Dictionary Definition
metabolism
Noun
1 the marked and rapid transformation of a larva
into an adult that occurs in some animals [syn: metamorphosis]
2 the organic processes (in a cell or organism)
that are necessary for life [syn: metabolic
process, metastasis]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
metabolism- The complete set of chemical reactions that occur in living cells.
Translations
complete set of chemical reactions that occur in
living cells
- Czech: metabolismus, metabolizmus
- Finnish: aineenvaihdunta
- Greek: μεταβολισμός
- Icelandic: efnaskipti
Extensive Definition
Most of the structures that make up animals,
plants and microbes are made from three basic classes of molecule: amino acids,
carbohydrates and
lipids (often called
fats). As these molecules
are vital for life, metabolism focuses on making these molecules,
in the construction of cells and tissues, or breaking them down and
using them as a source of energy, in the digestion and use of food.
Many important biochemicals can be joined together to make polymers such as DNA and proteins. These macromolecules are
essential parts of all living organisms. Some of the most common
biological polymers are listed in the table below.
Amino acids and proteins
Proteins are made of amino acids arranged in a linear chain and joined together by peptide bonds. Many proteins are the enzymes that catalyze the chemical reactions in metabolism. Other proteins have structural or mechanical functions, such as the proteins that form the cytoskeleton, a system of scaffolding that maintains the cell shape. Proteins are also important in cell signaling, immune responses, cell adhesion, active transport across membranes and the cell cycle.Lipids
Lipids are the most diverse group of biochemicals. Their main structural uses are as part of biological membranes such as the cell membrane, or as a source of energy. The fats are a large group of compounds that contain fatty acids and glycerol; a glycerol molecule attached to three fatty acid esters is a triacylglyceride. Several variations on this basic structure exist, including alternate backbones such as sphingosine in the sphingolipids, and hydrophilic groups such as phosphate in phospholipids. Steroids such as cholesterol are another major class of lipids that are made in cells.Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are straight-chain aldehydes or ketones with many hydroxyl groups that can exist as straight chains or rings. Carbohydrates are the most abundant biological molecules, and fill numerous roles, such as the storage and transport of energy (starch, glycogen) and structural components (cellulose in plants, chitin in animals).Nucleotides
The polymers DNA and RNA are long chains of nucleotides. These molecules are critical for the storage and use of genetic information, through the processes of transcription and protein biosynthesis. RNA in ribozymes such as spliceosomes and ribosomes is similar to enzymes as it can catalyze chemical reactions. Individual nucleosides are made by attaching a nucleobase to a ribose sugar. These bases are heterocyclic rings containing nitrogen, classified as purines or pyrimidines. Nucleotides also act as coenzymes in metabolic group transfer reactions.Coenzymes
further Coenzyme Metabolism involves a vast array of chemical reactions, but most fall under a few basic types of reactions that involve the transfer of functional groups. This common chemistry allows cells to use a small set of metabolic intermediates to carry chemical groups between different reactions.One central coenzyme is adenosine
triphosphate (ATP), the universal energy currency of cells.
This nucleotide is
used to transfer chemical energy between different chemical
reactions. There is only a small amount of ATP in cells, but as it
is continuously regenerated, the human body can use about its own
weight in ATP per day.
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), a derivative of
vitamin B3 (niacin), is
an important coenzyme that acts as a hydrogen acceptor. Hundreds of
separate types of dehydrogenases remove
electrons from their substrates and reduce NAD+ into NADH. This
reduced form of the coenzyme is then a substrate for any of the
reductases in the cell
that need to reduce their substrates. Nicotinamide adenine
dinucleotide exists in two related forms in the cell, NADH and
NADPH. The NAD+/NADH form is more important in catabolic reactions,
while NADP+/NADPH is used in anabolic reactions.
