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Efnisyfirlit
- Cover image
- Title page
- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- Preface
- Faculty resources
- Part One: Principles of Molecular Structure and Function
- Chapter 1: Introduction to Biomolecules
- Water is the solvent of life
- Water contains hydronium ions and hydroxyl ions
- Ionizable groups are characterized by their pk values
- The blood pH is tightly regulated
- Acidosis and alkalosis are common in clinical practice
- Bonds are formed by reactions between functional groups
- Isomeric forms are common in biomolecules
- Properties of biomolecules are determined by their noncovalent interactions
- Triglycerides consist of fatty acids and glycerol
- Monosaccharides are polyalcohols with a keto group or an aldehyde group
- Monosaccharides form ring structures
- Complex carbohydrates are formed by glycosidic bonds
- Polypeptides are formed from amino acids
- Nucleic acids are formed from nucleotides
- Most biomolecules are polymers
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 2: Introduction to Protein Structure
- Amino acids are zwitterions
- Amino acid side chains form many noncovalent interactions
- Peptide bonds and disulfide bonds form the primary structure of proteins
- Proteins can fold themselves into many shapes
- α-helix and β-pleated sheet are the most common secondary structures in proteins
- Globular proteins have a hydrophobic core
- Proteins lose their biological activities when their higher-order structure is destroyed
- The solubility of proteins depends on pH and salt concentration
- Proteins absorb ultraviolet radiation
- Proteins can be separated by their charge or their molecular weight
- Abnormal protein aggregates can cause disease
- Neurodegenerative diseases are caused by protein aggregates
- Protein misfolding can be contagious
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 3: Oxygen-Binding Proteins: Hemoglobin and Myoglobin
- The heme group is the oxygen-binding site of hemoglobin and myoglobin
- Myoglobin is a tightly packed globular protein
- Red blood cells are specialized for oxygen transport
- The hemoglobins are tetrameric proteins
- Oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin have different quaternary structures
- Oxygen binding to hemoglobin is cooperative
- 2,3-Bisphosphoglycerate is a negative allosteric effector of oxygen binding to hemoglobin
- Fetal hemoglobin has a higher oxygen-binding affinity than does adult hemoglobin
- The Bohr effect facilitates oxygen delivery
- Most carbon dioxide is transported as bicarbonate
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 4: Enzymatic Reactions
- The equilibrium constant describes the equilibrium of the reaction
- The free energy change is the driving force for chemical reactions
- The standard free energy change determines the equilibrium
- Enzymes are both powerful and selective
- The substrate must bind to its enzyme before the reaction can proceed
- Rate constants are useful for describing reaction rates
- Enzymes decrease the free energy of activation
- Many enzymatic reactions can be described by michaelis-menten kinetics
- Km and vmax can be determined graphically
- Substrate half-life can be determined for first-order but not zero-order reactions
- Kcat/km predicts the enzyme activity at low substrate concentration
- Allosteric enzymes do not conform to michaelis-menten kinetics
- Enzyme activity depends on temperature and pH
- Different types of reversible enzyme inhibition can be distinguished kinetically
- Covalent modification can inhibit enzymes irreversibly
- Enzymes stabilize the transition state
- Chymotrypsin forms a transient covalent bond during catalysis
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 5: Coenzymes
- Enzymes are classified according to their reaction type
- Adenosine triphosphate has two energy-rich bonds
- ATP donates phosphate in phosphorylation reactions
- ATP hydrolysis drives endergonic reactions
- Cells always try to maintain a high energy charge
- Dehydrogenase reactions require specialized coenzymes
- Coenzyme a activates organic acids
- S-adenosyl methionine donates methyl groups
- Many enzymes require a metal ion
- Summary
- Questions
- Part Two: Genetic Information: DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis
