Rethinking Human Energy Metabolism

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Abstract

For a long time, glycolysis and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation were opposed to each other. Glycolysis work when there is a lack of oxygen, the mitochondria supply ATP in oxygen environment. In recent decades, it has been discovered that glycolysis in vivo works always and the final product is lactate. Lactate can accumulate and is the transport form for pyruvate. In this review, we look at how obligate lactate formation during glycolysis affects the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and mitochondrial respiration. We conclude that fatty acid β-oxidation is a prerequisite for obligate lactate formation during glycolysis, which in turn promotes and enhances the anaplerotic functions of the TCA cycle. In this way, a supply of two types of substrates for mitochondria is formed: fatty acids as the basic energy substrates, and lactate as an emergency substrate for the heart, skeletal muscles, and brain. High steady-state levels of lactate and ATP, supported by β-oxidation, stimulate gluconeogenesis and thus supporting the lactate cycle. It is concluded that mitochondrial fatty acids β-oxidation and glycolysis constitute a single interdependent system of energy metabolism of the human body.

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