Title: BIOENERGETICS
1BIOENERGETICS
- Reading
- Harpers Biochemistry pp. 123-129
- Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry 3rd Ed.
pp. 485-522
2OBJECTIVES
- To gain an understanding of concepts used to deal
with energy flow in living organisms. - To understand the following terms and concepts
- 1. Enthalpy
- 2. Entropy
- 3. Free Energy
- 4. Bioenergetic coupling of chemical reactions
- 5. Additivity of free energy changes
- 6. Relationship between standard free energy
and equilibrium constant - 7. Role of ATP as energy currency of cell
3Bioenergetics- Biochemical Thermodynamics
- Quantitative study of the energy transductions
that occur in living cells, and of the nature and
function of the chemical processes underlying
these transductions - Provides underlying principles to explain why
some reactions may occur while other do not - Non-biological systems may use heat energy to
perform work, whereas biological systems are
essentially isothermic and use chemical energy to
power living processes
4Biomedical Importance of Bioenergetics
- Fuel is required to provide energy for normal
processes, so understanding energy production and
utilization is fundamental to understanding
normal nutrition and metabolism - Starvation - occurs when available energy
reserves are depleted - Certain forms of malnutrition are associated with
energy imbalance e.g. marasmus- wasting disease
due to insufficient energy and protein intake - Excess storage of surplus energy results in
obesity which can have negative effects on health
5Gibbs Free Energy Change (?G)
- ?G is that portion of the total energy change in
a system that is available for doing work - it is
the useful energy - When a reaction proceeds with a release of free
energy (i.e. the system changes so as to possess
less free energy), the free energy change, ?G,
has a negative value and the reaction is said to
be exergonic - In endogonic reactions, the system gains energy
and ?G is positive - Units of ?G - joules/mole (J/mol)
- - calories/mole (cal/mol)
6Enthalpy, H
- Enthalpy is the heat content of the reacting
system - It reflects the number and kinds of chemical
bonds in the reactants and products - When a chemical reaction releases heat, it is
said to be exothermic - the heat content of the
products is less than that of the reactants and
by convention, ?H has a negative value - Reacting systems that take up heat from their
surroundings are endothermic and have positive
value of ?H - Units of ?H - joules/mole (J/mol)
- - calories/mole (cal/mol)
7Entropy, S
- Entropy is a quantitative expression for the
randomness or disorder of a system - When the products of a reaction are less complex
and more disordered than the reactants, the
reaction is said to proceed with a gain in
entropy - Units of ?S - J/molK
- - cal/molK
- K units of absolute temperature (25?C 298K)
8Entropy, S
- Example
- Oxidation of glucose C6H12O66 O2?6 CO2 6 H2O
-
-
-
- Increase in number of molecules, or when a solid
is converted to liquid or gas, generates
molecular disorder. Entropy increases.
9Relationship between ?G, ?H, and ?S
- Under conditions existing in biological systems
(constant temperature and pressure), changes in
free energy (?G), enthalpy (?H), and entropy (?S)
are related to each other quantitatively - ?G ?H - T ?S, where T absolute temp (K)
- ?H has a negative sign when heat is released by
the system to the surroundings - ?S has a positive sign when entropy increases
10Relationship between ?G, ?H, and ?S
- In a favorable exergonic process which releases
heat and increases entropy - e.g. Oxidation of glucose
- ?G (negative value of ?H) - (T ? positive
value ?S) - ?G negative value
- For favorable or spontaneous processes, ?G has a
negative value
11Free Energy
- We must subtract the energy lost to increasing
entropy of the system from the total enthalpy
change to figure the amount of energy left over
available for useful work - ?G ?H - T?S
- At equilibrium in a closed system no net change
in free energy can occur, ?G 0 and ?H T?S
12Free Energy
- Example
- Heat water in tea kettle - steam is produced and
potentially capable of doing work - Allow to cool, no work is done, temp of
surroundings increases by infinitesimal amount
until equilibrium is reached. Kettle and
surroundings are at the same temp, the free
energy that was once in the kettle has
disappeared. - ?H (change in heat) T?S (change in entropy)
- ?G ?H - T?S, ?G 0, no free energy
- available to do work
- Irreversible
13- For general reaction aAbB cCdD, where
a,b,c,d number of molecules of A,B,C,D - Equilibrium constant, Keq CcDd
- AaBb
- When a reacting system is not at equilibrium, the
tendency to move toward equilibrium represents a
driving force, the magnitude of which can be
expressed as the free energy change for the
reaction, ?G - At 25?C (298K) and at 1M for participants,
driving force ?G ? standard free energy
change - If H involved, 1M H pH 0
14- For biochemical reactions, at pH 7, define
- ?Go standard transformed free energy change
- ?Go - RT ln Keq -2.303 RT log Keq
15- Indicates how much free energy is available from
the indicated reaction under standard conditions
16Actual free energy changes depend on reactant and
product concentrations
- The standard free-energy change tells us which
direction and how far a given reaction will go to
reach equilibrium when the initial concentration
of each component is 1.0M, the pH is 7.0, the
temp is 25?C, and the pressure is 1 atm.
17Actual free energy changes depend on reactant and
product concentrations
- However, actual free-energy change, ?G, is a
function of the reactant and product
concentrations and the prevailing conditions - ?G and ?Go are related for AB CD by
- ?G ?Go RT ln CD
- AB
- At equilibrium, ?G 0
- 0 ?Go RT ln CD
- AB
- ?Go -RT ln Keq
18Example
- Oxaloacetate acetyl-CoA H2O?citrate CoA
H - At pH 7 and 25C in rat heart mitochondria -
oxaloacetate 1?M acetyl-CoA 1?M citrate
220 ?M CoA 65 ?M - ?G -32.2 kJ/mol
- RT 2.48 kJ/mol
- What is direction of metabolite flow?
