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UNIT 5 NOTES – ENERGY PROCESSES METABOLISM I. Metabolism, Energy and Matter All living organisms must exchange energy with their environment. The energy can come from light for photoautotrophs, photoheterotrophs or from chemical energy for chemoautotrophs and chemoheterotrophs. The energy is used to fuel cellular processes. Metabolism – all processes that are responsible for transforming energy and matter within an organism. Two subtypes include: o Anabolism – building up molecules by using energy and enzymes o Catabolism – breaking down molecules by releasing energy and using enzymes Metabolic pathways – sets of reactions in which the product of one reaction becomes the reactant of the other. These pathways can be regulated together to form one certain product. Energy is the capacity to do work and create heat (potential and kinetic energy) First law of thermodynamics – Energy cannot be created or destroyed but can be converted to different forms or transferred from one organism to the next. Please review primary gross and net production, secondary production, production efficiency and trophic efficiency. Second law of thermodynamics – Every time energy is transformed from one form to an other, some of it is lost as heat. Heat increases the kinetic energy of molecules and their random motion, so the entropy (disorder) of the system also increases every time energy conversion or transfer occurs. Gibbs free energy – available energy for the system to use to perform work: ΔG = Gfinal – Ginitial When the reactants of a reaction with higher free energy are converted to the products with lower free energy, the reaction is spontaneous, and the reaction is exergonic. The ΔG in this case is negative. When the products have more free energy than the reactants, the reaction does not occur spontaneously (non-spontaneous) and the reaction is endergonic. The value of ΔG in this case is positive. All reactions, including exergonic reactions need an initial investment of energy to activate the reaction. This is called the activation energy. Review enzymes and enzyme regulation Coupled reactions team energy releasing reactions with energy-costing reactions. This way all coupled reactions have a net release of ΔG as heat to fulfill the second law of thermodynamics. An example of coupled reactions is the synthesis of DNA, where each nucleotide is added as a GTP, ATP, TTP, CTP and two phosphates are broken down of these monomers to release enough energy to form DNA. DNA synthesis is an anabolic endergonic process, while the hydrolysis of the triphosphate monomers is a catabolic exergonic process. II. ATP Is The Main Energy Currency in Cells Most cellular work is directly fuelled by the hydrolysis of one simple molecule, called adenosine triphosphate, ATP. The cell uses various molecules to store energy (such as starch, glycogen, proteins, simple lipids) but for direct energy use the cell mostly uses ATP. (Incorrectly stated in the book) The structure of ATP is made up of: o Adenine o Ribose o 3 phosphates ATP can break down into adenosine diphosphate (ADP) by hydrolysis in an exergonic reaction and releases energy for cells to use. Also, the phosphate released can bind with other molecules and energize them by changing their shape – Phosphorylation. The energy released is sufficient enough to fuel other endergonic processes. ADP can also be refueled by using exergonic reactions that will phosphorylate it to form ATP again. This way the cell regenerates ATP by using exergonic reactions such as cellular respiration. Because ATP is universally used by all living organisms, it must have evolved early on and is an indicator of the common origin of life. Other energy carrying molecules are also used by cells, such as GTP, NAD+, FAD, NADP+ and others. ENERGY TRANSFER I. Energy In Living Systems The chart below says it all: General equations also show the interrelatedness of photosynthesis and cellular respiration. II. Overview of Cellular Respiration The main purpose of cellular respiration is to release energy from organic molecules by breaking these down to simple carrier molecules than eventually to ATP. Cellular respiration can be aerobic – requires oxygen or anaerobic – does not require oxygen. In the case of anaerobic pathway an alternative process called fermentation completes the process. An aerobic or an anaerobic version of cellular respiration takes place in all living organisms. Cellular respiration can break down glucose directly, but can also metabolize any other organic molecule that is used as an energy source (anything except nucleic acids). Fat molecules produce the most ATP /g of molecule, more than carbohydrates or proteins. Cellular respiration is the step by step oxidation of glucose. This process takes place in small steps to minimize the loss of heat in the process and maximize the efficiency. The overall equation that only shows the starting and end products is: C6H12O6 + 6O2 --- 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (in the form of ATP and heat) Because this process is exergonic, it releases heat, so ΔG is negative. The entire process of cellular respiration is broken down to small steps of redox reactions. In a redox reaction, two steps occur at the same time. One of the reactants is reduced, meaning gains electrons (may be visible as a gain of hydrogen ions) while the other reactant is oxidized because it loses electrons (may be visible as losing hydrogen ions). (“LEO the lion goes GER”) In general, reduced forms of substances have more energy than the oxidized forms of the same substances. III. Mobile Carriers As a series of redox reactions take place in cellular respiration, electrons are moved along and their energy is gradually released. Because these electrons are not transferred directly from glucose (oxidized) to oxygen (reduced), electron carriers are required to move the electrons along. NAD+ is the most versatile carrier that picks up 2e- and 1H+ and