Placenta -

Placenta (eBook)

A Neglected Experimental Animal
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2013 | 1. Auflage
458 Seiten
Elsevier Science (Verlag)
978-1-4832-7975-6 (ISBN)
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Placenta
Placenta: A Neglected Experimental Animal covers the proceedings of the 1978 round table discussion on placenta held at Bedford College, University of London, under the auspices of the Special Commission on Internal Pollution. The placenta's remarkably complete spectrum of cellular and biochemical activity, as well as its hormonal and endocrinological roles and its short life-cycle, adds to its suitability for studying the processes of cell replication, immune mechanisms, graft acceptance and rejection- and aging. This book is organized into four sections encompassing 19 chapters. Section I emphasizes the process of placental metabolism. This section particularly deals with the principles of metabolic regulation; carbohydrate, fat, and protein metabolism; placenta's endocrine functions; and in vitro and in vivo studies of placental metabolism. Section II highlights the placenta's potential to delineate cell replication processes. This section describes the origin and formation of placenta and the mechanism of carcinogenesis. Section III focuses on the relevance of placenta and its potential as a model for studying malignancy, while Section IV examine its potential as a model for organ aging. This book will be of value to cell and developmental biologists, immunologists, and oncologists.

THE PRINCIPLES OF METABOLIC REGULATION WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO DEVELOPMENT AND AGEING


Speaker

Eric A. Newsholme and Bernard Crabtree

Publisher Summary


This chapter discusses the principles of metabolic regulation with special reference to development and ageing. Biochemical research has revealed the various sequences of reactions by which complex substances are degraded to simpler compounds to produce biological energy. It has been shown that a specific series of reactions was responsible for the metabolism of each complex substance and these sequences were called metabolic pathways. The processes needed for the metabolic degradation of complex substances proceed via a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions because the amount of chemical change that any one enzyme can produce is limited. A large chemical change requires a series of different enzymes. It is likely that a series of related reactions also plays a part in the regulation of cell division and in antibody production. The processes that underlie the phenomena of development and ageing are more complex than the process of glycolysis.

During the earlier part of this century, biochemical research revealed the various sequences of reactions by which complex substances are degraded to simpler compounds in order to produce biological energy. When it became clear that a specific series of reactions was responsible for the metabolism of each complex substance, these sequences were called metabolic pathways (e.g. glycolysis for converting glucose to pyruvate or lactate, and the citric acid cycle for oxidising acetate to carbon dioxide and water. Elucidation of their biochemical details showed each individual reaction in these metabolic pathways to be catalysed by a specific enzyme. In the last 25 years, detailed biochemical research into the molecular details of the individual reactions has been particularly directed to clarifying the catalytic mechanism mediated by each of these enzymes. Another line of investigation, during the same period, has been devoted to the mechanisms which control the rate of the individual reactions in a pathway and hence the flux through the pathway as a whole.

This paper is primarily concerned with regulation, concentrating on general principles rather than the details of individual reactions and pathways. By way of example, reference will be made to glycolysis and glycogenolysis (glycogen degradation) in muscle, since a wealth of knowledge is available on these pathways. In addition to describing the principles of control, the reasons why different mechanisms are necessary will be discussed, noting the possible advantages and disadvantages of each. This will enable the control of other systems to be considered, concluding with an outline of how these principles of metabolic regulation may be applied to the control of the complex processes of development and ageing.

First, it is necessary to consider the basic concept of metabolic pathways since some knowledge is essential to an understanding of their regulation. The processes needed for the metabolic degradation of complex substances proceed via a series of enzyme-catalysed reactions, because the amount of chemical change that any one enzyme can produce is limited. A large chemical change requires a series of different enzymes. This is true not only of metabolic degradation: it applies equally to complex biosynthetic processes (e.g. protein synthesis, RNA and DNA synthesis) and also to processes not normally associated with metabolic pathways, such as mechanisms of regulation. (Examples are control of glycogen degradation via the enzyme cascade,1 and the control of cyclic-AMP levels2 described later. It is likely that a series of related reactions also plays a part in the regulation of cell division and in antibody production. Since application of the term metabolic pathway to a control system is an extension of its usual meaning, and may be unfamiliar, the next section sets out the basic properties of such pathways.