- Chapter 6: DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis
- All living organisms use DNA as their genetic databank
- DNA contains four bases
- DNA forms a double helix
- DNA can be denatured
- DNA is supercoiled
- DNA replication is semiconservative
- DNA is synthesized by DNA polymerases
- DNA polymerases have exonuclease activities
- Unwinding proteins present a single-stranded template to the DNA polymerases
- One of the new DNA strands is synthesized discontinuously
- RNA plays key roles in gene expression
- The σ subunit recognizes promoters
- DNA is faithfully copied into RNA
- Some RNAs are chemically modified after transcription
- The genetic code defines the structural relationship between mRNA and polypeptide
- Transfer RNA is the adapter molecule in protein synthesis
- Amino acids are activated by an ester bond with the 3′ terminus of the tRNA
- Many transfer RNAs recognize more than one codon
- Ribosomes are the workbenches for protein synthesis
- The initiation complex brings together ribosome, messenger RNA, and initiator tRNA
- Polypeptides grow stepwise from the amino terminus to the carboxyl terminus
- Protein synthesis is energetically expensive
- Gene expression is tightly regulated
- A repressor protein regulates transcription of the lac operon in E. coli
- Anabolic operons are repressed by the end product of the pathway
- Glucose regulates the transcription of many catabolic operons
- Transcriptional regulation depends on DNA-binding proteins
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 7: The Human Genome
- Chromatin consists of DNA and histones
- The nucleosome is the structural unit of chromatin
- Covalent histone modifications regulate DNA replication and transcription
- DNA methylation silences genes
- All eukaryotic chromosomes have a centromere, telomeres, and replication origins
- Telomerase is required (but not sufficient) for immortality
- Eukaryotic DNA replication requires three DNA polymerases
- Most human DNA does not code for proteins
- Gene families originate by gene duplication
- The genome contains many tandem repeats
- Some DNA sequences are copies of functional RNAs
- Many repetitive DNA sequences are (or were) mobile
- L1 elements encode a reverse transcriptase
- ALU sequences spread with the help of L1 reverse transcriptase
- Mobile elements are dangerous
- Humans have approximately 20,000 genes
- Transcriptional initiation requires general transcription factors
- Genes are surrounded by regulatory sites
- Gene expression is regulated by DNA-binding proteins
- Long noncoding RNAs play roles in gene expression
- mRNA processing starts during transcription
- Translational initiation requires many initiation factors
- mRNA processing and translation are often regulated
- Small RNA molecules inhibit gene expression
- Mitochondria have their own DNA
- Human genomes are very diverse
- Human genomes have many low-frequency copy number variations
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 8: Protein Targeting and Proteostasis
- A signal sequence directs polypeptides to the endoplasmic reticulum
- Glycoproteins are processed in the secretory pathway
- The endocytic pathway brings proteins into the cell
- Lysosomes are organelles of intracellular digestion
- Autophagy recycles cellular proteins and organelles
- Poorly folded proteins are either repaired or destroyed
- Ubiquitin marks proteins for destruction
- The proteostatic system protects cells from abnormal proteins
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 9: Introduction to Genetic Diseases
- Four types of genetic disease
- Mutations occur in the germline and in somatic cells
- Mutations are an important cause of poor health
- Small mutations lead to abnormal proteins
- Most mutations are caused by replication errors
- Mutations can be induced by radiation and chemicals
- Mismatch repair corrects replication errors
- Missing bases and abnormal bases need to be replaced
- Nucleotide excision repair removes bulky lesions
- Repair of dna double-strand breaks is difficult
- Hemoglobin genes form two gene clusters
- Many point mutations in hemoglobin genes are known
- Sickle cell disease is caused by a point mutation in the β-chain gene
- SA heterozygotes are protected from tropical malaria
- α-thalassemia is most often caused by large deletions
