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Metabolism

Metabolism. Chapters 5-7. Metabolism. Sum of all chemical reactions occurring in a living organism Energy Conversion Chemical energy → (Electrical or Mechanical Energy) → Heat Material Conversion Catabolism - break down of complex substances Anabolism - build up of complex substances.

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Metabolism

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  1. Metabolism Chapters 5-7

  2. Metabolism • Sum of all chemical reactions occurring in a living organism • Energy Conversion Chemical energy → (Electrical or Mechanical Energy) → Heat • Material Conversion • Catabolism - break down of complex substances • Anabolism - build up of complex substances

  3. Uses of Energy • Biosynthesis • Replacing body structures • Growth • Reproduction • Storage (Fat, Glycogen) • Exported Materials • Maintenance (homeostasis) • External Work (e.g, movement)

  4. Energy Metabolism • Law of Entropy(2nd Law of Thermodynamics) • all metabolic processes involve a loss of free energy (organized energy  disorganized energy) • Animals require a constant input of organized energy (organic chemical bonds) • All energy involved in metabolism is eventually lost in the form of heat Fig 5.1

  5. Energy Metabolism • Energy usage by an organism • Rate at which organized energy is converted into heat • Calculation of Metabolic Rate • Direct calorimetry • measure heat production (kJ or Cal) • Indirect calorimetry • measure chemical changes • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (673 Cal, 2820 kJ) Fig 5.4, Box 5.4

  6. Indirect Calorimetry:Oxygen Consumption • Almost synonymous w/ metabolism • NOTE: only indicates energy usage through aerobic respiration • Accurate measure of energy expenditure through aerobic respiration • Roughly equal heat generation per liter O2 by carbohydrates, fats and proteins Table 5.1

  7. Indirect Calorimetry: Carbon Dioxide Production • Amount of CO2 formed does not always equal amount of O2 consumed • Respiratory Quotient (RQ) • Amt CO2 produced/O2 consumed • Varies for different energy sources Table 5.2

  8. O2 vs. CO2 • CO2 production is not as effective a measure of energy metabolism as O2 consumption • Energy yield per ml CO2 produced varies greatly • CO2 production can change easily through non-metabolic processes • e.g. hyperventilation

  9. What Affects Metabolic Rate? • Physical Activity • Environmental Temperature • Digestive Processing (Specific Dynamic Action) • Body Size • Age • Gender • Endocrine Activity • Circadian Rhythms • Aquatic Salinity (Osmoregulation) Fig 5.5

  10. Measuring “Apples and Apples” Metabolic Rate • Define physiological conditions under which metabolism is measured • Basal metabolic rate (BMR) – homeotherms • Temperature in thermal neutral zone • Fasting • Resting • Standard metabolic rate (SMR) – poikilotherms • Fasting • Resting

  11. Metabolism and Body Size • Kleiber’s Rule • For eutherian mammals • Oxygen Consumption (VO2) = 0.676(Mass)0.75 • Specific Oxygen Consumption (VO2/kg) = 0.676(Mass)-0.25 • Small animals have relatively higher metabolic rates • E.g. shrews have 100x the per-gram VO2 as an elephant Figs 5.6-5.10

  12. Metabolism and Body Size • Marsupial Mammals • VO2 = 0.409(Mass)0.75 • Passerine Birds • VO2 = 1.11(Mass)0.72 • Non-Passerine Birds • VO2 = 0.679(Mass)0.72 • Other Organisms • Ectothermic vertebrates • Invertebrates • Protozoa • Plants

  13. Why Does Metabolic Rate Scale to Mass0.75? • Max Rubner – study on dogs • Small and large dogs have same body temperature • Heat must be produced in relation to heat loss • Heat production per square m2 surface area equal in small and large dogs • Large dogs have relatively lower surface areas • Rubner’s Surface Rule • Metabolic rate (heat production)  surface area

  14. What’s Wrong With This? • If metabolism was directly related to scaling of heat loss, it should scale to Mass0.67 • If related to heat generation and body temperature maintenance, why is it seen in ectothermic organisms?

  15. Why Does Metabolic Rate Scale to Mass0.75? • O2 delivery mechanisms function  Mass0.75 • Lung Ventilation  Mass0.75 • Lung Volume  Mass1.0 • Breathing Rate  Mass-0.25 • Cardiac Output  Mass0.75 • Heart Mass  Mass1.0 • Heart Rate  Mass-0.25 • Do these cause metabolism’s scaling, or does metabolism cause their scaling?

  16. Why Does Metabolic Rate Scale to Mass0.75? • West et al. model- space filling fractal model • Biological distribution networks have a fractal design (branching) • Delivery of volumes of material to tissues approximated as spheres • Account for number of branchings needed to fill a given body volume (mass) , change in diameter, and delivery, flow to tissues α mass0.75 • Supply limitation Fig 5.12a

  17. Why Does Metabolic Rate Scale to Mass0.75? • Darveau et al. model- allometric cascade • Overall MR = Σ various contributors to ATP turnover (materials supply and energetic demand) • b = Σ scaling exponents of these contributors • Scaling differs depending upon particular biochemical and physiological pathways activated • e.g., SMR - scaling dominated by demand (ATP usage) • e.g., MMR - both supply and demand influence scaling (O2 delivery vs. ATP usage) Fig 5.12b

  18. Other Explanations • Related to the noncoding DNA content of cells (Koslowski et al. 2003) • Larger organisms have more noncoding DNA • More noncoding DNA produces larger cells • Larger cells have relatively lower MR • Mitochondrial function (Porter 2001) • Relatively less inner mitochondrial membrane surface in the cells of larger animals • Less ATP turnover • Less proton leak

  19. Why Does Metabolic Rate Scale to Mass0.75? ?

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