Page 5: Research news on bioenergetics

Bioenergetics is the study of energy flow and transformation in biological systems, focusing on how cells acquire, convert, store, and utilize energy to drive metabolic processes. It encompasses the thermodynamics and kinetics of biochemical reactions, including ATP synthesis, redox reactions, and proton motive force generation across biological membranes. Central topics include oxidative phosphorylation, photosynthetic energy conversion, substrate-level phosphorylation, and the coupling of catabolic and anabolic pathways. Bioenergetics provides quantitative frameworks (e.g., Gibbs free energy, redox potentials, chemiosmotic theory) to analyze how cellular structures such as mitochondria, chloroplasts, and bacterial membranes support energy transduction and maintain nonequilibrium steady states required for life.

Ceres may have had long-standing energy to fuel habitability

New NASA research has found that Ceres may have had a lasting source of chemical energy: the right types of molecules needed to fuel some microbial metabolisms. Although there is no evidence that microorganisms ever existed ...

Is your gut microbiome a calorie 'super harvester'?

In the jungle of microbes living in your gut, there's one oddball that makes methane. This little-known methane-maker might play a role in how many calories you absorb from your food, according to a new study from Arizona ...

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