Metabolism Overview
المؤلف:
Denise R. Ferrier
المصدر:
Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Biochemistry
الجزء والصفحة:
15-9-2021
1341
Metabolism Overview
Individual enzymic reactions were analyzed in an effort to explain the mechanisms of catalysis. However, in cells, these reactions rarely occur in isolation. Instead, they are organized into multistep sequences called pathways, such as that of glycolysis (Fig. 1).
In a pathway, the product of one reaction serves as the substrate of the subsequent reaction. Most pathways can be classified as either catabolic (degradative) or anabolic (synthetic). Catabolic pathways break down complex molecules, such as proteins, polysaccharides, and lipids, to a few simple molecules (for example, carbon dioxide, ammonia, and water).
Anabolic pathways form complex end products from simple precursors, for example, the synthesis of the polysaccharide glycogen from glucose. [Note: Pathways that regenerate a component are called cycles.] Different pathways can intersect, forming an integrated and purposeful network of chemical reactions.
Metabolism is the sum of all the chemical changes occurring in a cell, a tissue, or the body. The next several chapters focus on the central metabolic pathways that are involved in synthesizing and degrading carbohydrates, lipids, and amino acids.

Figure 1 Glycolysis, an example of a metabolic pathway. [Note: Pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate requires two reactions.] Curved reaction arrows () indicate forward and reverse reactions that are catalyzed by different enzymes. P = phosphate.
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