- Many different mutations can cause β-thalassemia
- Fetal hemoglobin protects from the effects of β-thalassemia and sickle cell disease
- Polygenic diseases have multiple genetic risk factors
- Genetic risk factors are discovered in genome-wide association studies
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 10: Viruses
- Viruses can replicate only in a host cell
- Bacteriophage T4 destroys its host cell
- DNA viruses substitute their own DNA for the host cell DNA
- λ phage can integrate its DNA into the host cell chromosome
- RNA viruses require an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
- Retroviruses replicate through a DNA intermediate
- Plasmids are small “accessory chromosomes” or “symbiotic viruses” of bacteria
- Bacteria can exchange genes by transformation and transduction
- Jumping genes can change their position in the genome
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 11: DNA Technology
- Restriction endonucleases cut large DNA molecules into smaller fragments
- Large probes are used to detect copy number variations
- Small probes are used to detect point mutations
- Southern blotting determines the size of restriction fragments
- DNA can be amplified with the polymerase chain reaction
- PCR is used for preimplantation genetic diagnosis
- Allelic heterogeneity is the greatest challenge for molecular genetic diagnosis
- Normal polymorphisms are used as genetic markers
- Tandem repeats are used for DNA fingerprinting
- DNA microarrays can be used for genetic screening
- DNA microarrays are used for the study of gene expression
- DNA is sequenced by controlled chain termination
- Massively parallel sequencing permits cost-efficient whole-genome genetic diagnosis
- Gene therapy targets somatic cells
- Viruses are used as vectors for gene therapy
- Retroviruses can splice a transgene into the cell’s genome
- Genome editing is based on the making and healing of DNA double strand breaks
- Designer nucleases are used for genome editing
- Antisense oligonucleotides can block the expression of rogue genes
- Genes can be altered in animals
- Tissue-specific gene expression can be engineered into animals
- Human germline genome editing is technically possible
- Summary
- Questions
- Part Three: Cell and Tissue Structure
- Chapter 12: Biological Membranes
- Membranes consist of lipid and protein
- Phosphoglycerides are the most abundant membrane lipids
- Most sphingolipids are glycolipids
- Cholesterol is the most hydrophobic membrane lipid
- Membrane lipids form a bilayer
- The lipid bilayer is a two-dimensional fluid
- The lipid bilayer is a diffusion barrier
- Membranes contain integral and peripheral membrane proteins
- Membranes are asymmetrical
- Membranes are fragile
- Membrane proteins carry solutes across the lipid bilayer
- Transport against an electrochemical gradient requires metabolic energy
- Active transport consumes ATP
- Sodium cotransport brings molecules into the cell
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 13: The Cytoskeleton
- The erythrocyte membrane is reinforced by a spectrin network
- Keratins give strength to epithelia
- Actin filaments are formed from globular subunits
- Striated muscle contains thick and thin filaments
- Myosin is a two-headed molecule with ATPase activity
- Muscle contraction requires calcium and ATP
- The cytoskeleton of skeletal muscle is linked to the extracellular matrix
- Microtubules consist of tubulin
- Eukaryotic cilia and flagella contain a 9 + 2 array of microtubules
- Cells form specialized junctions with other cells and with the extracellular matrix
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 14: The Extracellular Matrix
- Collagen is the most abundant protein in the human body
- The tropocollagen molecule forms a long triple helix
- Collagen fibrils are staggered arrays of tropocollagen molecules
- Collagen is subject to extensive posttranslational processing
- Collagen metabolism is altered in aging and disease
- Many genetic defects of collagen structure and biosynthesis are known
- Elastic fibers contain elastin and fibrillin
- The amorphous ground substance contains hyaluronic acid
- Sulfated glycosaminoglycans are covalently bound to core proteins
- Cartilage contains large proteoglycan aggregates
- Proteoglycans are synthesized in the er and degraded in lysosomes
