catabolism
Biology
(noun)
destructive metabolism, usually including the release of energy and breakdown of materials
(noun)
the breakdown of large molecules into smaller ones usually accompanied by the release of energy
Microbiology
(noun)
Destructive metabolism, usually includes the release of energy and breakdown of materials.
Physiology
(noun)
The destructive metabolism, usually including the release of energy and breakdown of materials.
Examples of catabolism in the following topics:
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Catabolic-Anabolic Steady State
- Catabolic reactions that break complex molecules provide the energy needed by anabolic reactions to produce complex molecules.
- Anabolism is the opposite of catabolism.
- Catabolism is a "downhill" process where energy is released as the organism uses up energy.
- Anabolism and catabolism must be regulated to avoid the two processes occurring simultaneously.
- Catabolic hormones include adrenaline, cortisol and glucagon.
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Metabolic Pathways
- An anabolic pathway requires energy and builds molecules while a catabolic pathway produces energy and breaks down molecules.
- The second process produces energy and is referred to as catabolic.
- Some catabolic pathways can capture that energy to produce ATP, the molecule used to power all cellular processes.
- Other energy-storing molecules, such as lipids, are also broken down through similar catabolic reactions to release energy and make ATP.
- Catabolic pathways are those that generate energy by breaking down larger molecules.
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Connecting Lipids to Glucose Metabolism
- Lipids can be both made and broken down through parts of the glucose catabolism pathways.
- Like sugars and amino acids, the catabolic pathways of lipids are also connected to the glucose catabolism pathways.
- Triglycerides can be both made and broken down through parts of the glucose catabolism pathways.
- Fatty acids are catabolized in a process called beta-oxidation that takes place in the matrix of the mitochondria and converts their fatty acid chains into two carbon units of acetyl groups, while producing NADH and FADH2.
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Types of Catabolism
- Catabolism is the set of metabolic processes that break down large molecules.
- Catabolism is the set of metabolic processes that break down large molecules.
- Carbohydrate catabolism is the breakdown of carbohydrates into smaller units.
- A simplified outline of the catabolism of proteins, carbohydrates and fats
- Summarize various types of catabolism included in metabolism (catabolism of carbohydrates, proteins and fats)
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Connecting Other Sugars to Glucose Metabolism
- Sugars, such as galactose, fructose, and glycogen, are catabolized into new products in order to enter the glycolytic pathway.
- You have learned about the catabolism of glucose, which provides energy to living cells.
- Like sugars and amino acids, the catabolic pathways of lipids are also connected to the glucose catabolism pathways.
- The catabolism of both fructose and galactose produces the same number of ATP molecules as glucose.
- The catabolism of sucrose breaks it down to monomers of glucose and fructose.
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Connecting Proteins to Glucose Metabolism
- Excess amino acids are converted into molecules that can enter the pathways of glucose catabolism.
- They can be broken down into their constituent amino acids and used at various steps of the pathway of glucose catabolism.
- However, if there are excess amino acids, or if the body is in a state of starvation, some amino acids will be shunted into the pathways of glucose catabolism.
- For example, deaminated asparagine and aspartate are converted into oxaloacetate and enter glucose catabolism in the citric acid cycle.
- Several amino acids can enter glucose catabolism at multiple locations.
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Benzoate Catabolism
- Benzoate catabolism is a series of chemical reactions resulting in the breakdown of benzoate.
- Strains of Rhodococcus are applicably important owing to their ability to catabolize a wide range of compounds and produce bioactive steroids, acrylamide, and acrylic acid, and their involvement in fossil fuel biodesulfurization.
- This genetic and catabolic diversity is not only due to the large bacterial chromosome, but also to the presence of three large linear plasmids.
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ATP Yield
- The amount of energy (as ATP) gained from glucose catabolism varies across species and depends on other related cellular processes.
- The number of ATP molecules generated via the catabolism of glucose can vary substantially.
- Glucose catabolism connects with the pathways that build or break down all other biochemical compounds in cells, but the result is not always ideal.
- Overall, in living systems, these pathways of glucose catabolism extract about 34 percent of the energy contained in glucose.
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Control of Catabolic Pathways
- Catabolic pathways are controlled by enzymes, proteins, electron carriers, and pumps that ensure that the remaining reactions can proceed.
- The pyruvate produced can proceed to be catabolized or converted into the amino acid alanine.
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The Entner–Doudoroff Pathway
- The Entner–Doudoroff pathway is an alternate series of reactions that catabolize glucose to pyruvate.
- The Entner–Doudoroff pathway describes an alternate series of reactions that catabolize glucose to pyruvate using a set of enzymes different from those used in either glycolysis or the pentose phosphate pathway .