BCMB 230 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Facilitated Diffusion, Passive Transport, Lipid Bilayer

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The level of protein in a cell determines cellular function. Amino acids come from diet, or degradation of protein. Oxidative deamination keto acid and ammonia: may be used in intermediates of glycolysis or krebs cycle, r group determines where it goes in the cycle, deamination occurs primarily in the liver. Ammonia is produced by deamination and converted to urea. Gluconeogenesis- ketoacid can be taken to yield glucose: only some amino acids allow for this. Amino acid can make: protein, glucose, different amino acid, atp. Essential amino acids in the sense here must be obtained through the diet. Nonessential: can be made in the body through transamination. Amino groups can be added to a ketoacid by pulling the amino group off another amino acid. These amino acids made by transamination are made because they are needed for. Fatty acids can be made from acetyl coa. Similar words: know the difference: glygogenolysis, glycogenesis, glyconeogenesis.

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