Minerals and cofactors
Inorganic elements play critical roles in metabolism; some are abundant (e.g. sodium and potassium) while others function at minute concentrations. About 99% of mammals' mass are the elements carbon, nitrogen, calcium, sodium, chlorine, potassium, hydrogen, phosphorus, oxygen and sulfur. The organic compounds (proteins, lipids and carbohydrates) contain the majority of the carbon and nitrogen and most of the oxygen and hydrogen is present as water. Ions are also critical for nerves and muscles, as action potentials in these tissues are produced by the exchange of electrolytes between the extracellular fluid and the cytosol. Electrolytes enter and leave cells through proteins in the cell membrane called ion channels. For example, muscle contraction depends upon the movement of calcium, sodium and potassium through ion channels in the cell membrane and T-tubules.The transition
metals are usually present as trace
elements in organisms, with zinc and iron being most abundant. These
metals are used in some proteins as cofactors and are essential for
the activity of enzymes such as catalase and oxygen-carrier
proteins such as hemoglobin. These cofactors
are bound tightly to a specific protein; although enzyme cofactors
can be modified during catalysis, cofactors always return to their
original state after catalysis has taken place. The metal
micronutrients are taken up into organisms by specific transporters
and bound to storage proteins such as ferritin or metallothionein when not
being used.
Catabolism
further Catabolism Catabolism is the set of metabolic processes that break down large molecules. These include breaking down and oxidising food molecules. The purpose of the catabolic reactions is to provide the energy and components needed by anabolic reactions. The exact nature of these catabolic reactions differ from organism to organism, with organic molecules being used as a source of energy in organotrophs, while lithotrophs use inorganic substrates and phototrophs capture sunlight as chemical energy. However, all these different forms of metabolism depend on redox reactions that involve the transfer of electrons from reduced donor molecules such as organic molecules, water, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide or ferrous ions to acceptor molecules such as oxygen, nitrate or sulfate. In animals these reactions involve complex organic molecules being broken down to simpler molecules, such as carbon dioxide and water. In photosynthetic organisms such as plants and cyanobacteria, these electron-transfer reactions do not release energy, but are used as a way of storing energy absorbed from sunlight.The most common set of catabolic reactions in
animals can be separated into three main stages. In the first,
large organic molecules such as proteins, polysaccharides or
lipids are digested into
their smaller components outside cells. Next, these smaller
molecules are taken up by cells and converted to yet smaller
molecules, usually acetyl coenzyme
A (CoA), which releases some energy. Finally, the acetyl group
on the CoA is oxidised to water and carbon dioxide in the citric
acid cycle and electron
transport chain, releasing the energy that is stored by
reducing the coenzyme
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) into NADH.
Digestion
Macromolecules such as starch, cellulose or proteins cannot be rapidly taken up by cells and need to be broken into their smaller units before they can be used in cell metabolism. Several common classes of enzymes digest these polymers. These digestive enzymes include proteases that digest proteins into amino acids, as well as glycoside hydrolases that digest polysaccharides into monosaccharides.Microbes simply secrete digestive enzymes into
their surroundings, while animals only secrete these enzymes from
specialized cells in their guts. The amino acids or sugars
released by these extracellular enzymes are then pumped into cells
by specific active
transport proteins.
Energy from organic compounds
Carbohydrate catabolism is the breakdown of carbohydrates into smaller units. Carbohydrates are usually taken into cells once they have been digested into monosaccharides. Once inside, the major route of breakdown is glycolysis, where sugars such as glucose and fructose are converted into pyruvate and some ATP is generated. Pyruvate is an intermediate in several metabolic pathways, but the majority is converted to acetyl-CoA and fed into the citric acid cycle. Although some more ATP is generated in the citric acid cycle, the most important product is NADH, which is made from NAD+ as the acetyl-CoA is oxidized. This oxidation releases carbon dioxide as a waste product. In anaerobic conditions, glycolysis produces lactate, through the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase re-oxidizing NADH to NAD+ for re-use in glycolysis. An alternative route for glucose breakdown is the pentose phosphate pathway, which reduces the coenzyme NADPH and produces pentose sugars such as ribose, the sugar component of nucleic acids.Fats are catabolised by hydrolysis to free fatty
acids and glycerol. The glycerol enters glycolysis and the fatty
acids are broken down by beta
oxidation to release acetyl-CoA, which then is fed into the
citric acid cycle. Fatty acids release more energy upon oxidation
than carbohydrates because carbohydrates contain more oxygen in
their structures.