- Mucopolysaccharidoses are caused by deficiency of glycosaminoglycan-degrading enzymes
- Bone consists of calcium phosphates in a collagenous matrix
- Basement membranes contain type iv collagen, laminin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans
- Fibronectin glues cells and collagen fibers together
- Summary
- Questions
- Part Four: Molecular Physiology
- Chapter 15: Extracellular Messengers
- Steroid hormones are made from cholesterol
- Progestins are the biosynthetic precursors of all other steroid hormones
- Thyroid hormones are synthesized from protein-bound tyrosine
- T4 becomes activated to T3 in the target tissues
- Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism are common disorders
- Insulin is released together with the C-peptide
- Proopiomelanocortin forms several active products
- Angiotensin is formed from circulating angiotensinogen
- Immunoassays are used for determination of hormone levels
- Catecholamines are synthesized from tyrosine
- Indoleamines are synthesized from tryptophan
- Histamine is produced by mast cells and basophils
- Neurotransmitters are released at synapses
- Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter of the neuromuscular junction
- There are many neurotransmitters
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 16: Intracellular Messengers
- Receptor-hormone interactions are noncovalent, reversible, and saturable
- Many neurotransmitter receptors are ion channels
- Steroid and thyroid hormones bind to transcription factors
- Seven-transmembrane receptors are coupled to G proteins
- Adenylate cyclase is regulated by G proteins
- Hormones can both activate and inhibit the camp cascade
- Cytoplasmic calcium is an important intracellular signal
- Phospholipase C generates two second messengers
- Both camp and calcium regulate gene transcription
- Muscle contraction and exocytosis are triggered by calcium
- Atrial natriuretic factor acts through a membrane-bound guanylate cyclase
- Nitric oxide stimulates a soluble guanylate cyclase
- cGMP is a second messenger in retinal rod cells
- Receptors for insulin and growth factors are tyrosine-specific protein kinases
- Growth factors and insulin trigger multiple signaling cascades
- Cytokine receptors use the JAK-STAT pathway
- Many receptors become desensitized after overstimulation
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 17: Plasma Proteins
- Plasma proteins are both synthesized and destroyed in the liver
- Albumin prevents edema
- Albumin binds many small molecules
- Some plasma proteins are specialized carriers of small molecules
- Deficiency of α1-antitrypsin causes lung emphysema
- Levels of plasma proteins are affected by many diseases
- Blood components are used for transfusions
- Blood clotting must be tightly controlled
- Platelets adhere to exposed subendothelial tissue
- Insoluble fibrin is formed from soluble fibrinogen
- Thrombin is derived from prothrombin
- Factor X can be activated by the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways
- Negative controls are necessary to prevent thrombosis
- Plasmin degrades the fibrin clot
- Heparin and vitamin K antagonists are used as anticoagulants
- Clotting factor deficiencies cause abnormal bleeding
- Tissue damage causes release of cellular enzymes into blood
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 18: Defense Mechanisms
- Lipophilic xenobiotics are metabolized to water-soluble products
- Cytochrome P-450 is involved in phase I metabolism
- Phase II metabolism makes xenobiotics water-soluble for excretion
- Phase III metabolism excretes xenobiotic metabolites
- Drug-metabolizing enzymes are inducible
- The innate immune system uses pattern recognition receptors
- Infection triggers inflammation
- Lymphocytes possess antigen receptors
- B Lymphocytes produce immunoglobulins
- Antibodies consist of two light chains and two heavy chains
- Different immunoglobulin classes have different properties
- Adaptive immune responses are based on clonal selection
- Immunoglobulin genes are rearranged during B-cell development
- The T-cell receptor recruits cytosolic tyrosine protein kinases
- Mediators of inflammation are produced from arachidonic acid
- Prostaglandins are synthesized in all tissues
- Prostanoids participate in many physiological processes
- Leukotrienes are produced by the lipoxygenase pathway
