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A very terse overview of metabolism

A very terse overview of metabolism

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A very terse overview of metabolism. Anabolism vs. Catabolism. “ lysis ” i.e., glycolysis. “ genesis ” i.e., gluconeogenesis. Overview of metabolism. Overview of metabolism. The key parts (three high-level views). Glycolysis (Chapter 14). Glycolysis, cont. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A very terse overview of metabolism

A very terse overview of metabolism

Page 2: A very terse overview of metabolism

Anabolism vs. Catabolism

“lysis”i.e., glycolysis

“genesis”i.e., gluconeogenesis

Page 3: A very terse overview of metabolism

Overview of metabolism

Page 4: A very terse overview of metabolism

Overview of metabolism

Page 5: A very terse overview of metabolism

The key parts(three high-level views)

Page 6: A very terse overview of metabolism

Glycolysis(Chapter 14)

Page 7: A very terse overview of metabolism

Glycolysis, cont.

Page 8: A very terse overview of metabolism

Three possible fates of pyruvate

Page 9: A very terse overview of metabolism

Lower organisms (i.e., yeast) Higher organisms

(i.e., mammals)

Three possible fates of pyruvate

Page 10: A very terse overview of metabolism

Three possible fates of pyruvate

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The traditional, but largely incorrect, viewof anaerobic catabolism of glucose

First half of glycolysis: -2 ATPSecond half of glycolysis: +4 ATP

+2 NADH+2 Pyruvate

Fermentation: -2 NADH-2 Pyruvate+2 Lactate (or +2 EtOH)

Net: +2 ATP+ a bunch of other stuff

Page 12: A very terse overview of metabolism

Let’s take a quick step back…Where did the glucose come from to start glycolysis?

Page 13: A very terse overview of metabolism

The opposing pathways of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis

(note most differences include kinases)

Kinase vs. phosphatase: Its not always this simple, but this is typically correct.

Page 14: A very terse overview of metabolism

Chapter 16: The Citric Acid Cycle(aka TriCarboxylic Acid Cycle or Krebs Cycle)

Citrate

Page 15: A very terse overview of metabolism

The Citric Acid Cycle

Page 16: A very terse overview of metabolism

The Citric Acid Cycle

The TCA cycle involves a series of oxidation reactions that produce a large number of NADH, which -- as you recall -- has accepted a hydride (electrons!)

The NADH molecules produced by TCA (and elsewhere) will be used in electron transport to a proton ion gradient (a battery).

The potential energy in this battery will be used to drive oxidative phosphorylation, which is the synthesis of ATP (see purple box on previous slide).

Page 17: A very terse overview of metabolism

Pyruvate Acetyl-CoAThe irreversible commitment to TCA

Note: this is technically an oxidation of the pyruvate -carbon (carbonyl to thioester), which is why NADH is produced.

Page 18: A very terse overview of metabolism

Pyruvate Acetyl-CoAThe irreversible commitment to TCA

Page 19: A very terse overview of metabolism

The Citric Acid Cycle

Page 20: A very terse overview of metabolism

The Citric Acid Cycle

Note the CO2

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Keeping track up to this point

Glycolysis (net): +2 ATP+2 NADH+2 Pyruvate

Pyr->Ac-CoA: -2 Pyruvate+2 NADH (1 per pyruvate)+2 Ac-CoA

TCA: -2 Ac-CoA+6 NADH (3 per Ac-CoA)+2 GTP (1 per Ac-CoA)+2 FADH2 (1 per Ac-CoA)+CO2 and some other carbon bodies

Net: +4 ATP (b/c GTP = ATP)+10 NADH+2 FADH2

Page 22: A very terse overview of metabolism

Fatty acid catabolism is called -oxidation(Chapter 17)

Page 23: A very terse overview of metabolism

Amino acid catabolism(Chapter 18)

Page 24: A very terse overview of metabolism

A [H+] gradient is produced using the free energyproduced from electron transport (Chapter 19)

Page 25: A very terse overview of metabolism

Diffusion and electrochemical gradients

Page 26: A very terse overview of metabolism

A [H+] gradient is produced using the free energyproduced from electron transport (Chapter 19)

Molecular oxygen is the final electron acceptor

Page 27: A very terse overview of metabolism

Cytochrome C

Page 28: A very terse overview of metabolism

Oxidative phosphorylation using ATP synthase(also Chapter 19)

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How does ATP Synthase work?

Experimental demonstration of rotation

Page 30: A very terse overview of metabolism

The final score (sorta)

Glycolysis (net): +2 ATP+2 NADH+2 Pyruvate

Pyr->Ac-CoA: -2 Pyruvate+2 NADH (1 per pyruvate)+2 Ac-CoA

TCA: -2 Ac-CoA+6 NADH (3 per Ac-CoA)+2 GTP (1 per Ac-CoA)+2 FADH2 (1 per Ac-CoA)+CO2 and some other carbon bodies

Net: +4 ATP (b/c GTP = ATP)+10 NADH = +30 ATP (assuming 3 ATP per NADH)+2 FADH2 = +4 ATP (assuming 2 ATP per FADH2)-----------------------------------------------------------------------

+38 ATP (4 from substrate phosphorylation; 34 from oxidative phosphorylation)

Page 31: A very terse overview of metabolism

How come lactate gets such a bad rap?

Page 32: A very terse overview of metabolism

Lactate is actually an important fuel

The lactate shuttle (middle image). On the left a white muscle fiber producing lactate. This lactate then travels to neighboring muscle tissues ("Ox Fiber") as well as distant tissues like the heart and other muscle cells, where it is used as a fuel.

In the middle you see the liver, representing the conversion of lactate to glucose (the Cori Cycle), the traditional view most medical students learn, which is the typical textbook view of lactate (right image).

Source: Matthew L. Goodwin, PhD

Page 33: A very terse overview of metabolism

Lactate is actually an important fuel

(Part of) The Proof. Lactate replacing glucose as a fuel in mammalian hippocampus slices.

Two groups of tissues were studied in vitro. In both, glucose was removed from solution (@ first arrow).

Both tissues began to fail (spike amplitude falling to 0).

In one group nothing was changed after that (closed circles); in the other group (open circles) 10 mM lactate was added at the second arrow.

The lactate fully replaced glucose as a fuel and the tissue returned to normal vitality.

Source: Matthew L. Goodwin, PhD

Restored activity

Page 34: A very terse overview of metabolism

Lactate threshold

Lactate threshold is actually all about the rate at which your muscles clear lactate from the blood (as it is used as a fuel within other tissues), and not simply an indicator of the point that aerobic metabolism stops.

In fact, trained athletes produce AND reuse far more lactate at threshold than untrained people. At LT in both samples above, the blood [lactate] is about the same, but – in fact – the trained group is producing about 60% more lactate, and thus also clearing it 60% faster. In moderate to well-trained runners, LT is roughly

the pace at which he/she can run for one hour.