carries them to the last step, oxidative phosphorylation where it is going to be oxidized back to its empty form. NAD+ + 2 e- + H+ NADH Another electron carrier is FAD, which is used only in the citric acid cycle and also carries electrons to oxidative phosphorylation: FAD + 2e_ + 2H+ IV. Two Ways of Producing ATP: The main purpose of cellular respiration is to produce as much ATP as possible. ATP is always produced form ADP and P by phosphorylation. Phosphate binding to ADP can occur in two ways: o Substrate-level phosphorylation – Here phosphorylation occurs as the result of an exergonic chemical reaction. The excess energy from the reaction fuels the binding of phosphate to ADP by specific enzymes that perform that particular chemical reaction. o Oxidative phosphorylation – uses an electrochemical gradient of hydrogen ions across a membrane to fuel ATP production by one specific enzyme called ATP synthase. Prezi link: http://prezi.com/m9s0caebmwdu/ap-bio-energy-3-chemoheterotrophic-nutrition/ THE STAGES AND STEPS OF AEROBIC CELLULAR RESPIRATION I. THE STAGES OF CELLULAR RESPIRATION: PREVIEW There are three distinct stages of the cellular respiration: oGlycolysis oThe citric acid cycle (preceded by pyruvate oxidation) oOxidative phosphorylation composed of electron transport + chemiosmosis II. Glycolysis Takes place in the cytoplasm. In this process a glucose molecule is split to produce 2 pyruvate molecules. The process consists of 10 steps which can be divided into two phases: o Energy investment phase – during this phase the cell actually spends energy (uses ATP) to phosphorylate and break the glucose. o Energy payoff phase – ATP is produced by substrate-level phosphorylation and NADH is also produced. The net energy yield from this process is 2 ATP + 2 NADH from every glucose molecule. This process does not require oxygen. Pyruvates that are produced in this process will either continue into the mitochondria for aerobic cellular respiration or remain in the cytoplasm for fermentation in anaerobic conditions. Total products/glucose: 2 ATP, 2 NADPH, 2 pyruvate Find out the fate of each molecule and also what is oxidized and what is reduced in this process. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfGlznwfu9U -- song III. The Citric Acid Cycle (Krebs Cycle) If molecular oxygen is present, the two pyruvate molecules enter the mitochondrion where the enzymes of the citric acid cycle complete the oxidation process. However, pyruvate needs to be altered before it enters the citric acid cycle. This takes place during pyruvate oxidation in the matrix of the mitochondrion. Conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA (pyruvate oxidation) consists of three reactions that are catalyzed by multiple enzymes: o The carboxyl group is removed from pyruvate and given off as CO2 gas o The remaining 2 carbon compound is oxidized into an acetate o A coenzyme A (a derivative of vitamin B) is attached to the acetate, making it very reactive. In the citric acid cycle the acetyl group is gradually broken down to 2 more CO2 molecules, 1 ATP molecule, 3 NADH molecules and another electron carrier FADH2 per turn (2 turns per glucose). The NADH and FADH2 molecules move to the electron transport chain while the CO2 molecules are released into the blood stream and eventually into the air during exhalation. The ATP molecules can be used in endergonic processes. IV. Oxidative Phosphorylation At this point there is still a large amount of energy stored in the 8 NADH and 2 FADH2 molecules that move to the inner membrane of the mitochondrion from glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation and citric acid cycle. The electrons and H+ ions are released and two processes take place: A. Electron Transport: Electron transport is performed on a collection of molecules that are located on the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. The large surface that is provided by the cristae of the mitochondrion makes thousands of these processes possible all at once. There are four groups of proteins in the electron transport chain, they are numbered from I through IV. As the electrons move in the electron transport chain, they gradually lose some of their free energy. This energy is used to fuel the active transport of H+ across the mitochondrial inner membrane from the matrix into the intermembrane space. This process sets up an electrochemical gradient of H+ ions between the two sides of the inner membrane. This potential energy will be used to fuel the second part of oxidative phosphorylation. B. Chemiosmosis Chemiosmosis – energy stored in the form of hydrogen ion gradient across a membrane is used to drive cellular work such as the synthesis of ATP. This process also takes place on the inner membrane of the mitochondrion, where many copies of another protein complex are located. This complex is called ATP synthase – an enzyme that makes ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. This enzyme works like an ion pump but pushes the H+ ions in reverse (from the higher to the lower concentration area) and uses the potential energy of the concentration gradient to fuel ATP synthesis. ATP synthase is a complex protein that has several subunits. As an H+ ion flows through a narrow space in the enzyme, it rotates a part of the enzyme and every three electrons will this way form an ATP molecule. To complete oxidative phosphorylation, H+ ions from the ATP synthase and the electrons from the 4th transport protein have to be neutralized so they don’t harm the mitochondria. They bind with O2 that we exhale (this is the only reason why we need to exhale oxygen) and form water as the final product of cellular respiration. Oxidative phosphorylation produces 32-34 ATP molecules/glucose. Watch: http://vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/atpgradient/movie.htm And http://vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/etc/movie.htm http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCpNk92uswY