- Antiinflammatory drugs inhibit the synthesis of eicosanoids
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 19: Cellular Growth Control and Cancer
- The cell cycle is controlled at checkpoints
- Cells can be grown in culture
- Cyclins play key roles in cell cycle control
- Retinoblastoma protein guards the G1 checkpoint
- Cell proliferation is triggered by mitogens
- Mitogens regulate gene expression
- Cells can commit suicide
- Cancers are monoclonal in origin
- Cancer is caused by activation of growth-promoting genes and inactivation of growth-inhibiting genes
- Some retroviruses contain an oncogene
- Retroviruses can cause cancer by inserting themselves next to a cellular proto-oncogene
- Many oncogenes code for components of mitogenic signaling cascades
- Cancer susceptibility syndromes are caused by inherited mutations in tumor suppressor genes
- Many tumor suppressor genes are known
- Components of the cell cycle machinery are abnormal in most cancers
- DNA Damage causes either growth arrest or apoptosis
- Most spontaneous cancers are defective in p53 action
- The PI3K/protein kinase B pathway is activated in many cancers
- The products of some viral oncogenes neutralize the products of cellular tumor suppressor genes
- Tumors become more malignant through darwinian selection
- Intestinal polyps are benign lesions
- Intestinal polyps can evolve into colon cancer
- Summary
- Questions
- Part Five: Metabolism
- Chapter 20: Digestive Enzymes
- Saliva contains α-amylase and lysozyme
- Protein and fat digestion start in the stomach
- The pancreas is a factory for digestive enzymes
- Fat digestion requires bile salts
- Some digestive enzymes are anchored to the surface of the microvilli
- Poorly digestible nutrients cause flatulence
- Many digestive enzymes are released as inactive precursors
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 21: Introduction to Metabolic Pathways
- Alternative substrates can be oxidized in the body
- Metabolic processes are compartmentalized
- Free energy changes in metabolic pathways are additive
- Most metabolic pathways are regulated
- Feedback inhibition and feedforward stimulation are the most important regulatory principles
- Metabolism is regulated to ensure homeostasis
- Inherited enzyme deficiencies cause metabolic diseases
- Vitamin deficiencies, toxins, and endocrine disorders can disrupt metabolic pathways
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 22: Glycolysis, Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle, and Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Glucose uptake into the cells is regulated
- Glucose degradation begins in the cytoplasm and ends in the mitochondria
- Glycolysis begins with ATP-dependent phosphorylations
- Most glycolytic intermediates have three carbons
- Phosphofructokinase is the most important regulated enzyme of glycolysis
- Lactate is produced under anaerobic conditions
- Pyruvate is decarboxylated to acetyl-CoA in the mitochondria
- The TCA cycle produces two molecules of carbon dioxide for each acetyl residue
- Reduced coenzymes are the most important products of the TCA cycle
- Oxidative pathways are regulated by energy charge and [NADH]/[NAD+] ratio
- The TCA cycle provides a pool of metabolic intermediates
- Antiporters transport metabolites across the inner mitochondrial membrane
- The respiratory chain channels electrons from NADH and FADH2 to molecular oxygen
- The standard reduction potential is the tendency to donate electrons
- The respiratory chain contains flavoproteins, iron-sulfur proteins, cytochromes, ubiquinone, and protein-bound copper
- The respiratory chain contains large multiprotein complexes
- The respiratory chain creates a proton gradient
- The proton gradient drives ATP synthesis
- The efficiency of glucose oxidation is close to 40%
- Oxidative phosphorylation is limited by the supply of ADP
- Brown adipose tissue contains an uncoupling protein
- Mutations in mitochondrial DNA can cause disease
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 23: Oxygen Deficiency and Oxygen Toxicity
- Ischemia leads to infarction
- Oxidative phosphorylation is inhibited by many poisons
- Hypoxia inducible factor adjusts cell metabolism to hypoxia
- Reactive oxygen derivatives are formed during oxidative metabolism
- The respiratory chain is a major source of superoxide
