoms are not stored in the body . They must be obtained by:
recycling N in body or from diet
43. Negative nitrogen balance Protein breakdown (excretion) exceeds amount of protein used for synthesis
Occurs w/physical & emotional stress, when quality of dietary protein is poor, and with starvation Protein synthesis (absorption) >protein breakdown & loss
Normal for growing children & pregnant women
Normal with rebuilding of tissues following injury or illness
Always more protein going into tissues than amount being broken down for E
44. Minerals and Mineral Reserves
45. Minerals Make up 4% of body weight and are not used for fuel
Body requires moderate amounts of 7 types (Na,P, K,S,Na,Cl, & Mg) & trace amounts of ~ a dozen others
Uses include strength (Ca/P/Mg), electrolytes (Na/Cl/K), bind to organic compounds to form molecules like phospholipids, hormones, & enzymes
Found mostly in veggies, legumes, milk, & some meats
46. Vitamins Organic compounds needed for growth & health
Most serve as coenzymes (or parts of coenzymes)
w/o them the carbs, proteins, & fats we eat would be useless
Some act as antioxidants (A,C,E) and act against cancer causing free radicals
Are not used for energy
Do not serve as building blocks
Most are not made in the body and must be ingested (exceptions: D-skin, B/K-intestinal bacteria)
47. Vitamins, cont. Fat soluble (Vits A,D,E,& K)
Bind to ingested lipids and are absorbed w/ their digestion products
Problem w/fat absorptionproblem w/uptake of fat soluble vitamins
Can have hypervitaminosis
Water soluble (all others)
Absorbed thru intestinal tract
Typically can not overdose; pee out excess
48. Fat Soluble Vitamins Vitamin A - A structural component of visual pigment retinal
Vitamin D - Is converted to calcitriol:
which increases rate of intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption
Vitamin E - Stabilizes intracellular membranes
Vitamin K - Helps synthesize several proteins including 3 clotting factors
49. The Fat-Soluble Vitamins
50. The Water-Soluble Vitamins
51. Vitamins and Bacteria Bacterial inhabitants of intestines produce small amounts of:
fat-soluble vitamin K
5 water-soluble vitamins including B12
Intestinal epithelium absorbs all water-soluble vitamins except B12
B12 molecule is too large & must bind to intrinsic factor before absorption
52. Energy Gains and Losses Energy is released when chemical bonds are broken
In cells energy is used to synthesize ATP
some energy is lost as heat
Lipids release 9.46 C/g
Carbohydrates release 4.18 C/g
Proteins release 4.32 C/g
53. Calories Energy required to raise 1 g of water 1 degree centigrade is a calorie
Energy required to raise 1 kg of water 1 degree centigrade is a Calorie (C)
54. Metabolism Clinicians examine metabolism to determine Calories used and measured in:
Calories /hr, Calories/day, Calories /unit of body wt/day
Metabolic rate is the sum of all anabolic and catabolic processes in the body
If daily energy intake exceeds energy demands body stores excess energy as triglycerides in adipose tissue
If daily caloric expenditures exceeds dietary supply body uses energy reserves, loses weight
55. Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) Is the minimum resting energy expenditure:
of an awake and alert person
measured under standardized testing conditions
Involves monitoring respiratory activity
Energy utilization is proportional to oxygen consumption
56. Hormonal Effects Thyroxine:
controls overall metabolism
Cholecystokinin (CCK):
suppresses appetite
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH):
suppresses appetite
Leptin:
released by adipose tissues during absorptive state
binds to CNS neurons that suppress appetite
57. Heat Production BMR estimates rate of energy use
Energy not captured is released as heat:
serves important homeostatic purpose
58. Thermoregulation The body produces heat as by-product of metabolism
Increased physical or metabolic activity generates more heat
Heat produced is retained by water in body
For body temperature to remain constant:
heat must be lost to environment
Body controls heat gains and losses to maintain homeostasis
59. Mechanisms of Thermoregulation The body uses four mechanisms of heat exchange
Radiation (50%) loss of heat as infrared rays
Conduction transfer of heat by direct contact
Convection (15%) transfer of heat to the surrounding air
Evaporation heat loss due to the evaporation of water from the lungs, mouth mucosa, and skin (insensible heat loss)
Evaporative heat loss becomes sensible when body temperature rises and sweating produces increased water for vaporization
60. Insensible Water Loss - about 20% of indoor heat loss
Each hour, 2025 ml of water crosses epithelia & evaporates from alveolar surfaces and skin surface
Sensible Perspiration - from sweat glands
Depends on wide range of activity from inactivity to secretory rates of 24 liters/hr
61. Regulating Heat Gain and Loss Is coordinated by heat-gain center and heat-loss center in anterior hypothalamus
62. 3 Actions of Heat-Loss Center Inhibition of vasomotor center:
causes peripheral vasodilation & warm blood flows to surface of body
skin temperatures rise & radiational and convective losses increase
Sweat glands are stimulated to increase secretory output:
perspiration flows across body surface & evaporative heat losses increase
Respiratory centers are stimulated:
depth of respiration increases
63. Mechanisms for Promoting Heat Gain The heat-gain center prevents low body temperature (hypothermia)
Sympathetic vasomotor center decreases blood flow to dermis reducing losses by radiation, convection, and conduction
In cold conditions blood flow to skin is restricted
blood returning from limbs is shunted to deep, insulated veins (countercurrent exchange)
64. Countercurrent Exchange Is heat exchange between fluids moving in opposite directions:
traps heat close to body core & restricts heat loss in cold conditions
Blood is diverted to a network of deep, insulated veins
Venous network wraps around deep arteries
Heat is conducted from warm blood flowing outward to cooler blood returning from periphery
65. Heat Generation Shivering thermogenesis
Increased muscle tone increases energy consumption of skeletal muscleenergy consumption produces heat
Involves both agonists and antagonists
Shivering increases heat generation up to 400%
Nonshivering thermogenesis
Releases hormones that increase metabolic activity
Raises heat production in adults 1015% over extended time period
66. Hormones and Thermogenesis Heat-gain center stimulates adrenal medullae via SNS division of ANS releasing epinephrine
Epinephrine increases glycogenolysis in liver and skeletal muscle & the metabolic rate of most tissues
In children, low body temperature stimulates additional TRH release, stimulating thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)
TSH stimulates thyroid gland increasing thyroxine release into blood
Thyroxine increases rate of carbohydrate catabolism & rate of catabolism of all other nutrients
67. Infant Thermogenesis Mechanism Infants have brown fat:
highly vascularized adipose tissue
adipocytes contain numerous mitochondria
found between shoulder blades, around neck, and in upper body
Pyrexia is elevated body temp. (Usually temporary)
Fever is body temperature maintained at greater than 37.2?C (99?F)
Occurs for many reasons, not always pathological
In young children, transient fevers can result from exercise in warm weather