MEH 1 - Energy Reactions In Cells Flashcards

1
Q

What is metabolism?

A

The set of processes which derive energy and raw materials from food and use them to support repair, growth and activity of the tissues of the body to sustain life

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2
Q

What are the two main types of metabolic pathways?

A

Catabolic pathways and anabolic pathways

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3
Q

What is the function of catabolic pathways?

A
  • break down larger molecules into smaller ones
  • release large amounts of free energy
  • oxidative (release H atoms) and have ‘reducing power’
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4
Q

What is the function of anabolic pathways?

A
  • Synthesise larger cellular components from intermediary metabolites
  • use energy released from catabolism (ATP)
  • reductive (use H released in catabolism)
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5
Q

What do metabolised fuel molecules supply?

A
  • building block materials (eg sugars, amino acids, fatty acids)
  • organic precursors (acetyl CoA)
  • biosynthetic reducing power (eg NADH, NADPH)
  • energy for cell function (ATP)
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6
Q

Energy is the capacity to do work. What sort of work must be carried out in the body?

A
  • biosynthetic work (anabolism)
  • transport work (eg maintenance of ion gradients, nutrient uptake)
  • specialised functions (includes mechanical, electrical and osmotic work)
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7
Q

How do the standard international unit of energy and the units of energy used for food differ?

A

The standard international units of energy are Joules or kJ, while food is measured in kcal.

1 kcal = 4.20 KJ

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8
Q

Which has the most energy in it - fat, carbohydrate, protein or alcohol?

A

Fat, then alcohol, then carbohydrate, then protein

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9
Q

What is the basal metabolic rate?

A

Energy required by an awake individual during physical, digestive and emotional rest. Approx. 1400-1700 kcal

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10
Q

What is the difference between an exergonic and an endergonic reaction?

A

Exergonic - releases energy, reaction is spontaneous (catabolism)

Endergonic - requires energy, reaction not spontaneous (anabolism)

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11
Q

What are the standard conditions that delta G is usually measured under?

A

25 degrees C, 1 atm, 1 molar concentration of reactants and products, pH=7

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12
Q

What is oxidation?

A

Removal of electrons or removal of H atoms

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13
Q

Give some examples of H-carrier molecules

A

NAD, NADP, FAD

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14
Q

How does ATP concentration affect catabolic/anabolic pathways?

A

[ATP] high = anabolic pathways are activated

[ATP] low and [ADP/AMP] low = catabolic pathways activated

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15
Q

What is phosphocreatine?

A

A molecule that can phosphorylate ATP in the muscles, in cases where ATP supplies have run out

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16
Q

What is creatine kinase used as a marker of?

A

Used to indicate myocardial infarction. Specific isoform combinations are specific to certain locations, including heart muscle. This means that we can be sure there is heart damage.

17
Q

What is creatinine?

A

Breakdown product of creatine and creatine phosphate, excreted via kidneys

18
Q

Give some clinical uses of creatinine

A
  • creatinine excretion per 24h is proportional to muscle mass of individual, so provides a measure of muscle mass
  • concentration in urine is marker of urine dilation
  • can be used to test urinary loss of many substances