Cell Metabolism
Metabolism is all the chemical reactions in a cell. Most happen as metabolic pathways — chains of reactions where each step is controlled by a specific enzyme.
A metabolic pathway: each step needs its own enzyme and passes through intermediates.
In a pathway there are many regulated steps, each producing intermediate compounds, each needing a specific enzyme, and each losing some energy as heat.
Internal membranes matter
Folded internal membranes pack in surface area for these reactions: the cristae of mitochondria and the thylakoid (grana) stacks of chloroplasts hold the enzymes for respiration and photosynthesis.
Chemicals can interfere with metabolism — some harmful (cyanide blocks respiration; herbicides, insecticides), some useful (antibiotics target bacterial enzymes). Weighing benefit against harm is a real-world judgement.