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General Biology I: Metabolism

General Biology I
Metabolism
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. 1. Reference Information
    1. Presenting Data
    2. Using credible sources
    3. Citing your sources
    4. Writing for Science
  7. The Process of Science
    1. The Nature of Science
    2. Scientific Inquiry
    3. Hypothesis Testing
    4. Types of Data
    5. Basic and Applied Science
    6. Reporting Scientific Work
  8. Themes and Concepts of Biology
    1. Properties of Life
    2. Levels of Organization of Living Things
    3. The Diversity of Life
    4. Phylogenetic Trees
  9. Cell Structure and Function
    1. How Cells Are Studied
    2. Comparing Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells
    3. The Plasma Membrane and The Cytoplasm
    4. Ribosomes
    5. The Cytoskeleton
    6. Flagella and Cilia
    7. The Endomembrane System
    8. The Nucleus
    9. The Endoplasmic Reticulum
    10. The Golgi Apparatus
    11. Vesicles and Vacuoles, Lysosomes, and Peroxisomes
    12. Mitochondria and Chloroplasts
    13. The Cell Wall
    14. Extracellular matrix and intercellular junctions
    15. Animal vs Plant cells
    16. The Production of a Protein
    17. Chapter Quiz
    18. Summary Table of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells and Functions
  10. Membranes and movement of molecules
    1. The Plasma Membrane
    2. Transport Across Membranes
    3. Passive Transport: Diffusion
    4. Passive Transport: Osmosis
    5. Active Transport
  11. Enzyme-catalyzed reactions
    1. Metabolic Pathways
    2. Energy
    3. Enzymes
    4. Changes in Enzyme Activity
    5. Feedback Inhibition in Metabolic Pathways
  12. How cells obtain energy
    1. Energy in Living Systems
    2. From Mouth to Molecule: Digestion
    3. Metabolism
    4. An overview of Cellular Respiration
    5. Aerobic Respiration: Glycolysis
    6. Aerobic Respiration: The Citric Acid Cycle
    7. Aerobic Respiration: Oxidative Phosphorylation
    8. Fermentation: an anaerobic process
    9. Metabolism of molecules other than glucose
    10. Anaerobic Cellular Respiration
  13. Photosynthesis
    1. Putting Photosynthesis into Context
    2. Light and Pigments
    3. Light Dependent Reactions
    4. The Calvin Cycle
    5. Photosynthesis in Prokaryotes

45

Metabolism

An organism’s metabolism is the sum total of all the chemical reactions that occur within the organism. These chemical reactions fall into two basic categories:

  • Anabolism: building polymers (large molecules that the cell needs).
  • Catabolism: breaking down polymers to release energy.

This means that metabolism is composed of synthesis (anabolism) and degradation (catabolism) (Figure 1).

catabolic vs anabolic
Figure 1 Catabolic pathways are those that generate energy by breaking down larger molecules. Anabolic pathways are those that require energy to synthesize larger molecules. Both types of pathways are required for maintaining the cell’s energy balance.

It is important to know that the chemical reactions of metabolic pathways do not take place on their own. Each reaction step is facilitated, or catalyzed, by a protein called an enzyme. Enzymes are important for catalyzing all types of biological reactions—those that require energy as well as those that release energy.

Consider the metabolism of sugar. This is a classic example of one of the many cellular processes that use and produce energy. Living things consume sugars as a major energy source, because sugar molecules have a great deal of energy stored within their bonds. For the most part, photosynthesizing organisms like plants produce these sugars. During photosynthesis, plants use energy (originally from sunlight) to convert carbon dioxide gas (CO2) into sugar molecules (like glucose: C6H12O6). They consume carbon dioxide and produce oxygen as a waste product. This reaction is summarized as:

6 CO2 + 6 H2O –> C6H12O6 + 6 O2

Because this process involves synthesizing an energy-storing molecule, it requires an energy input to proceed.

In contrast, energy-storage molecules such as glucose are consumed to be broken down to use their energy. The reaction that harvests the energy of a sugar molecule in cells requiring oxygen to survive can be summarized by the reverse reaction to photosynthesis. In this reaction, oxygen is consumed and carbon dioxide is released as a waste product. The reaction is summarized as:

C6H12O6 + 6 O2 –> 6 CO2 + 6 H2O

Both of these reactions involve many steps.

The processes of making and breaking down sugar molecules illustrate two examples of metabolic pathways. A metabolic pathway is a series of chemical reactions that takes a starting molecule and modifies it, step-by-step, through a series of metabolic intermediates, eventually yielding a final product. In the example of sugar metabolism, the first metabolic pathway synthesized sugar from smaller molecules, and the other pathway broke sugar down into smaller molecules.

An interactive or media element has been excluded from this version of the text. You can view it online here:
https://openoregon.pressbooks.pub/mhccbiology101/?p=388

References

Unless otherwise noted, images on this page are licensed under CC-BY 4.0 by OpenStax.

Text adapted from: OpenStax, Concepts of Biology. OpenStax CNX. May 18, 2016 http://cnx.org/contents/b3c1e1d2-839c-42b0-a314-e119a8aafbdd@9.10

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Copyright © 2016 by Lisa Bartee and Christine Anderson. Mt Hood Community College Biology 101 by Lisa Bartee and Christine Anderson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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