Title: Energy
1- Energy the ability to do work or bring about a
change - Cells need energy to maintain their organization
- Cells need energy to carry out reactions used to
grow, develop, and reproduce
2- Forms of energy
- Kinetic energy energy of motion
- Ex you raise your arm
- Potential energy stored energy capable of
producing energy, but not being used yet - Ex food we eat has potential energy
- Chemical energy composed or organic molecules
such as carbohydrates - Ex food we eat, ATP
3- First law of thermodynamics (the law of
conservation of energy) energy cannot be
created or destroyed, but it can be changed from
one form to another - Energy flows it does not cycle
- As materials change from one form of energy to
another, some energy is given off as heat (a form
of energy)
4- Second law of thermodynamics energy cannot be
changed from one form to another without a loss
of usable energy - Heat given off through the conversion of chemical
energy to kinetic energy is not a usable form of
energy - For this reason, living things are dependent upon
an outside source of energy the sun
5- Metabolic Pathways and Enzymes
- Cellular reactions are usually part of a
metabolic pathway, a series of linked reactions - Many reactions have molecules in common
- Energy can be released in small amounts rather
than all at once - Illustrated as follows
- E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6
- A ? B ? C ? D ? E ? F ? G
- Letters A-F are reactants or substrates, B-G are
the products in the various reactions, and E1-E6
are enzymes.
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- Enzyme - a protein molecule that functions as an
organic catalyst to speed a chemical reaction. - An enzyme brings together particular molecules
and causes them to react. - The reactants in an enzymatic reaction are called
the substrates for that enzyme. - For series of reactions below, A is substrate for
E1 and B is product. B then becomes substrate
for E2 and C is product. Continues to end of
pathway. - E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6
- A ? B ? C ? D ? E ? F ? G
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- Energy of activation (Ea) - the energy that must
be added to cause molecules to react with one
another - Enzyme lowers the amount of energy required for
reaction to occur - Enzymes allow reactions to take place at lower
temperatures otherwise, reactions would not be
able to occur at normal body temperatures
8Energy of activation (Ea)
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When no enzyme is present more energy required
When an enzyme is added less energy required
9Enzyme-Substrate Complexes
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- Every reaction in a cell requires a specific
enzyme. - Enzymes are named for their substrates
Substrate Enzyme
Lipid Lipase
Ureas Urease
Maltose Maltase
Ribonucleic acid Ribonuclease
10- Active site part of enzyme that attaches to
substrate - Active site may undergo a slight change in shape
in order to accommodate the substrate(s) - The enzyme and substrate form an enzyme-substrate
complex during the reaction. - The enzyme is not changed by the reaction (active
site returns to its original state), and it is
free to act again.
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Enzymatic reaction
Substrates are combined into a larger product
Substrate is broken down into smaller products
12Induced fit model
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- Because the enzyme must undergo a slight change
in shape to fit with the substrate, this is known
as the induced fit model.
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Factors Affecting Enzymatic Speed
- Substrate concentration
- Temperature and pH
- Enzyme concentration
- Enzyme inhibition
- Competitive inhibitors
- Non-competitive inhibitors
- Enzyme co-factors
14- Substrate concentration
- Enzyme activity increases as substrate
concentration increases because there are more
collisions between substrate molecules and the
enzyme. - When active sites on enzymes are filled almost
continuously with substrate, rate of activity
cannot increase further.
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- Temperature and pH
- As the temperature rises, enzyme activity
increases because more collisions occur between
enzyme and substrate. - If the temperature is too high, enzyme activity
levels out and then declines rapidly because the
enzyme is denatured. - When enzyme is denatured, its shape changes and
it can no longer bind to substrate. - Each enzyme has an optimal pH and temperature at
which the rate of reaction is highest.
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Rate of an enzymatic reaction as a function of
temperature and pH
17- Enzyme Concentration
- A cell regulates which enzymes are present or
active at any one time and the quantity of enzyme
present by turning on of off genes - Another way to control enzyme activity is to
activate or deactivate the enzyme, such as
through phosphorylation (removal of phosphate
group).
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- Enzyme Inhibition
- Occurs when an active enzyme is prevented from
combining with its substrate. - When the product of a metabolic pathway is in
abundance, it binds competitively with the
enzymes active site, a simple form of feedback
inhibition. - Other metabolic pathways are regulated by the end
product binding to an allosteric site (another
area of enzyme). - Poisons such as cyanide are often enzyme
inhibitors penicillin is an enzyme inhibitor for
bacteria.
