Human Metabolism. Keith N. Frayn

Human Metabolism - Keith N. Frayn


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to encapsulate the general principle of these types of reaction – i.e. the transfer of electrons. Oxidation can be thought of as the process of losing electrons, and reduction as gaining electrons (in an analogous fashion to regarding acids as proton (H+) donors and bases as proton acceptors). Implicit in gaining an electron is gaining energy, hence reduction actually involves achieving an enhanced energy status. This may sound counter-intuitive as the word ‘reduction’ implies diminution, but if one considers that chemically it refers to gaining a negatively charged entity (an electron, e) then this aids understanding. Oxidation and reduction occur simultaneously in a reaction as an electron is transferred, and these reactions are therefore called redox reactions. Following on from this, oxidising agents are substances that are relatively electron poor and can gain electrons (indeed, they attract electrons) causing oxidation (electron loss) in another substance, but becoming themselves reduced, becoming electron- enriched. The partner substance, a reducing agent, is electron- (and hence energy-) rich and donates an electron (to the electron acceptor – the oxidising agent) and hence reduces it, becoming itself oxidised: see Box 1.2.

      Oxygen is a powerful oxidising agent (the word ‘oxidising’ derives from oxygen) and is used in metabolism as an electron acceptor. Hydrogen is the reducing agent in many biological reactions and hence reduction could be termed ‘hydrogenation’ although this term has a specific meaning in chemistry, referring to the addition of hydrogen.

      Oxidation and reduction are characterised by a change in the oxidation state of the atoms involved. The oxidation state is the (theoretical) charge (its electron status or ‘count’) that an atom would have if all its bonds were entirely ionic (not true in practice due to covalent bonding) – hence oxidation state denotes the degree of oxidation of an atom; it may be positive, zero, or negative, and an increase in oxidation state during a reaction denotes oxidation of the atom, whilst a decrease denotes reduction, both resulting from electron transfer. The tendency of an atom to attract electrons to itself (i.e. to act as an oxidising agent) is denoted by its electronegativity, and is partly a function of the distribution of its own (valence) electrons; by contrast, the tendency of an atom to donate electrons (i.e. to act as a reducing agent) is denoted by its electropositivity.

      The chemically usable energy in a biomolecule which is a metabolic substrate is therefore present in the form of electrons, and therefore electron-rich molecules will be energy-rich and serve as good energy sources for metabolism. All three major metabolic substrate groups – carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins – contain these electrons in association with carbon-hydrogen (C–H) bonds. They can all be thought of as reduced (electron-rich) carbon (as found in wood, coal, house gas, and heating oil). In energy-yielding metabolism they act as reducing agents, donating these electrons to an electron acceptor, and ultimately themselves getting oxidised (the carbon ending up fully oxidised as CO2 and the hydrogen as H2O). The ultimate electron acceptor (oxidising agent) is, of course, oxygen.

      e.g.

      The redox state of a cell refers to the proportion of these intermediary electron carriers that are in the reduced (high energy) state compared to those in the oxidised (low energy) form: the NAD+: NADH ratio for example provides an estimate of the energetic ‘charge’ (potential) contained within the cell (in an analogous fashion to the phosphorylation potential denoting the amount of adenine nucleotide in the form of ATP) – it is for this reason that many metabolic pathways are regulated not only by the phosphorylation potential ([ATP]: [ADP] and [AMP]) but, as we are increasingly recognising, also by the redox potential (NAD+: NADH; NADP+:NADPH).

      1.2.2 The chemical characteristics of macronutrients

      1.2.2.1 Carbohydrates

      Simple carbohydrates have the empirical formula Cn(H2O)n; complex carbohydrates have an empirical formula which is similar to this (e.g. Cn(H2O)0.8n). The name carbohydrate reflects the idea, based on this empirical formula, that these compounds are hydrates of carbon. It is not strictly correct but illustrates an important point about this group of compounds – the relative abundance of hydrogen and oxygen, in proportions similar to those in water, in their molecules. From the discussion above, it will be apparent that carbohydrates are mostly relatively polar molecules, miscible with, or soluble in, water. Carbohydrates in nature include the plant products starch and cellulose and the mammalian storage carbohydrate glycogen (‘animal starch’), as well as various simple sugars, of which glucose is the most important from the point of view of human metabolism. The main source of carbohydrate we eat is the starch in vegetables such as potatoes, rice, and grains.


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