Literature DB >> 23720257

Energy and metabolism.

Raul K Suarez1.   

Abstract

Although firmly grounded in metabolic biochemistry, the study of energy metabolism has gone well beyond this discipline and become integrative and comparative as well as ecological and evolutionary in scope. At the cellular level, ATP is hydrolyzed by energy-expending processes and resynthesized by pathways in bioenergetics. A significant development in the study of bioenergetics is the realization that fluxes through pathways as well as metabolic rates in cells, tissues, organs, and whole organisms are "system properties." Therefore, studies of energy metabolism have become, increasingly, experiments in systems biology. A significant challenge continues to be the integration of phenomena over multiple levels of organization. Body mass and temperature are said to account for most of the variation in metabolic rates found in nature. A mechanistic foundation for the understanding of these patterns is outlined. It is emphasized that evolution, leading to adaptation to diverse lifestyles and environments, has resulted in a tremendous amount of deviation from popularly accepted scaling "rules." This is especially so in the deep sea which constitutes most of the biosphere.
© 2012 American Physiological Society

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23720257     DOI: 10.1002/cphy.c110009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Compr Physiol        ISSN: 2040-4603            Impact factor:   9.090


  4 in total

1.  Effects of Exogenous ATP on Melanoma Growth and Tumor Metabolism in C57BL/6 Mice.

Authors:  Yali Lei; Xu Zhou; Yang Zhao; Jianfa Zhang
Journal:  Comp Med       Date:  2022-04-11       Impact factor: 1.565

2.  Brain's Energy After Stroke: From a Cellular Perspective Toward Behavior.

Authors:  Juan José Mariman; Enrique Lorca; Carlo Biancardi; Pablo Burgos; Joel Álvarez-Ruf
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2022-05-16

3.  Enzymatic capacities of metabolic fuel use in cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) and responses to food deprivation: insight into the metabolic organization and starvation survival strategy of cephalopods.

Authors:  Ben Speers-Roesch; Neal I Callaghan; Tyson J MacCormack; Simon G Lamarre; Antonio V Sykes; William R Driedzic
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2016-04-30       Impact factor: 2.200

4.  Meta-analysis reveals that resting metabolic rate is not consistently related to fitness and performance in animals.

Authors:  Pieter A Arnold; Steven Delean; Phillip Cassey; Craig R White
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 2.200

  4 in total

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