Amino acids
are either used to synthesize proteins and other biomolecules, or
oxidized to urea and carbon
dioxide as a source of energy. The oxidation pathway starts with
the removal of the amino group by a transaminase. The amino
group is fed into the urea cycle,
leaving a deaminated carbon skeleton in the form of a keto acid.
Several of these keto acids are intermediates in the citric acid
cycle, for example the deamination of glutamate forms α-ketoglutarate.
The glucogenic
amino acids can also be converted into glucose, through
gluconeogenesis
(discussed below).
Energy transformations
Oxidative phosphorylation
In oxidative phosphorylation, the electrons removed from food molecules in pathways such as the citric acid cycle are transferred to oxygen and the energy released used to make ATP. This is done in eukaryotes by a series of proteins in the membranes of mitochondria called the electron transport chain. In prokaryotes, these proteins are found in the cell's inner membrane. These proteins use the energy released from passing electrons from reduced molecules like NADH onto oxygen to pump protons across a membrane.Pumping protons out of the mitochondria creates a
proton concentration
difference across the membrane and generates an electrochemical
gradient. This force drives protons back into the mitochondrion
through the base of an enzyme called ATP
synthase. The flow of protons makes the stalk subunit rotate,
causing the active site
of the synthase domain to change shape and phosphorylate adenosine
diphosphate - turning it into ATP. reduced sulfur compounds (such as
sulfide, hydrogen
sulfide and thiosulfate), ferrous iron
(FeII) or ammonia as
sources of reducing power and they gain energy from the oxidation
of these compounds with electron acceptors such as oxygen or nitrite. These microbial
processes are important in global biogeochemical
cycles such as acetogenesis, nitrification and denitrification and are
critical for soil
fertility.
Energy from light
The energy in sunlight is captured by plants, cyanobacteria, purple bacteria, green sulfur bacteria and some protists. This process is often coupled to the conversion of carbon dioxide into organic compounds, as part of photosynthesis, which is discussed below. The energy capture and carbon fixation systems can however operate separately in prokaryotes, as purple bacteria and green sulfur bacteria can use sunlight as a source of energy, while switching between carbon fixation and the fermentation of organic compounds.The capture of solar energy is a process that is
similar in principle to oxidative phosphorylation, as it involves
energy being stored as a proton concentration gradient and this
proton motive force then driving ATP synthesis.
In plants, photosystem II uses light
energy to remove electrons from water, releasing oxygen as a waste
product. The electrons then flow to the cytochrome
b6f complex, which uses their energy to pump protons across the
thylakoid membrane in
the chloroplast.
These protons move back through the membrane as they drive the ATP
synthase, as before. The electrons then flow through photosystem I and can then
either be used to reduce the coenzyme NADP+, for use in the
Calvin
cycle which is discussed below, or recycled for further ATP
generation.
Anabolism
further AnabolismAnabolism is the set of constructive metabolic
processes where the energy released by catabolism is used to
synthesize complex molecules. In general, the complex molecules
that make up cellular structures are constructed step-by-step from
small and simple precursors. Anabolism involves three basic stages.
Firstly, the production of precursors such as amino acids,
monosaccharides,
isoprenoids and
nucleotides,
secondly, their activation into reactive forms using energy from
ATP, and thirdly, the assembly of these precursors into complex
molecules such as proteins, polysaccharides, lipids and nucleic
acids.
Organisms differ in how many of the molecules in
their cells they can construct for themselves. Autotrophs such
as plants can construct the complex organic molecules in cells such
as polysaccharides and proteins from simple molecules like carbon
dioxide and water. Heterotrophs,
on the other hand, require a source of more complex substances,
such as monosaccharides and amino acids, to produce these complex
molecules. Organisms can be further classified by ultimate source
of their energy: photoautotrophs and photoheterotrophs obtain
energy from light, whereas chemoautotrophs and chemoheterotrophs
obtain energy from inorganic oxidation reactions.