STRUCTURES OF METABOLIC PATHWAYS


1 Closed and open systems


All chemical (and hence enzymatic) reactions are reversible, but some are more reversible than others. With metabolic pathways, particularly in vivo, the rate of the forward component of a reaction can be much greater than that of the reverse component – to the extent that the reaction is regarded as irreversible. Consider the following hypothetical enzyme-catalysed reaction:

The reactants are x and y, and v1 and v2 represent the rates of the forward and reverse components. If such a reaction is isolated from its surroundings, so that there is no production or removal of x or y from the system, the concentrations of these substances will approach values that equate v1 and v2. Such a state, in which the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are equal, is referred to as equilibrium. For an isolated (i.e. closed) system, equilibrium is the only state in which the concentrations of x and y do not vary with time. However, at equilibrium there is no net interconversion of the reactants (since v1 = v2) and, as classical thermodynamics shows, such a system can do no useful work, A closed system does not therefore provide a valid model of the metabolism in living cells, which inter-convert substances at constant (through variable) rates and are capable of doing work on their surroundings. Nonetheless, some individual cell reactions may be at equilibrium under certain conditions, and some reactions in metabolic pathways may be very close to equilibrium.

Metabolic systems are examples of open thermodynamic reactions, characterised by continuous interchange of matter and energy with their surroundings. Such an open system can be illustrated as follows:

This system contains the same hypothetical reaction as the closed system described above. But, in this case, the preliminary reaction A continuously supplies x from the surroundings, while the subsequent reaction B continuously removes y from the system; reactions behaving in this way have been designated non-equilibrium. An important property of an open system is that the concentrations of x and y can be independent of time, even if the reaction x y is displaced from equilibrium (e.g. when v1 is greater than v2). In the above example, such a situation would arise if the rate of reaction A were constant and the rate of reaction B was a function of the concentration of y. The rate of conversion of one substance into the other would then be constant, and the system in steady-state, the rate of overall throughput being referred to as the flux.

Although the steady-state serves as a model for the operation of metabolic pathways, open systems can take other forms. Those in which the concentrations of substrate (or metabolic intermediates) are continuous functions of time include both transient (exponential) states, when the flux through a steady-state system changes, and oscillatory states.

2 Generation of flux in steady-state systems


The main characteristics of a system in steady-state are the time-independence of the concentrations of the intermediates and the presence of a constant flux; indeed, constancy of flux is the main factor determining steady-state. A steady-state system therefore consists of two types of reaction:

One which provides (or generates) the constant flux, and

Other reactions which adjust to the flux, by responding to changes in substrate concentration.

For example, in a steady-state system such as the following:

a constant flux is generated at reaction A. The rate of reaction B is determined by the concentration (which is constant) of its substrate x. The flux through reaction B is therefore equal to the rate of reaction A. For steady-state to be maintained, reaction A could not be isolated and substrate-dependent, because the concentration of the substrate, and hence the flux, would decline as the reaction progressed. In short, reaction A must be substrate-saturated if it is to generate a flux for the other reactions in the pathway to transmit. While such flux-generating reactions need to be substrate-saturated for a system to reach steady-state, other reactions which follow later in the pathway are substrate-dependent.

The term substrate needs to be used with care, as illustrated by the following hypothetical example:

A cofactor (a) is involved in the flux-generating reaction (A), and this cofactor is regenerated at some subsequent reaction in the pathway. In this example reaction A must be saturated with the pathway-substrate, which provides the flow of matter through such an open system, but it need not necessarily be saturated with co-factor a. Since the latter is continuously regenerated, it can be considered to belong to a ‘conserved system of metabolites’, whereas the pathway-substrate has to be made constantly available from an outside source – in the same or another tissue.

The reactions that make up a metabolic system need not necessarily be confined to just one cell or tissue; a pathway can span several tissues linked by the circulation. For example, the flux-generating reaction...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 22.10.2013
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Laboratoriumsmedizin
ISBN-10 1-4832-7975-8 / 1483279758
ISBN-13 978-1-4832-7975-6 / 9781483279756
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