- Cells have specialized enzymes to destroy reactive oxygen species
- Free radical formation is affected by energy supply and energy consumption
- Some vitamins and phytochemicals can scavEnge free radicals
- The NRF2 transcription factor coordinates defenses against reactive oxygen species
- Phagocytic cells use reactive oxygen species for intracellular killing
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 24: Carbohydrate Metabolism
- An adequate blood glucose level must be maintained at all times
- Gluconeogenesis bypasses the three irreversible reactions of glycolysis
- Fatty acids cannot be converted into glucose
- Glycolysis and gluconeogenesis are regulated by hormones
- Glycolysis and gluconeogenesis are fine tuned by allosteric effectors and hormone-induced enzyme phosphorylations
- Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate switches the liver from gluconeogenesis to glycolysis
- Glucokinase is regulated by two regulatory proteins
- Carbohydrate is stored as glycogen
- Glycogen is synthesized from glucose
- Glycogen is degraded by phosphorolytic cleavage
- Glycogen metabolissm is regulated by hormones and metabolites
- Glycogen accumulates in several enzyme deficiencies
- Fructose is channeled into glycolysis/gluconeogenesis
- Excess fructose is problematic
- Excess galactose is channeled into the pathways of glucose metabolism
- The pentose phosphate pathway supplies NADPH and ribose-5-phosphate
- Fructose is the principal sugar in seminal fluid
- Amino sugars and sugar acids are made from glucose
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 25: The Metabolism of Fatty Acids and Triglycerides
- Fatty acids differ in chain length and number of double bonds
- Chylomicrons transport triglycerides from the intestine to other tissues
- Adipose tissue is specialized for the storage of triglycerides
- Fat metabolism in adipose tissue is under hormonal control
- Fatty acids are transported into the mitochondrion
- β-Oxidation produces acetyl-CoA, NADH, and FADH2
- Special fatty acids require special reactions
- The liver converts excess fatty acids to ketone bodies
- Fatty acids are synthesized from acetyl-CoA
- Acetyl-CoA is shuttled into the cytoplasm as citrate
- Fatty acid synthesis is regulated by hormones and metabolites
- AMP-Activated protein kinase adapts metabolic pathways to cellular energy status
- Most fatty acids can be synthesized from palmitate
- Fatty acids regulate gene expression
- Polyunsaturated fatty acids can be oxidized nonenzymatically
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 26: The Metabolism of Membrane Lipids
- Phosphatidic acid is an intermediate in phosphoglyceride synthesis
- Phosphoglycerides are remodeled continuously
- Sphingolipids are synthesized from ceramide
- Deficiencies of sphingolipid-degrading enzymes cause lipid storage diseases
- Cholesterol is the least soluble membrane lipid
- Cholesterol is derived from both endogenous synthesis and the diet
- Cholesterol biosynthesis is regulated at the level of HMG-CoA reductase
- Bile acids are synthesized from cholesterol
- Bile acids are subject to extensive enterohepatic circulation
- Most gallstones consist of cholesterol
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 27: Lipid Transport
- Most plasma lipids are components of lipoproteins
- Lipoproteins have characteristic lipid and protein compositions
- Dietary lipids are transported by chylomicrons
- VLDL is a precursor of LDL
- LDL is removed by receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Cholesterol regulates its own metabolism
- HDL is needed for reverse cholesterol transport
- Lipoproteins can initiate atherosclerosis
- Lipoproteins respond to diet and lifestyle
- Hyperlipoproteinemias are grouped into five phenotypes
- Hyperlipidemias are treated with diet and drugs
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 28: Amino Acid Metabolism
- Amino acids can be used for gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis
- The nitrogen balance indicates the net rate of protein synthesis
- The amino group of amino acids is released as ammonia
- Ammonia is detoxified to urea
- Urea is synthesized in the urea cycle
- Hyperammonemia can be treated with diet and drugs
- Some amino acids are closely related to common metabolic intermediates
