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Metabolic_pathway


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In biochemistry, a metabolic pathway is a series of chemical reactions occurring within a cell. In each pathway, a principal chemical is modified by chemical reactions. Enzymes catalyze these reactions, and often require dietary minerals, vitamins and other cofactors in order to function properly. Because of the many chemicals that may be involved, pathways can be quite elaborate. In addition, many pathways can exist within a cell. This collection of pathways is called the metabolic network. Pathways are important to the maintenance of homeostasis within an organism.

Metabolism is a step by step modification of the initial molecule to shape it into another product. The result can be used in one of three ways.

  • Stored by the cell.
  • Be used immediately, as a metabolic product.
  • Initiate another metabolic pathway, called a flux generating step.

A molecule called a substrate enters a metabolic pathway depending on the needs of the cell and the availability of the substrate. An increase in concentration of anabolical and catabolical end products would slow the metabolic rate for that particular pathway.

Contents

Overview

Metabolic pathways are composed of a series of biochemical reactions that are connected by their intermediates: the reactants (or substrates) of one reaction are the products of the previous one, and so on. Metabolic pathways are usually considered in one direction (although all reactions are chemically reversible, conditions in the cell are such that it is thermodynamically more favorable for flux to be in one of the directions).

  • Glycolysis was the first metabolic pathway discovered:
  1. As glucose enters a cell it is immediately phosphorylated by ATP to glucose 6-phosphate in the irreversible first step. This is to prevent the glucose leaving the cell.
  2. In times of excess lipid or protein energy sources glycolysis may run in reverse (gluconeogenesis) in order to produce glucose 6-phosphate for storage as glycogen or starch.

Major metabolic pathways

Glucuronate metabolism

Pentose interconversion

Inositol metabolism

Cellulose and sucrose
metabolism

Starch and glycogen
metabolism

Other sugar
metabolism

Pentose phosphate pathway

Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis

Amino sugars metabolism

Small amino acid synthesis

Branched amino acid
synthesis

Purine biosynthesis

Histidine metabolism

Aromatic amino
acid synthesis

Pyruvate
decarboxylation

Anaerobic
respiration

Fatty acid
metabolism

Urea cycle

Aspartate amino acid
group synthesis

Porphyrins and
corrinoids
metabolism

Citric acid cycle

Glutamate amino
acid group
synthesis

Pyrimidine biosynthesis

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Cellular respiration

Main article: Cellular respiration

Several distinct but linked metabolic pathways are used by cells to transfer the energy released by breakdown of fuel molecules to ATP. These occur within all living organisms in some forms:

  1. Glycolysis
  2. Anaerobic respiration
  3. Krebs cycle / Citric acid cycle
  4. Oxidative phosphorylation

Other pathways occurring in (most or) all living organisms include:

Creation of energetic compounds from non-living matter:

See also

External links


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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