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Feedback inhibition
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When there is a sufficient amount of the end
product, some of the product binds to the
allosteric site on the enzyme, the active site
changes shape, the reactant cannot bind, and the
end product is no longer produced.
http//highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072437316/s
tudent_view0/chapter8/animations.html
21- Competitive inhibitors
- Have a similar shape to the substrate fit into
the active site of the enzyme - Dont take part in the reaction
- Block active site so substrate cant enter
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Animation
- Non-competitive inhibitors
- Do not have the same shape as the substrate do
not compete for the active site - Bind at some other point on the enzyme molecule,
which still changes the shape of the active site
so enzyme-substrate complex cannot be formed.
http//www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/flashanimat/
enzymes/allosteric.swf
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- Enzyme Cofactors
- Presence of enzyme cofactors may be necessary for
some enzymes to carry out their functions. - Inorganic metal ions, such as copper, zinc, or
iron function as cofactors for certain enzymes. - Organic molecules, termed coenzymes, must be
present for other enzymes to function. - Some coenzymes are vitamins certain vitamin
deficiencies result in a lack of certain
enzymatic reactions.
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The ATP cycle
24- ATP (adenosine triphosphate)
- The energy currency of cells.
- A nucleotide made of the following
- Adenine
- Ribose (a sugar)
- Three phosphate groups
- Constantly regenerated from ADP (adenosine
diphosphate) after energy is expended by the
cell. - Pneumonic devices ATP a triple phosphate
- - ADP a double phosphate
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http//www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/flashanimat/
metabolism/atpsyn2.swf
25 Advantages of ATP 1) It can be used in many
types of reactions. 2) When ATP ? ADP P, energy
released is sufficient for cellular needs and
little energy is wasted. 3) ATP is coupled to
endergonic reactions (requires an input of
energy) in such a way that it minimizes energy
loss.
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26- Overview of Cellular Respiration
- Makes ATP molecules
- Releases energy in several reactions
- Glycolysis
- Transition reaction
- Citric acid cycle (Krebs cycle)
- Electron transport system
- An aerobic process that requires O2
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27- Cellular respiration takes the potential chemical
energy in the bonds of glucose and transforms it
into the potential chemical energy in the bonds
of ATP. - ATP molecules store usable chemical energy to
drive life processes through coupled reactions.
28- It is an oxidation-reduction reaction, or redox
reaction for short. - Oxidation is the loss of electrons hydrogen
atoms are removed from glucose. - Reduction is the gain of electrons oxygen atoms
gain electrons. - Remember OIL RIG (oxidation is loss, reduction is
gain)
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- Enzymes involved
- NAD
- Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
- Accepts 2 electrons 1 H to become NADH
- FAD
- Flavin adenine dinucleotide (sometimes used
instead of NAD) - Accepts 2 electrons 2 H to become FADH2
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The NAD cycle
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Phases of Cellular Respiration
- Four phases
- Glycolysis
- Transition reaction
- Citric acid cycle (Krebs cycle)
- Electron transport system
- (If oxygen is not available, fermentation occurs
in the cytoplasm instead of proceeding to
cellular respiration.)
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The four phases of complete glucose breakdown
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- Glycolysis
- Occurs in the cytoplasm (outside the
mitochondria) - Glucose ? 2 pyruvate molecules.
- Universally found in all organisms
- Does not require oxygen.
http//www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/B
io231/glycolysis.html
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- Energy-Investment Steps
- Requires 2 ATP to start process and activate
glucose - Glucose splits into two C3 molecules (PGAL)
- Each C3 molecule undergoes the same series of
reactions.
38- Energy-Harvesting Steps
- PGAL is oxidized by the removal of electrons by
NAD phosphate group is attached to each PGAL as
well (phosphorylation) - Removal of phosphate from 2 PGAP by 2 ADP
produces 2 ATP, and 2 PGA molecules
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39- Removal of water results in 2 PEP molecules
- Removal of phosphate from 2 PEP by 2 ADP produces
2 ATP molecules and 2 pyruvate molecules
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Glycolysis summary
- Inputs
- Glucose
- 2 NAD
- 2 ATP
- 4 ADP 2 P
- Outputs
- 2 pyruvate
- 2 NADH
- 2 ADP
- 2 ATP (net gain)
- When oxygen is available, pyruvate enters the
mitochondria, where it is further broken down - If oxygen is not available, fermentation occurs
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- Inside the Mitochondria
- Structure of mitochondia
- Has a double membrane, with an intermembrane
space between the two layers. - Cristae are folds of inner membrane
- The matrix, the innermost compartment, which is
filled with a gel-like fluid. - The transition reaction and citric acid cycle
occur in the matrix the electron transport
system is located in the cristae.
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Mitochondrion structure and function
43- Transition Reaction
- Is the transition between glycolysis and the
citric acid cycle. - Pyruvate (made during glycolysis) is converted to
acetyl CoA, and CO2 is released - NAD is converted to NADH H
- The transition reaction occurs twice per glucose
molecule.
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Transition reaction inputs and outputs per
glucose molecule
- Outputs
- 2 acetyl groups
- 2 CO2
- 2 NADH
http//www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/B
io231/krebs.html
45- Citric Acid Cycle (aka Krebs Cycle)
- Occurs in the matrix of the mitochondria.