- Glycine, serine, and threonine are glucogenic
- Proline, arginine, ornithine, and histidine are degraded to glutamate
- Methionine and cysteine are metabolically related
- Valine, leucine, and isoleucine are degraded by transamination and oxidative decarboxylation
- Phenylalanine and tyrosine are both glucogenic and ketogenic
- Melanin is synthesized from tyrosine
- Lysine and tryptophan have lengthy catabolic pathways
- The liver is the most important organ of amino acid metabolism
- Glutamine participates in renal acid-base regulation
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 29: Metabolism of Iron and Heme
- Iron is conserved very efficiently in the body
- Iron uptake by cells is regulated
- Dietary iron is absorbed in the duodenum
- Iron deficiency is the most common micronutrient deficiency worldwide
- Bone marrow and liver are the most important sites of heme synthesis
- Heme is synthesized from succinyl-CoA and glycine
- Porphyrias are caused by deficiencies of heme-synthesizing enzymes
- Heme is degraded to bilirubin
- Bilirubin is conjugated and excreted by the liver
- Elevations of serum bilirubin cause jaundice
- Many diseases can cause jaundice
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 30: The Metabolism of Purines and Pyrimidines
- Purine synthesis starts with ribose-5-phosphate
- Purines are degraded to uric acid
- Free purine bases can be salvaged
- Pyrimidines are synthesized from carbamoyl phosphate and aspartate
- DNA synthesis requires deoxyribonucleotides
- Many antineoplastic drugs inhibit nucleotide metabolism
- Uric acid has limited water solubility
- Hyperuricemia causes gout
- Abnormalities of purine-metabolizing enzymes can cause gout
- Gout can be treated with drugs
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 31: Micronutrients
- Riboflavin is a precursor of flavin mononucleotide and flavin adenine dinucleotide
- Niacin is a precursor of NAD and NADP
- Thiamine deficiency causes weakness and amnesia
- Vitamin B6 plays a key role in amino acid metabolism
- Pantothenic acid is a building block of coenzyme A
- Biotin is a coenzyme in carboxylation reactions
- Folic acid deficiency causes megaloblastic anemia
- Vitamin B12 requires intrinsic factor for its absorption
- Vitamin C is a water-soluble antioxidant
- Retinol, retinal, and retinoic acid are the active forms of vitamin A
- Vitamin D is a prohormone
- Vitamin E prevents lipid oxidation
- Many vitamins and phytochemicals are antioxidants
- Vitamin K is required for blood clotting
- Zinc is a constituent of many enzymes
- Copper participates in reactions of molecular oxygen
- Some trace elements serve very specific functions
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 32: Integration of Metabolism
- Insulin is released in response to elevated glucose
- Insulin stimulates the utilization of nutrients
- Protein synthesis is coordinated by the mTOR complex
- Glucagon maintains the blood glucose level
- Catecholamines mediate the flight-or-fight response
- Glucocorticoids are released in chronic stress
- Energy is expended continuously
- Stored fat and glycogen are degraded between meals
- Adipose tissue is the most important energy depot
- The liver converts dietary carbohydrates to glycogen and fat after a meal
- The liver maintains the blood glucose level during fasting
- Ketone bodies provide lipid-based energy during fasting
- Obesity is common in all affluent countries
- Appetite control is the most important determinant of obesity
- Obesity is related to insulin resistance
- Diabetes is caused by insulin deficiency or insulin resistance
- In diabetes, metabolism is regulated as in starvation
- Diabetes is diagnosed with laboratory tests
- Diabetes leads to late complications
- Many drugs are available for diabetes treatment
- Contracting muscle has three energy sources
- Physical exercise leads to adaptive changes
- Ethanol is metabolized to acetyl-CoA in the liver
- Liver metabolism is deranged by alcohol
- Alcohol abuse leads to fatty liver and liver cirrhosis
- Most “diseases of civilization” are caused by aberrant lifestyles
- Aging is the greatest challenge for medical research
- Antiaging treatments are being investigated
- Summary
- Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 32
- Glossary
- Credits
- Index
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