Ketogenesis is the process by which ketone bodies are produced as a result of fatty acid breakdown.
Ketone bodies are produced mainly in the mitochondria of liver cells when carbohydrates are so scarce that energy must be obtained from breaking down fatty acids. Fatty acids are long chains of carbons with an acid group on one end. The body gets energy from fatty acids by breaking the carbon chain down into pieces that contain only two carbon atoms. These pieces are in the form of acetyl-CoA.
The three ketone bodies are acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetone. (The first two are not technically ketones according to IUPAC nomenclature, but the third is.) Each of these is the product of acetyl-CoA molecules combining to make larger compounds.
Ketogenesis may or may not occur, dependent on how many carbohydrates are available. This is closely related to the paths of acetyl-CoA:
COO- COO- O O | CH3--C(O)--S-CoA | || CH3 || CH2 CH2 CH3--C--S--CoA | + CH3--C--S-CoA | ^ COO-
Ketone bodies are created at moderate levels in everyone's bodies, such as during sleep and other times when no carbohydrates are available. However, when ketogenesis is happening at abnormally high levels, the body is said to be in a state of ketosis. It is unknown whether ketosis has negative long-term effects or not.
Both acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate are acidic, and, if levels of these ketone bodies are too high, the pH of the blood drops, resulting in ketoacidosis. This is very rare, and, in general, happens only in untreated Type I diabetes (see diabetic ketoacidosis) and in alcoholics after binge drinking and subsequent starvation (see alcoholic ketoacidosis).
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"Ketogenesis".
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