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  • I weigh about 80 kilograms.

  • Most of that, let’s say 64 percent, is water -- though you can’t tell by looking.

  • I mean, as organisms go, I like to think that I look fairly solid.

  • After water, the next largest proportion of me is protein, about 16% -- not just in my

  • muscles, but also in things like the tiny sodium-potassium pumps in my neurons, and

  • the hemoglobin in my blood, and the enzymes driving the chemical reactions in every one

  • of my 37 trillion cells.

  • Then another 16% of me is fat, which I’m totally OK with;

  • Four percent of me is minerals, like the calcium and phosphorus in my bones, and the iron in my blood;

  • and 1 percent is carbohydrates, most of which is either being consumed as I talk to you,

  • or is sitting around as glycogen waiting to be used.

  • But here’s the thing: It’s not like I just ate 80 kilograms of food and then all this happened.

  • Instead, my body, like yours, is constantly acquiring stuff, extracting some of it to

  • keep, burning some of it for energy, and getting rid of the rest.

  • But even the stuff that my body does hold onto doesn’t last forever. Some of the chemicals

  • that I absorb in my food eventually become a part of me. But enzymes wear out, and membranes

  • break down, and DNA gets oxidized. So, they get discarded.

  • And then I need more of those chemicals to reconstruct the material that I’ve lost.

  • As a result, over the course of my lifetime, my cells will synthesize somewhere between

  • 225 and 450 kilograms of protein

  • That’s like 3, or 4, or 5 separate me’s -- just made of protein.

  • And all of the protein and fat and carbohydrates nucleic acids that

  • make up me, of course, come from food.

  • Every organism has to keep taking in and breaking down food, to keep resupplying itself with

  • the raw materials it needs to survive.

  • And all that activity requires energy, which we also gain from food.

  • So, how do our bodies actually convert what we eat into energy and raw materials?

  • The answer is a neverending series of reactions that are dedicated to doing two vital, and

  • totally contradictory, things:

  • One set of chemical reactions destroys the reactants that you give them, reducing big,

  • complex substances into molecular rubble.

  • And the other set reassembles that rubble into new and bigger products that are put

  • together again to make you.

  • So our bodies are constantly reinventing themselves -- in a perpetual state of loss, but also always rebuilding.

  • And even though all of this is happening at the cellular level, its consequences could hardly be larger.

  • These two sets of reactions are where everything that weve learned so far -- about the digestive,

  • endocrine, circulatory, and respiratory systems -- really starts to come together.

  • Together, these processes make up your metabolism.

  • Now the sciencey word metabolism has come to have a meaning in popular speech,

  • but metabolism isn’t just one thing.

  • People talk about metabolism as meaning, like, how fast your body burns the fuel in your

  • food, or how high your personal energy level is.

  • And that’s fine for use by personal trainers and fitness magazines.

  • But physiologically, metabolism really describes every single biochemical reaction that goes on in your body.

  • And maybe more importantly, it reconciles two conflicting chemical processes that are

  • always, simultaneously underway inside of you.

  • One of those chemical forces is anabolism.

  • Anabolic reactions construct things and consume energy.

  • These are the processes that take the small monomer building blocks in your food -- like

  • monosaccharides and fatty and amino acids -- and build them into bigger, more complex

  • polymers like carbs, and fats, and proteins that are used in your cells.

  • Then, when you need new building blocks, or you need to release some energy, those polymers

  • in your body, or new ones in your food, get broken up -- by catabolic reactions.

  • The processes of catabolism break down bigger molecules, and in breaking their bonds, release

  • the energy you need to stay warm, and move around, and provide your cells with fuelto

  • build the polymers back up again.

  • To be honest, your metabolism is a lot like Sisyphus. It works really hard. But it is never finished.

  • And the boulder that your inner Sisyphus is always pushing uphill and watching fall back

  • down? That’s nutrients -- the molecules that your body is forever breaking up, and

  • then rebuilding, only to have them break apart again.

  • And these nutrients -- the materials your body needs to build, maintain and repair itself

  • -- come in six major groups.

  • By volume, the majority of what we consume -- and what makes up our bodies -- is water,

  • so that’s maybe the most vital nutrient.

  • Then there are vitamins, compounds that come in either fat-soluble or water soluble forms.

  • They aren’t used as building blocks or for energy, but theyre essential in helping

  • the body make use of other nutrients that do do those things.

  • Vitamin C, for example, helps improve iron absorption, while vitamin K is crucial to

  • blood clotting, and some B vitamins are important in the production of ATP from glucose.

  • Minerals, like vitamins, they don’t provide fuel, but they have all sorts of other functions.

  • Calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus harden bones and teeth, while iron is, of course,

  • crucial in hemoglobin. Plus, potassium, sodium, and chlorine help maintain your body’s pH

  • balance and are used in action potentials.

  • So water, vitamins, and minerals are allnecessary.

  • But the three major nutrients that everyone always talks about -- the ones you find on

  • food labels, from oatmeal to Pop-Tarts -- are carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins.

  • Most of the carbohydrates youve ever eaten

  • -- with the exception of lactose in milk -- originally came from plants.

  • Mono- and disaccharides come from fruits, honey, sugar beets and sugar cane, while polysaccharide

  • starches come from veggies and grains.

  • The main thing you need to know is that the monosaccharide glucose is the be-all-end-all

  • molecular fuel that your cells need to make ATP.