Carbon fixation
Photosynthesis is the synthesis of carbohydrates from sunlight, carbon dioxide (CO2) and water, with oxygen produced as a waste product. This process uses the ATP and NADPH produced by the photosynthetic reaction centres, as described above, to convert CO2 into glycerate 3-phosphate, which can then be converted into glucose. This carbon-fixation reaction is carried out by the enzyme RuBisCO as part of the Calvin – Benson cycle. Three types of photosynthesis occur in plants, C3 carbon fixation, C4 carbon fixation and CAM photosynthesis. These differ by the route that carbon dioxide takes to the Calvin cycle, with C3 plants fixing CO2 directly, while C4 and CAM photosynthesis incorporate the CO2 into other compounds first, as adaptations to deal with intense sunlight and dry conditions.In photosynthetic prokaryotes the mechanisms of
carbon fixation are more diverse. Here, carbon dioxide can be fixed
by the Calvin – Benson cycle, a reversed
citric acid cycle, or the carboxylation of acetyl-CoA.
Prokaryotic chemoautotrophs
also fix CO2 through the Calvin – Benson cycle, but use
energy from inorganic compounds to drive the reaction.
Carbohydrates and glycans
In carbohydrate anabolism, simple organic acids can be converted into monosaccharides such as glucose and then used to assemble polysaccharides such as starch. The generation of glucose from compounds like pyruvate, lactate, glycerol, glycerate 3-phosphate and amino acids is called gluconeogenesis. Gluconeogenesis converts pyruvate to glucose-6-phosphate through a series of intermediates, many of which are shared with glycolysis.Although fat is a common way of storing energy,
in vertebrates such
as humans the fatty acids in
these stores cannot be converted to glucose through gluconeogenesis as these
organisms cannot convert acetyl-CoA into pyruvate; plants do, but
animals do not, have the necessary enzymatic machinery. As a
result, after long-term starvation, vertebrates need to produce
ketone
bodies from fatty acids to replace glucose in tissues such as
the brain that cannot metabolize fatty acids. In other organisms
such as plants and bacteria, this metabolic problem is solved using
the glyoxylate
cycle, which bypasses the decarboxylation step in
the citric acid cycle and allows the transformation of acetyl-CoA
to oxaloacetate,
where it can be used for the production of glucose. The
polysaccharides produced can have structural or metabolic functions
themselves, or be transferred to lipids and proteins by enzymes
called oligosaccharyltransferases.
Fatty acids, isoprenoids and steroids
Fatty acids are made by fatty acid synthases that polymerize and then reduce acetyl-CoA units. The acyl chains in the fatty acids are extended by a cycle of reactions that add the actyl group, reduce it to an alcohol, dehydrate it to an alkene group and then reduce it again to an alkane group. The enzymes of fatty acid biosynthesis are divided into two groups, in animals and fungi all these fatty acid synthase reactions are carried out by a single multifunctional type I protein, while in plant plastids and bacteria separate type II enzymes perform each step in the pathway.Terpenes and
isoprenoids are a
large class of lipids that include the carotenoids and form the
largest class of plant natural
products. These compounds are made by the assembly and
modification of isoprene units donated from the
reactive precursors isopentenyl
pyrophosphate and dimethylallyl
pyrophosphate. These precursors can be made in different ways.
In animals and archaea, the mevalonate
pathway produces these compounds from acetyl-CoA, while in
plants and bacteria the non-mevalonate
pathway uses pyruvate and glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate as substrates. Lanosterol can then be converted
into other steroids such as cholesterol and ergosterol.
Amino acids are made into proteins by being
joined together in a chain by peptide
bonds. Each different protein has a unique sequence of amino
acid residues: this is its primary
structure. Just as the letters of the alphabet can be combined
to form an almost endless variety of words, amino acids can be
linked in varying sequences to form a huge variety of proteins.
