catabolism
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
catabolism , subdivision of metabolism involving all degradative chemical reactions in the living cell. Large polymeric molecules such as polysaccharides, nucleic acids, and proteins are first split into their constituent monomeric units, such as amino acids, after which the monomers themselves can be broken down into such simple cellular metabolites as lactic acid, acetic acid, carbon dioxide, ammonia, and urea. The first set of reactions provides the cell with monomers with which it can construct new polymeric molecules. The second set of reactions usually involves the process of oxidation and is accompanied by a release of chemical free energy, not all of which is lost as heat, but is partially conserved through the coupled synthesis of adenosine triphosphate . The hydrolysis of this compound is subsequently used to drive almost every energy-requiring reaction in the cell. Thus catabolism also provides the source of chemical energy necessary for the maintenance of the living cell.
Author not available, CATABOLISM.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Living Cell to do world first trial for type one diabetics
AAP General News (Australia); 1/31/2007; 137 words
; Living Cell to do world first trial for type one diabetics A world-first trial by an Australian company could see pigs offering new hope for suffers of type one diabetes. Australian biotechnology company Living Cell Technologies is trialling a transplant of its porcine pancreatic cell product
Read more
|
|
z IN BRIEF Having PIE and saving too.
New Zealand Herald (Auckland, New Zealand); 6/4/2008; 427 words
; Kiwibank yesterday launched new savings accounts that will allow some savers to take advantage of the Portfolio Investment Entities (PIE) legislation that limits tax on interest to 30 per cent. With conventional accounts, tax on interest is 33 per cent or 39 per cent depending on the customer's
Read more
|
|
NZ pioneer brings cure for diabetes a step closer.(NEWS)
New Zealand Herald (Auckland, New Zealand); 12/15/2006; 617 words
; Byline: Martin Johnston health reporter Ground-breaking Auckland medical scientist Bob Elliott has devised a revolutionary treatment to prevent Type 1 diabetes. The experimental treatment has been used only in mice, but it has produced good results. If these continue, trials on people could start
Read more
|
|
NSW: Living Cell to do world first trial for type one diabetics
AAP General News (Australia); 1/30/2007; 374 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 01-30-2007 NSW: Living Cell to do world first trial for type one diabetics By Justine Turner SYDNEY, Jan 30 AAP - A ...
Read more
|
|
Human guinea pigs for NZ diabetes trial.(FRONT PAGE)
New Zealand Herald (Auckland, New Zealand); 1/30/2007; 599 words
; Byline: Martin Johnston health reporter A breakthrough New Zealand pig-cell transplant therapy that could transform the treatment of type-1 diabetes has been given the go-ahead for trials in humans. But it is Russia, not New Zealand, that has approved the first clinical trial of the treatment,
Read more
|
|
Detecting exposure to chemicals
Resource; 7/1/1998; Anonymous; 270 words
; A microspic sensor that can determine the inner workings of a living cell was recently unveiled at the Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy in New Orleans. The sensor could find wide use in the laboratory and may someday detect signs of human exposure to biological
Read more
|
|
Disk-Covery
Jerusalem Post; 11/15/2002; Judy Siegel-Itzkovich; 1284 words
; ... the launcher propels the enemy back to where they come from. You also try to collect drachma coins lying around so you can buy maps and other necessary objects for Avner. The Greeks are fair game for transfer out of the city, but the Hellenists - who speak ...
Read more
|
|
Virus alert
New Straits Times; 1/26/2005; 443 words
; New Straits Times 01-26-2005 Virus alert Edition: 2* HAVE you ever had a cold or a sore throat? Have you stopped and thought about how you got it? Usually, illnesses are caused by really tiny creatures that enter your body from the air, water, food and other ways. Some of these creatures are called
Read more
|
|
Skin clarifier.(Marketplace)
Plastic Surgery Products; 1/1/2006; 123 words
; Packed with hydrating, pure, and fresh botanicals, Living Cell Clarifier by GlyMed Plus protects living skin cells against free radical invasion and inflammation. It also corrects damage initiated from aging, sun, and chemicals. Living Cell Clarifier battles age spots and sun spots naturally
Read more
|
|
Man meets machine in bionic technology.
The Washington Times; 2/26/2000; Price, Joyce Howard; 635 words
; The Frankenstein monster and the Six Million Dollar Man may loom over the horizon. The University of California at Berkeley has developed a tiny bionic chip that is part living tissue and part machine, researchers said yesterday. The technology incorporates electronic circuitry into a fragile
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
catabolism
A Dictionary of Psychology
catabolism n. A destructive form of metabolism in which complex molecules are broken down into simpler ones with the release of energy. Compare anabolism . catabolic adj. catabolite n. Any substance produced by catabolism . [From Greek kataballein to throw down, from kata down + ballein to throw]
Read more
|
|
Physiology
Plant Sciences
... buildup of complex macromolecules ) and catabolism (the breaking down of macromolecules ... also be found with them. Anabolism and Catabolism: Biosynthesis and Turnover Anabolism ... pyrimidines are produced from aspartic acid. Catabolism. Catabolism includes any metabolic process ...
Read more
|
|
Metabolism
Nutrition and Well-Being A to Z
... anabolism (the constructive phase) and catabolism (the destructive phase, in which complex ... producing ATP. The final products of protein catabolism include carbon dioxide, water, ATP ... involved in the metabolism (especially catabolism) of amino acids, as a cofactor in transamination ...
Read more
|
|
Metabolism, Human
Biology
... Metabolism means the sum of all chemical changes in a cell or the body of an organism. It has two subdivisions: catabolism and anabolism. Catabolism (from the Greek cata, meaning "down") consists of all those reactions in which large molecules are broken ...
Read more
|
|
uric acid
A Dictionary of Zoology
uric acid A nitrogen compound (C 5 H 4 N 4 O 3 ) that forms the principal end-product of amino-acid catabolism in insects, birds, and reptiles. It is also present in the urine of other organisms where it represents the final product of purine catabolism.
Read more
|