- Solution - calculate ?G, positive or negative?
- ?G ?G RT ln PP
- RR
- ?G -32.2 2.48 ln 22065x10-12
- 11 x10-12
- ?G -32.2 2.48 x ln14300
- -32.2 23.7
- -8.5 kJ/mol
- ?G is negative, reaction proceeds to the right
19Standard Free-Energy Changes are Additive
- For sequential reactions,
- A B and B C, the ?Go values are
additive - ?Go Total ?G1o ?G2o
-
- A thermodynamically unfavorable reaction
(endergonic) can be driven in the forward
direction by coupling it to an exergonic reaction
20- Vital processes- e.g. synthetic reactions, muscle
contractions, active transport, obtain energy by
chemical linkage, or coupling, to oxidative
reactions - One way of coupling an exergonic to an endogonic
process is to synthesize a compound of high
energy potential in the exergonic reaction and to
incorporate the new compound into the endergonic
reaction
21- Can theoretically serve as a transducer of
energy for a wide range of reactions
E
22- Example
- Synthesis of glucose 6-phosphate
- Glucose Pi?glucose 6-phosphate H2O
- ?Go 13.8 kJ/mol
- (will not proceed spontaneously in this
direction) - ATP H2O?ADP Pi ?Go - 30.5 kJ/mol
- These reactions share the common intermediates Pi
and H2O and may be expressed as - (1) Glucose Pi?glucose 6-phosphate H2O
- (2) ATP H2O?ADP Pi
- Glucose ATP?ADP glucose 6-phosphate
- ?Go 13.8 kJ/mol (-30.5 kJ/mol) -16.7
kJ/mol - Overall reaction is exergonic
- The actual pathway of glucose 6P formation is
different from these reactions, but net result in
energetic terms is the same.
23ATP has a special role as energy currency
- ATP is the shared chemical intermediate linking
energy-releasing to energy-requiring cell
processes. Its role in the cell is analogous to
that of money in an economy It is
earned/produced in exergonic reactions and
spent/consumed in endergonic reactions.
24Chemical basis for the large free-energy change
associated with ATP hydrolysis
- Hydrolysis causes charge separation, relieving
electrostatic repulsion among the four negative
charges on ATP - Inorganic phosphate released is stabilized by
formation of a resonance hybrid - ADP2- produced ionizes
- Greater degree of solvation of ADP and Pi than ATP
25ATP has two high-energy phosphate groups
- Standard free-energy of hydrolysis of ATP is
intermediate in list of organophosphates
26- ATP can act as a donor of high-energy phosphate
to compounds below it in the table - ADP can accept high-energy phosphate to form ATP
from those compounds above it in the table - This forms ATP/ADP cycle
27Adenylyl Kinase Interconverts Adenine Nucleotides
- Adenylyl Kinase (or myokinase) is present in most
cells and catalyzes the interconversion of ATP
and AMP to ADP and vice versa - ATP AMP 2 ADP
- Allows high-energy phosphate in ADP to be used in
synthesis of ATP - Allows AMP (formed as a consequence of several
activating reactions involving ATP) to be
recovered by rephosphorylation to ADP
28ATP can Donate Phosphoryl, Pyrophosphoryl, or
Adenylyl Groups
- The transfer of these groups couples the energy
of ATP breakdown to endergonic transformation of
substrates
29Activation of a fatty acid
- Involves attachment of the carrier coenzyme A
- Direct condensation of a fatty acid with coenzyme
A is endergonic, but process is made exergonic by
stepwise removal of two phosphoryl groups from
ATP - Hydrolysis of PPi to 2Pi by inorganic
pyrophosphatase releases additional energy
30Other Nucleoside Triphosphates Participate in the
Transfer of High-Energy Phosphate
- By means of the enzyme nucleoside diphosphate
kinase (NDK), nucleoside triphosphates similar to
ATP but containing different bases (U,G,C) can be
synthesized - ATP UDP ADP UTP
- ATP GDP ADP GTP
- ATP CDP ADP CTP
- Similarly, specific nucleoside monophosphate
kinases (NMK) exist - ATP nucleoside ? ADP nucleoside
??
NDK
31Summary
- Biological systems are isothermic and use
chemical energy to power living processes - Chemical reactions are influenced by two forces
- (1) The tendency to achieve the most stable
bonding state (enthalpy, H) - (2) The tendency to achieve the highest degree
of randomness (entropy, S) - The net driving force of a reaction, ?G, the
free-energy charge, represents the net effect of
those two factors ?G ?H - T?S.
32Summary
- The standard free-energy change, ?Go, is a
physical constant for a given reaction and is
related to the equilibrium constant - ?Go - RT ln Keq
- The actual free energy change, ?G, is a variable
which depends on ?Go and the actual conditions - ?G ?Go RT ln products
- reactants
- ?G large, negative - reactions go in forward
direction - ?G large, positive - reactions go in reverse
- ?G is zero - system is at equilibrium
33Summary
- Endergonic processes occur only when coupled to
exergonic processes. Free-energy changes are
additive for successive reactions sharing a
common intermediate. - ATP acts as the energy currency of the cell and
is the chemical link between catabolism and
anabolism. Its exergonic conversion to ADP and
Pi or to AMP and PPi is coupled to a large number
of endergonic reactions.