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Activating Strategy
Belief or Disbelief
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
1st Law of thermodynamics states that energy can be
created and destroyed.
Anabolic reactions are reactions that break bonds
between molecules.
Exergonic chemical reactions release energy.
Chemical reactions occur spontaneously in living
organisms because they have stable covalent bonds.
Activation energy is the amount of energy required to
start a chemical reaction
Biological catalysts help divide chemical reactions into
small steps, which increases their efficiency.
AP Lesson #10
EQ: What is metabolism and what
role does energy play in metabolism?
How does energy move through an environment?
• Life is built on chemical reactions
– transforming energy from one form to another
• 1st Law of Thermodynamics
– Energy can be transferred,
– but never created or destroyed
organic molecules →
ATP & organic molecules
organic molecules →
ATP & organic molecules
sun
solar energy →
ATP & organic molecules
1
So then what is metabolism?
• An emergent property of life that arises from
interactions between molecules within the cell
• Chemical reactions of life
– forming bonds between molecules
• dehydration synthesis
• Ex. Protein Synthesis
• anabolic reactions
– breaking bonds between molecules
• Hydrolysis and digestion
• Ex. Cellular Respiration
• catabolic reactions
Examples
• Anabolic Metabolism
– dehydration synthesis (synthesis)
enzyme
• Catabolic Metabolism
– hydrolysis (digestion)
enzyme
What is the difference between chemical
reactions in living things?
• Some chemical reactions release energy
– exergonic
+
+ energy
– digesting polymers
– digesting molecules = LESS organization release of
stored energy
• Some chemical reactions require input of energy
– endergonic
+
+ energy
– building polymers
– building molecules = MORE organization stores energy
2
What is the difference between the two reactions?
∆G = change in free energy = ability to do work
exergonic
endergonic
- energy released
- digestion
- energy invested
- synthesis
+∆
∆G
-∆
∆G
So then why do we need chemical reactions?
• Organisms require energy to live
– where does that energy come from?
• coupling exergonic reactions (releasing energy) with
endergonic reactions (needing energy)
+
+
energy
digestion
synthesis
+
+
energy
If reactions are “downhill”, why don’t
they just happen spontaneously?
• Why don’t stable polymers spontaneously
digest into their monomers?
– because covalent bonds are stable bonds
starch
3
We need activation energy!
• Breaking down large molecules requires
an initial input of energy
– activation energy
– large biomolecules are stable
– must absorb energy to break bonds
cellulose
CO2 + H2O + heat
energy
What is activation energy?
• amount of energy needed to destabilize the bonds of a
molecule
• moves the reaction over an “energy hill”
• at temperatures typical of the cell, molecules don’t
make it over the hump of activation energy
glucose
How do we Reduce Activation Energy?
• Catalysts
– reducing the amount of energy to start a reaction
uncatalyzed reaction
catalyzed reaction
NEW activation energy
reactant
product
4
So what’s a cell got to do to reduce
activation energy?
– Use Enzymes
– Requires less energy input for metabolism
∆G
Metabolic pathways
→
→
2
→
→
1
→
→
→
A→B→C→D→E→F→G
4
5
6
enzyme
enzyme enzyme enzyme
enzyme enzyme enzyme
3
• Chemical reactions of life
are organized in pathways
– divide chemical reaction into
many small steps
• ↑ efficiency
– intermediate branching points
• ↑ control = regulation
– Feedback
Summarizing Strategy
Belief or Disbelief
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
1st Law of thermodynamics states that energy can be
created and destroyed.
Anabolic reactions are reactions that break bonds
between molecules.
Exergonic chemical reactions release energy.
Chemical reactions occur spontaneously in living
organisms because they have stable covalent bonds.
Activation energy is the amount of energy required to
start a chemical reaction
Biological catalysts help divide chemical reactions into
small steps, which increases their efficiency.
5
Assessment
HW: Chapter 8.1 – 8.2 MC Wkst and Read
Chapter 8.4
6