Energy Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

How does the body extract energy from carbs?

A

Anaerobic and Aerobic pathways

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2
Q

How does the body extract energy from fats?

A

Beta-oxidation

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3
Q

How does the body extract energy from proteins?

A

Deamination

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4
Q

Catabolism

A

Metabolic reactions break down molecules to extract energy

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5
Q

Anabolism

A

Metabolic reactions synthesize building blocks to produce new molecules

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6
Q

Carb usual energy from 4 pathways

A
  1. Glycolysis- cytosol
  2. Pyruvate to acetyl CoA- Mitochondria
  3. Citric Acid Cycle- Mitochondria
  4. ETC- Mitochondria
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7
Q

Glycosis- Glucose splitting

A

One six-carbon glucose molecule into two three-carbon pyruvate molecules

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8
Q

Where does glycolysis occur?

A

Cytosol

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9
Q

How much ATP does glycolysis use and produce?

A

Uses 2 ATP and Produces 4 ATP = 2 net ATP

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10
Q

Pyruvate to Lactate

A

When O2 is in short supply, pyruvate forms lactate

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11
Q

Lactate

A

Alternative fuel that muscle cells can use or that the liver cells can convert to glucose through anaerobic pathways

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12
Q

Why Lactation?

A

Speed! Making ATP in the liver is very quick due to glycolysis

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13
Q

Pyruvate to Acetyl CoA

A

Two pyruvate molecules from 1 molecule of glucose, produce two acetyl CoA molecules

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14
Q

Why is Pyruvate to Acetyl CoA irreversible?

A

Acetyl CoA cannot exit via the mitochondrial membrane & enters the citric acid cycle in the mitochondria

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15
Q

Citric Acid Cycle

A

Acetyl CoA combines with oxaloacetate to form citrate and release coenzyme A. The two carbon atoms from acetyl CoA combine with O2 to form CO2

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16
Q

What does the Citric Acid Cycle produce?

A
  1. One guanosine triphosphate (GTP)
  2. Transfer pairs of high energy electrons to 3 molecules of NAD+ and 1 molecule of FAD
  3. Oxaloacetate is regenerated
    One glucose molecule produces two acetyl CoA molecules, the citric acid cycle occurs twice
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17
Q

Electron Transport Chain

A
  • NADH AND FADH2 deliver their cargo of high-energy electrons to the ETC
  • As electrons travel along the ETC they give up energy to power the production of ATP
18
Q

What is at the end of the ETC?

A

An oxygen “basket” accepts the energy-depleted electrons and combines them with hydrogen to form water

19
Q

What if there was no oxygen for the ETC to use?

A

ATP production would stop halting the supply of power for our body’s essential functions

20
Q

How do electrons travel along the ETC?

A

They move from higher to lower energy levels, releasing energy

21
Q

How is an electrochemical gradient created in the ETC?

A

Some of the energy that is released is used to pump H+ ions out of the matrix and into intermembrane space, establishing an electrochemical gradient due to charge

22
Q

Where do the H+ ions in the ETC go?

A

H+ ions flow down the gradient powering ATP synthase

23
Q

Beta-oxidation of fatty acids

A

Acetyl CoA enters the Citric acid cycle to generate NADH and FADH2 for transferring pairs of high energy electrons to ETC to fuel ATP synthesis in the mitochondria

24
Q

How do fatty acids travel across the mitochondria membrane?

A

Carnitine transport

25
Q

Extracting Energy from Proteins

A

During starvation, the body breaks down protein and extracts energy from the amino acids

26
Q

Deamination

A

Deamination strips down the amino acid to a “carbon skeleton” while producing nitrogen byproduct that becomes urea

27
Q

End Products of Amino Acid Catabolism

A

The carbon skeleton’s point of entry to the breakdown pathways determines the amount of ATP it produces (the sooner, the better)

28
Q

What does the complete breakdown of amino acids yield?

A

Urea, carbon dioxide, water, and ATP

29
Q

How is metabolism related to respiration?

A

The Respiratory Quotient (RQ) is an index of which nutrients are being used by the body to generate ATP

30
Q

What is the respiratory quotient?

A

The volume of carbon dioxide exhaled divided by the volume of the oxygen used

31
Q

RQ for carbs?

A

1.0

32
Q

RQ for protein?

A

0.8

33
Q

RQ for fats?

A

0.7

34
Q

Why is the RQ for fats and amino acids less than 1?

A

They require more O2 to produce CO2 and H2O

35
Q

What does anaerobic metabolism use?

A

Glucose and Glycogen, requiring less O2, increasing RQ value

36
Q

What does aerobic metabolism due?

A

Breakdown of fats and protein, requiring more O2, decreasing RQ value

37
Q

How is Creatine (Phosphate) made?

A

Made from amino acids (glycerine)

38
Q

Where is Creatine (Phosphate) synthesized?

A

Liver

39
Q

Where is Creatine (Phosphate) stored?

A

Muscle (~94%)

40
Q

How is Creatine (Phosphate) excreted?

A

The kidneys (creatinine)