Metabolosomes: Difference between revisions

From Thrive Developer Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Add test for non-whitelisted link)
(Undo revision 1406 by Oliveriver (talk))
Tag: Undo
Line 18: Line 18:


'''Metabolosomes''' perform '''Protein Respiration''', a form of '''Aerobic Respiration''' inferior to that of '''[[Mitochondrion|Mitochondria]]'''. It is the conversion of '''Glucose''' {{CompoundIcon|image=GlucoseIcon.png|internalName=glucose}} into '''ATP''' {{CompoundIcon|image=ATPIcon.png|internalName=atp}} with the use of '''Oxygen''' {{CompoundIcon|image=OxygenIcon.png|internalName=oxygen}}.
'''Metabolosomes''' perform '''Protein Respiration''', a form of '''Aerobic Respiration''' inferior to that of '''[[Mitochondrion|Mitochondria]]'''. It is the conversion of '''Glucose''' {{CompoundIcon|image=GlucoseIcon.png|internalName=glucose}} into '''ATP''' {{CompoundIcon|image=ATPIcon.png|internalName=atp}} with the use of '''Oxygen''' {{CompoundIcon|image=OxygenIcon.png|internalName=oxygen}}.
[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news Illegal link.]


== Requirements ==
== Requirements ==

Revision as of 00:30, 15 Ocak 2024

Organelle Details
Metabolosomes
MetabolosomeIcon.png
MetabolosomeOrganelle.png
Base Cost (MP) 45
Requires Nucleus No
Processes Protein Respiration
Enzymes None
Size (Hexes) 1
Osmoregulation Cost 1
Storage 0.5
Unique No
Upgrades None
Internal Name metabolosome

Metabolosomes perform Protein Respiration, a form of Aerobic Respiration inferior to that of Mitochondria. It is the conversion of Glucose glucose into ATP atp with the use of Oxygen oxygen.

Requirements

No requirements

Processes

Protein Respiration: Glucose glucose + Oxygen oxygenATP atp

A method of energy production, superior to that in Cytoplasm but inferior to Mitochondria. Requires a steady influx of Glucose glucose. Rate scales with the concentration of environmental Oxygen oxygen.

Modifications

No modifications.

Effects

No effects.

Upgrades

No upgrades.

Strategy

TBA

Scientific Background

Unlike eukaryotes, prokaryote organelles do not have membranes. Instead, prokaryotes like bacteria construct compartments out of proteins. A Metabolosome is an example of such a compartment, officially referred to as a Bacterial MicroCompartment (BMC). BMCs consist of a polyhedral protein shell around 100-200 nm in size that looks similar to a virus capsid. The proteins that make up the shell typically have (semi-permeable) pores that allow different compounds (substrates and products) in and out of the organelle. They concentrate enzymes and proteins involved in specific metabolic processes in one spot, ensuring their success. The protein shell also acts as a physical barrier, allowing BMCs to conduct metabolic reactions that create toxic or unstable intermediate compounds.

Metabolosomes are a catabolic type of BMC, and are involved in the degradation of different carbon sources such as glycerol and amino acids. There is no clear evidence that the process of breaking down Glucose glucose takes place in metabolosomes, however it is not unreasonable to assume that it could do so. The actual process of breaking down glucose for energy takes place in several steps in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The only difference is where some of the enzymes are located and organized.

Read more on this organelle's Wikipedia page.