Title: Metabolism , Energy and Life
1Metabolism , Energy and Life
- As a whole metabolism is concerned with managing
the material and energy (nrg) resources of the
cell. All of this is precisely managed - There are several pathways.
2Anabolic Pathway
- Consume nrg to form build more complex molecules
from simple ones.
3Energy is the capacity to do work.
- Animation Quizzes go to nrg conversion
- Kinetic energy is the energy of motion
- Potential nrg is the nrg that matter posses due
to location or structure. - Howstuffworks "Animation of the Day(go to roller
coaster)
4Exergonic
- When the reactants of a chemical reaction have
more free energy than the products of that
reaction and energy is released, the reaction is
said to be exergonic (-?H) heat releasing
5Endergonic
- On the other hand, if the products of a chemical
reaction have more free energy than the reactants
and the reaction requires an input of energy, the
reaction is said to be endergonic (?H) heat
absorbing
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7Catabolic Pathway
- Release nrg by breaking down complex molecules to
simpler compounds.
8Lifes chemical reactions are of two types
- 1. Endergonic reactions
- requires net input of energy.
- products have more potential energy than
reactants (e.g. 6CO2 6H2O to C6H12O6) - e.g. photosynthesis, anabolic reactions
9- 2. Exergonic reactions
- chemical reaction that releases energy.
- reactants have more potential energy in their
covalent bonds than the products. - e.g. catabolic reactions ( C6H12O6 to 6CO2
6H2O) - Burning and cellular respiration are examples of
exergonic processes. However, burning is a 1 step
process that releases energy all at once, whereas
cellular respiration involves many steps, each a
separate chemical reaction (i.e a slow burn). - Exergonic and Endergonic Reactions
10Oxidation and reduction flow of energy in living
things.
11- Oxidation is the loss of an electron
- Reduction is the gain of an electron
12- Cellular respiration energy-releasing chemical
breakdown of glucose molecules and the storage of
the energy in a form that the cell can use to do
work. - Cellular metabolism sum of all exergonic and
endergonic reactions in a cell.
13ATP and cellular work
- Chemical energy in the form of ATP powers nearly
all cellular work.
14- Covalent bonds connecting second and third
phosphate groups of ATP are unstable. These bonds
can be readily broken (hydrolysis)
15- This reaction is highly exergonic and can be
coupled to a endergonic reaction. - Energy coupling involves transfer of third
phosphate to another molecule.
16Work of the cell requires nrg and this is most
often provided by ATP
- 1. Mechanical work- such as the beating of cilia
- 2. Transport work pumping of substances across
the cell membrane - 3. Chemical work- the pushing of endergonic
reactions which would not normally occur
spontaneously.
17Work of the cell requires nrg and this is most
often provided by ATP
- 1. Mechanical work- such as the beating of cilia
- 2. Transport work pumping of substances across
the cell membrane - 3. Chemical work- the pushing of endergonic
reactions which would not normally occur
spontaneously.
18Enzymes. (When in doubt answer with enzymes)
- Enzyme protein molecule that serves as a
biological catalyst.Enzymes allow life to go on.
They speed up and regulate metabolic reactions.
Enzymes are catalysts. - Catalyst a chemical that speeds up the rate of
a reaction without itself being consumed in the
process.
19Enzymes. (When in doubt answer with enzymes)
- Enzyme protein molecule that serves as a
biological catalyst.Enzymes allow life to go on.
They speed up and regulate metabolic reactions.
Enzymes are catalysts. - Catalyst a chemical that speeds up the rate of
a reaction without itself being consumed in the
process.
20Activation energy
- Enzymes lower the barriers that normally prevent
chemical reactions from occurring (or slow them
down) by decreasing the required activation
energy. Thus, in the presence of enzymes,
reactions proceed at a faster rate.
21Enzymes are substrate specific
22Enzymes are substrate specific
- Substrate reactants in an enzyme catalyzed
reaction. - Each enzyme has a unique 3-D shape and recognizes
and binds only the specific substrate of a
reaction. - Active site small portion of enzyme molecule
which actually binds the substrate.
23The active site is the catalytic center.
- When the active site of an enzyme is unoccupied
and its substrate is available the cycle begins - An enzyme substrate complex forms with hydrogen
and ionic bonds - The substrate is converted to product
- The enzyme releases the product
- The enzyme is available for the next reaction
- Animation of Enzyme Reaction
24- Animation of Enzyme Action
- http//ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/genobc/animations/
enzyme.mov
25Properties of active site
- Typically a grove or pocket on the protein
(enzymes are proteins) - The specificity of an enzyme is based on the fit
between the active site and the substrate
26Properties of active site
- Acts as a template for substrate orientation.
- Stabilizes the transition state
- Provides a favorable microenvironment
- May participate directly in reaction
27The lock and Key model
28Induced fit model
- Binding of the first substrate (gold) induces a
conformational shift (angular contours) that
facilitates binding of the second substrate
(blue), When catalysis is complete, the product
is released, and the enzyme returns to its
uninduced state.
29Factors which may denature enzymes
- Each enzyme works best at a certain pH
- Altering the pH will denature the enzyme. This
means that the structure of the enzyme is altered
and the shape no longer works with its specific
substrate
- CIEC Catalysis -- Principles of Catalysis
30- Temperature is another factor. Enzymes have
specific temperature ranges. Most denature at
high temperatures, but will continue to work at
lower temperature.
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32Enzymes they are very important.
- Biology I Interactive Animations go to (Enzyme
Substrate Formation Hong Kong Bio Web - One more look
33Enzyme Inhibition
- chemicals which interfere with enzyme function
34Competitive Inhibitors
- Mimics
- BBC Education - AS Guru - Biology - Biological
Molecules - Proteins - Enzymes - Competitive
Inhibitors - New Page 1
35Non Competitive Inhibitors
- Bind to some other point on the molecule.
- BBC Education - AS Guru - Biology - Biological
Molecules - Proteins - Enzymes - Non-competitive
Inhibitors - New Page 1
36Regulation of Enzymes
- Allosteric Enzymes The Life Wire Content
- (go to chapter 6 tutorial)
37Noncompetitive Inhibition with Allosteric Enzymes
or feedback inhibition
- When the end product (inhibitor) of a pathway
combines with the allosteric site of the enzyme,
this alters the enzyme's active site so it can no
longer bind to the starting substrate of the
pathway. This blocks production of the end
product.