Proteins are made from amino acids that have been activated by
attachment to a transfer RNA
molecule through an ester
bond. This aminoacyl-tRNA precursor is produced in an ATP-dependent
reaction carried out by an aminoacyl
tRNA synthetase. This aminoacyl-tRNA is then a substrate for
the ribosome, which
joins the amino acid onto the elongating protein chain, using the
sequence information in a messenger
RNA.
Nucleotide synthesis and salvage
Nucleotides are made from amino acids, carbon dioxide and formic acid in pathways that require large amounts of metabolic energy. Consequently, most organisms have efficient systems to salvage preformed nucleotides. Purines are synthesized as nucleosides (bases attached to ribose). Both adenine and guanine are made from the precursor nucleoside inosine monophosphate, which is synthesized using atoms from the amino acids glycine, glutamine, and aspartic acid, as well as formate transferred from the coenzyme tetrahydrofolate. Pyrimidines, on the other hand, are synthesized from the base orotate, which is formed from glutamine and aspartate.Xenobiotics and redox metabolism
All organisms are constantly exposed to compounds that they cannot use as foods and would be harmful if they accumulated in cells, as they have no metabolic function. These potentially damaging compounds are called xenobiotics. Xenobiotics such as synthetic drugs, natural poisons and antibiotics are detoxified by a set of xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes. In humans, these include cytochrome P450 oxidases, UDP-glucuronosyltransferasess, and glutathione S-transferases. This system of enzymes acts in three stages to firstly oxidize the xenobiotic (phase I) and then conjugate water-soluble groups onto the molecule (phase II). The modified water-soluble xenobiotic can then be pumped out of cells and in multicellular organisms may be further metabolized before being excreted (phase III). In ecology, these reactions are particularly important in microbial biodegradation of pollutants and the bioremediation of contaminated land and oil spills. Many of these microbial reactions are shared with multicellular organisms, but due to the incredible diversity of types of microbes these organisms are able to deal with a far wider range of xenobiotics than multicellular organisms, and can degrade even persistent organic pollutants such as organochloride compounds.A related problem for aerobic
organisms is oxidative
stress. Here, processes including oxidative
phosphorylation and the formation of disulfide
bonds during protein
folding produce reactive
oxygen species such as hydrogen
peroxide. These damaging oxidants are removed by antioxidant metabolites such
as glutathione and
enzymes such as catalases and peroxidases.
Thermodynamics of living organisms
further Biological thermodynamics Living organisms must obey the laws of thermodynamics, which describe the transfer of heat and work. The second law of thermodynamics states that in any closed system, the amount of entropy (disorder) will tend to increase. Although living organisms' amazing complexity appears to contradict this law, life is possible as all organisms are open systems that exchange matter and energy with their surroundings. Thus living systems are not in equilibrium, but instead are dissipative systems that maintain their state of high complexity by causing a larger increase in the entropy of their environments. The metabolism of a cell achieves this by coupling the spontaneous processes of catabolism to the non-spontaneous processes of anabolism. In thermodynamic terms, metabolism maintains order by creating disorder.Regulation and control
As the environments of most organisms are constantly changing, the reactions of metabolism must be finely regulated to maintain a constant set of conditions within cells, a condition called homeostasis. Metabolic regulation also allows organisms to respond to signals and interact actively with their environments. Two closely-linked concepts are important for understanding how metabolic pathways are controlled. Firstly, the regulation of an enzyme in a pathway is how its activity is increased and decreased in response to signals. Secondly, the control exerted by this enzyme is the effect that these changes in its activity have on the overall rate of the pathway (the flux through the pathway). For example, an enzyme may show large changes in activity (i.e. it is highly regulated) but if these changes have little effect on the flux of a metabolic pathway, then this enzyme is not involved in the control of the pathway.There are multiple levels of metabolic
regulation. In intrinsic regulation, the metabolic pathway
self-regulates to respond to changes in the levels of substrates or
products; for example, a decrease in the amount of product can
increase the flux through
the pathway to compensate. Extrinsic control involves a cell in a
multicellular organism changing its metabolism in response to
signals from other cells. These signals are usually in the form of
soluble messengers such as hormones and growth
factors and are detected by specific receptors
on the cell surface. These signals are then transmitted inside the
cell by second
messenger systems that often involved the phosphorylation of
proteins.