- C2 acetyl group (produced during transition
reaction) joins a C4 molecule, and C6 citrate
results. - Each acetyl group gives off 2 CO2 molecules.
- NAD accepts electrons in three sites and FAD
accepts electrons once. - Substrate-level phosphorylation results in a gain
of one ATP per every turn of the cycle it turns
twice per glucose, so a net of 2 ATP are
produced. - The citric acid cycle produces four CO2 per
molecule of glucose.
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Citric acid cycle
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Citric acid cycle inputs and outputs per glucose
molecule
- Inputs
- 2 acetyl groups
- 6 NAD
- 2 FAD
- 2 ADP 2 P
- Outputs
- 4 CO2
- 6 NADH
- 2 FADH2
- 2 ATP
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- Electron Transport System (ETS)
- Located in the cristae of mitochondria
- Series of protein carriers pass electrons from
one to the other. - NADH and FADH2 carry electrons picked up during
glycolysis, transition reaction, citric acid
cycle - NADH and FADH2 enter the ETS.
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- As a pair of electrons is passed from carrier to
carrier, energy is released and is used to form
ATP molecules by oxidative phosphorylation (term
used to describe production of ATP as a result of
energy released by ETS). - Oxygen receives electrons at the end of the ETS,
which combines with hydrogen to form water - ½ O2 2 e- 2 H ? H2O
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Overview of the electron transport system
52- Organization of Cristae
- The ETS consists of 3 protein complexes and 2
mobile carriers. - Mobile carriers transport electrons between the
complexes. - Energy is released by electrons as they move down
carriers - H are pumped from the matrix into the
intermembrane space of the mitochondrion. - Produces a very strong electrochemical gradient -
few H in the matrix and many H in the
intermembrane space.
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53- The cristae also contain an ATP synthase complex
- Hydrogen ions flow through ATP synthase complex
down their gradient from the intermembrane space
into the matrix. - Flow of 3 H through ATP synthase complex causes
the ATP synthase to synthesize ATP from ADP P. - This process of making ATP is called
chemiosmosis, because ATP production is tied to
an electrochemical gradient (H gradient) - Once formed, ATP molecules are transported out of
the mitochondrial matrix.
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http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/atpgradient
/movie.htm
http//www.sp.uconn.edu/7Eterry/images/movs/synth
ase.mov
http//www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/B
io231/etc.html
http//highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072437316/s
tudent_view0/chapter9/animations.html
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- Energy Yield from Glucose Metabolism
- Per glucose molecule
- 10 NADH take electrons to the ETS ? 3 ATP from
each - 2 FADH2 take electrons to the ETS ? 2 ATP from
each - Electrons carried by NADH produced during
glycolysis are shuttled to the electron transport
chain by an organic molecule (mechanism of
delivery may vary of ATP produced by ETS).
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Accounting of energy yield per glucose molecule
breakdown
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60- Fermentation
- Occurs when oxygen is not available.
- During fermentation, the pyruvate formed by
glycolysis is reduced to alcohol and CO2, or one
of several organic acids, such as lactate. - Fermentation uses NADH and regenerates NAD,
which are free to pick up more electrons during
early steps of glycolysis this keeps glycolysis
going. - Occurs in anaerobic bacteria, fungus, human
muscle cells.
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http//instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/Courses/biomi290/
MOVIES/GLYCOLYSIS.HTML
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62Fermentation
- Before fermentation, glycolysis produces 2
pyruvate molecules. - Then pyruvate is reduced by NADH into lactate or
alcohol CO2.
63Advantages and Disadvantages of Fermentation
- Fermentation can provide a rapid burst of ATP in
muscle cells, even when oxygen is in limited
supply. - For bacteria, glycolysis and fermentation is the
main energy source - Lactate, however, is toxic to cells.
- Initially, blood carries away lactate as it
forms eventually lactate builds up, lowering
cell pH, and causing muscles to fatigue. - Oxygen debt occurs, and the liver must reconvert
lactate to pyruvate.
64Efficiency of Fermentation
- Two ATP produced during fermentation are
equivalent to 14.6 kcal complete oxidation of
glucose to CO2 and H2O represents a yield of 686
kcal per molecule of glucose. - Thus, fermentation is only 2.1 efficient
compared to cellular respiration (which is 39
efficient). - (14.6/686) x 100 2.1
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Glycolysis and Fermentation inputs and outputs
per glucose molecule
- Inputs (into glycolysis)
- Glucose
- 2 ATP
- 4 ADP 2 P
- Outputs
- 2 lactate (fermentation) or
- 2 alcohol 2 CO2 (fermentation)
- 2 ADP (glycolysis)
- 2 ATP (net gain) (glycolysis)