  • ATP being the molecule that your cells use to drive anabolic reactions, when they need

  • to make new polymers or get anything else done -- whether that’s operating a sodium-potassium

  • pump, or detaching the head of a myosin filament to contract a muscle.

  • But ATP is too unstable to store, so cells often store energy in the form of glucose,

  • which they can then catabolize and convert to ATP when they need it.

  • Now, some of your cells can get their energy from fats. But many of the most important

  • ones, like your neurons and red blood cells, feed exclusively on glucose. So most of the

  • carbs that your intestines absorb are converted to glucose for that reason.

  • But, if it’s not needed right away, that energy can also get stored as glycogen in

  • your liver and muscles, or converted to glycerol and fatty acids to make triglyceride fats.

  • And even though there seems to be a marketing war going on against dietary fats,

  • we most definitely need them.

  • The fats in your adipose tissue store energy, of course, but they also store fat-soluble

  • vitamins, and cushion your organs.

  • Lipids also form the myelin that insulates the neurons in your brain and throughout your

  • body, as well as the oil in your skin, and they provide the vital calorie content found in breast milk.

  • But there are other important lipids, like cholesterol, which is the precursor to things

  • like testosterone and estrogen...

  • ...and, of course, phospholipids, which form the cell membrane in every single one of the

  • three-dozen-or-so-trillion cells you have.

  • Now, if youre into eating meat, a lot of the fat that you ingest might come from that.

  • But guess what: Plants have fat too.

  • Plants use lipids for energy storage just like we do, except they do it in fruits, and

  • nuts, and seeds. Which, when you think of it, are kind of like plant breast milk -- it’s

  • food for their growing babies.

  • Either way, though, when you eat lipids, your body breaks down triglycerides into glycerol

  • and fatty acids.

  • Those molecules can then be processed and used in the making of ATP. Or they might be

  • converted into other kinds of fatty acids, which your cells can then re-assemble into

  • your very own triglycerides or phospholipids.

  • And your liver happens to be great at converting one fatty acid into another, but there are

  • some it just can’t synthesize.

  • For example, omega 6 and 3 fatty acids are called essential fatty acids, because your

  • body can’t make them, so they have to be ingested.

  • They get turned into all kinds of useful molecules, like the ones used for synapse formation in

  • the brain, and for signalling inflammation during the healing process.

  • But -- if carbohydrates provide energy, and fats insulate and store energy, then just

  • about everything else is done with proteins.

  • They form the bulk of your muscle and connective tissue, but theyre also what the ion channels

  • and pumps are made of in your neurons and muscle cells, and they make up your enzymes,

  • which are responsible for pretty much every chemical reaction in your body.

  • In other words, your body runs on protein, and pretty much is protein.

  • Nutritionally speaking, meats, dairy products, eggs, legumes, nuts, cereals are particularly

  • high in protein. But because everything we eat was once alive, and every cell of every

  • living thing contains protein, as long as youre eating whole foods, youre at least

  • partially re-stocking your protein supplies.

  • Now it might seem like you’d have eat muscle to make muscle, or eat enzymes to make enzymes,

  • but that’s not how it works.

  • Since all of your proteins are made up of just 20 amino acids, the differences between

  • the thousands of unique proteins are simply in the sequence of those amino acids.

  • And, of course, you have a specialized molecule that knows just which amino acids to put together

  • in what order to make a certain protein.

  • It’s called DNA.

  • When you consume some hamburger, for example, the protein actin in the meat gets catabolized

  • into its component amino acids, which gets mixed up with all the amino acids from the

  • other proteins in the meat -- like the collagen and elastin and titin and myosin -- as well

  • as all the protein from the bun and the tomato and the mayonnaise.

  • Those amino acids then get reassembled using anabolic reactions into your very own, but

  • somewhat different, proteins, as defined by your DNA.

  • Each cell is like a picky little Gordon Ramsay and it has to have every amino acid needed

  • -- every ingredient present -- before it will even think about starting to make a protein.

  • And just like with your lipids, your cells can improvise, and convert some amino acids

  • to others if theyre missing an ingredient.

  • However, there are nine essential amino acids that you cannot make from others, and have to eat.

  • Now lots of foods don’t provide every essential amino acid, but when you combine foods, like

  • beans and rice, or pasta and cheese, you do get all of the essential amino acids. Which

  • is important because, remember: after water, you are mostly made of protein. On the order of 16%

  • But what about the one percent of you? The carbohydrates?

  • How that tiniest fraction of you ends up creating all of the energy, is what well discover next time.

  • But for now, youve learned all about the vital nutrients -- including water, vitamins,

  • minerals, carbs, fats, and proteins -- as well as how anabolic reactions build structures

  • and require energy, while catabolic reactions tear things apart and release energy. And

  • together, these competing forces form the wonderfully conflicted process known as metabolism.

  • Thank you to our Headmaster of Learning, Linnea Boyev, and thanks to all of our Patreon patrons

  • whose monthly contributions help make Crash Course possible, not only for themselves,

  • but for everyone, everywhere. If you like Crash Course and want to help us keep making

  • videos like this, you can go to patreon.com/crashcourse

  • This episode was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio, it was written

  • by Kathleen Yale, edited by Blake de Pastino, and our consultant is Dr. Brandon Jackson.

  • It was directed by Nicholas Jenkins, edited by Nicole Sweeney; our sound designer is Michael

  • Aranda, and the Graphics team is Thought Cafe.

I weigh about 80 kilograms.

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