A very well understood example of extrinsic
control is the regulation of glucose metabolism by the hormone
insulin. Insulin is
produced in response to rises in blood glucose
levels. Binding of the hormone to insulin
receptors on cells then activates a cascade of protein
kinases that cause the cells to take up glucose and convert it
into storage molecules such as fatty acids and glycogen. The metabolism of
glycogen is controlled by activity of phosphorylase, the enzyme
that breaks down glycogen, and glycogen
synthase, the enzyme that makes it. These enzymes are regulated
in a reciprocal fashion, with phosphorylation inhibiting glycogen
synthase, but activating phosphorylase. Insulin causes glycogen
synthesis by activating protein phosphatases and
producing a decrease in the phosphorylation of these enzymes.
Evolution
The central pathways of metabolism described above, such as glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, are present in all three domains of living things and were present in the last universal ancestor. The retention of these ancient pathways during later evolution may be the result of these reactions being an optimal solution to their particular metabolic problems, with pathways such as glycolysis and the citric acid cycle producing their end products highly efficiently and in a minimal number of steps.Many models have been proposed to describe the
mechanisms by which novel metabolic pathways evolve. These include
the sequential addition of novel enzymes to a short ancestral
pathway, the duplication and then divergence of entire pathways as
well as the recruitment of pre-existing enzymes and their assembly
into a novel reaction pathway. The relative importance of these
mechanisms is unclear, but genomic studies have shown that enzymes
in a pathway are likely to have a shared ancestry, suggesting that
many pathways have evolved in a step-by-step fashion with novel
functions being created from pre-existing steps in the pathway. An
alternative model comes from studies that trace the evolution of
proteins' structures in metabolic networks, this has suggested that
enzymes are pervasively recruited, borrowing enzymes to perform
similar functions in different metabolic pathways (evident in the
MANET
database) These recruitment processes result in an evolutionary
enzymatic mosaic. A third possibility is that some parts of
metabolism might exist as "modules" that can be reused in different
pathways and perform similar functions on different
molecules.
As well as the evolution of new metabolic
pathways, evolution can also cause the loss of metabolic functions.
For example, in some parasites metabolic processes
that are not essential for survival are lost and preformed amino
acids, nucleotides and carbohydrates may instead be scavenged from
the host.
Similar reduced metabolic capabilities are seen in endosymbiotic
organisms.
Investigation and manipulation
Classically, metabolism is studied by a reductionist approach that focuses on a single metabolic pathway. Particularly valuable is the use of radioactive tracers at the whole-organism, tissue and cellular levels, which define the paths from precursors to final products by identifying radioactively-labelled intermediates and products. The enzymes that catalyze these chemical reactions can then be purified and their kinetics and responses to inhibitors investigated. A parallel approach is to identify the small molecules in a cell or tissue; the complete set of these molecules is called the metabolome. Overall, these studies give a good view of the structure and function of simple metabolic pathways, but are inadequate when applied to more complex systems such as the metabolism of a complete cell.An idea of the complexity of the metabolic
networks in cells that contain thousands of different enzymes
is given by the figure showing the interactions between just 43
proteins and 40 metabolites to the right: the sequences of genomes
provide lists containing anything up to 45,000 genes. However, it
is now possible to use this genomic data to reconstruct complete
networks of biochemical reactions and produce more holistic
mathematical models that may explain and predict their behavior.
These models are especially powerful when used to integrate the
pathway and metabolite data obtained through classical methods with
data on gene
expression from proteomic and DNA
microarray studies. Using these techniques, a model of human
metabolism has now been produced, which will guide future drug
discovery and biochemical research.
