Biochemistry: Carbohydrate Metabolism
Carbohydrate Metabolism
Introduction
Glucose is the major form of sugar moiety present in blood and other body fluids. The digestion of food carbohydrates, such as starch, sucrose, and lactose produces the monosaccharides glucose, fructose and galactose, which pass into the blood stream. The study of synthesis (Anabolism) and degradation (Catabolism) of biomolecules is biochemically termed as metabolism.
Anabolism + Catabolism = Metabolism
Since glucose is the most important carbohydrate existing in physiological amounts in the body and is easily absorbed from the diet, the metabolism of carbohydrate resolves itself to the study of the metabolism of glucose and its main derivatives. The monosaccharides galactose and fructose are converted to glucose in the liver. All the monosaccharides are completely absorbed in the small intestine.
The glucose in the circulating blood and tissue fluids is drawn upon by all the cells of the body and used for the production of energy. Normally carbohydrate metabolism supplies more than half of the energy requirements of the body. In fact the brain largely depends upon carbohydrate metabolism as a source of energy and quickly ceases to function properly when the blood glucose level falls much below normal.
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