A major technological application of this
information is metabolic
engineering. Here, organisms such as yeast, plants or bacteria are
genetically-modified to make them more useful in biotechnology and aid the
production of drugs such as
antibiotics or
industrial chemicals such as 1,3-propanediol
and shikimic
acid. These genetic modifications usually aim to reduce the
amount of energy used to produce the product, increase yields and
reduce the production of wastes.
History
The term metabolism is derived from the Greek Μεταβολισμός – "Metabolismos" for "change", or "overthrow". The history of the scientific study of metabolism spans several centuries and has moved from examining whole animals in early studies, to examining individual metabolic reactions in modern biochemistry. The concept of metabolism dates back to Ibn al-Nafis (1213-1288), who stated that "the body and its parts are in a continuous state of dissolution and nourishment, so they are inevitably undergoing permanent change." The first controlled experiments in human metabolism were published by Santorio Santorio in 1614 in his book Ars de statica medecina. He described how he weighed himself before and after eating, sleeping, working, sex, fasting, drinking, and excreting. He found that most of the food he took in was lost through what he called "insensible perspiration".In these early studies, the mechanisms of these
metabolic processes had not been identified and a vital force was thought to
animate living tissue. In the 19th century, when studying the
fermentation
of sugar to alcohol by
yeast, Louis
Pasteur concluded that fermentation was catalyzed by substances
within the yeast cells he called "ferments". He wrote that
"alcoholic fermentation is an act correlated with the life and
organization of the yeast cells, not with the death or putrefaction
of the cells." This discovery, along with the publication by
Friedrich
Wöhler in 1828 of the chemical synthesis of urea, proved that the organic
compounds and chemical reactions found in cells were no different
in principle than any other part of chemistry.
It was the discovery of enzymes at the beginning of the
20th century by Eduard
Buchner that separated the study of the chemical reactions of
metabolism from the biological study of cells, and marked the
beginnings of biochemistry. The mass of
biochemical knowledge grew rapidly throughout the early 20th
century. One of the most prolific of these modern biochemists was
Hans
Krebs who made huge contributions to the study of metabolism.
He discovered the urea cycle and later, working with Hans
Kornberg, the citric acid cycle and the glyoxylate cycle.
Modern biochemical research has been greatly aided by the
development of new techniques such as chromatography, X-ray
diffraction,
NMR spectroscopy, radioisotopic
labelling, electron
microscopy and molecular
dynamics simulations. These techniques have allowed the
discovery and detailed analysis of the many molecules and metabolic
pathways in cells.
See also
portalpar MetabolismReferences
Further reading
Introductory- and , The Chemistry of Life. (Penguin Press Science, 1999), ISBN 0-14027-273-9
- and , Into the Cool: Energy Flow, Thermodynamics, and Life. (University Of Chicago Press, 2005), ISBN 0-22673-936-8
- , Oxygen: The Molecule that Made the World. (Oxford University Press, USA, 2004), ISBN 0-19860-783-0
Advanced
- and , Fundamentals of Enzymology: Cell and Molecular Biology of Catalytic Proteins. (Oxford University Press, 1999), ISBN 0-19850-229-X
- and , Biochemistry. (W. H. Freeman and Company, 2002), ISBN 0-71674-955-6
- and , Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), ISBN 0-71674-339-6
- and , Brock's Biology of Microorganisms. (Benjamin Cummings, 2002), ISBN 0-13066-271-2
- and , The Biological Chemistry of the Elements: The Inorganic Chemistry of Life. (Clarendon Press, 1991), ISBN 0-19855-598-9
- and , Bioenergetics. (Academic Press Inc., 2002), ISBN 0-12518-121-3
External links
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Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
assimilation, avatar, basal metabolism,
catabolism, catalysis, consubstantiation,
displacement,
heterotopia,
metagenesis,
metamorphism,
metamorphosis,
metastasis, metathesis, metempsychosis, mutant, mutated form, mutation, permutation, reincarnation, sport, transanimation, transfiguration,
transfigurement,
transformation,
transformism,
translation,
translocation,
transmigration,
transmogrification,
transmutation,
transposition,
transubstantiation