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Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy Chapter 9 Energy in Natural Systems • Energy stored in organic molecules (food) ultimately comes from the sun Catabolic Pathways and ATP • Organic compounds have potential energy because of the arrangement of their atoms • Compounds in exergonic reactions can be seen as fuels • Some of those fuels can be used to do cellular work and some is lost as heat Catabolic Pathways and ATP • Aerobic Respiration – oxygen is consumed as a reactant along with the sugar – Most prevalent and efficient – Most eukaryotes and some prokaryotes • C6H1206 + 602 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (ATP + Heat) • Glucose is fuel used most often (can also be fueled by other carbs, lipids, etc.) • Exergonic reaction Catabolic Pathways and ATP • Anaerobic Respiration – an item other than oxygen in consumed • Fermentation – catabolic process that partially degrades sugar without the use of oxygen – Yeast • Cellular Respiration – includes both aerobic and anaerobic respiration • These catabolic pathways regenerate ATP to complete cellular work Redox Reactions • Redox reactions occur during a chemical reaction when one reactant transfers electrons to another reactant – Oxidation – the loss of electrons from one item (the electron donor is called the reducing agent) – Reduction – the addition of electrons to another (the electron acceptor is called the oxidizing agent) • Some redox reactions change the degree of sharing in covalent bonds Redox Reactions Redox Reactions • Those items that are more electronegative will be stronger oxidizing agents (ie. Oxygen) • Energy must be added to pull an electron away • More energy is required the more electronegative the atom • The move of an electron towards a more electronegative item decreases the amount of potential energy and releases chemical energy that can be put to work Redox Reactions • In biology, cellular respiration is a redox reaction – Glucose is oxidized to carbon dioxide – Oxygen is reduced to water • The oxidation of glucose transfers electrons to a lower energy state, liberating energy that is now available for ATP synthesis • Hydrogen is an excellent source for these electrons; therefore carbohydrates and fats are our best fuel sources Respiration and Electrons • Cellular respiration oxidizes glucose and other organic fuels through several steps where each is catalyzed by an enzyme. • At key steps, electrons are stripped from the glucose via hydrogen atoms – Hydrogen is passed via an electron carrier (coenzyme) called NAD+ which acts as an oxidizing agent Functioning of NAD+ • NAD+ traps electrons via enzymes called dehydrogenases which remove Hydrogen atoms from the glucose (or other substrate) oxidizing it. • NAD+ receives 2 electrons and 1 proton (the other proton is released) creating NADH which helps to store energy for making ATP later Electron Transport • Hydrogen atoms are harnessed via NADH for their electrons, but to help control the reaction between hydrogen (electrons) and oxygen an Electron Transport Chain is used. • Electron transfer from NADH to oxygen is exergonic • Electrons cascade down the chain from one carrier molecule to another; each step is slightly more electronegative Cellular Respiration (Aerobic) • 3 stages: – Glycolysis – The citric acid cycle / Krebs Cycle – Oxidative phosphorylation: Electron Transport Chain and chemiosmosis Glycolysis • Process of “splitting sugar” into 2 molecules of pyruvate – First the glucose is split into 2 3-carbon sugars which are then oxidized into pyruvate • Occurs in the cytosol • Begins cellular respiration (occurs in both aerobic and anaerobic pathways) Glycolysis • Can be split into 2 phases – Energy Investment: uses 2 ATP – Energy Payoff: creates 4 ATP • uses substrate level phosphorylation • NAD+ gains electrons becoming NADH Pyruvate and Acetyl CoA • Glycolysis only releases about ¼ of chemical energy stored in glucose. The rest is still in pyruvate. • In aerobic respiration, pyruvate will enter mitochondria and be converted to Acetyl CoA – Carboxyl oxidized releasing carbon dioxide – Two carbon fragment oxidized forming acetate and transferring electrons to NADH – Coenzyme A is attached to the acetate Citric Acid Cycle / Krebs • Acetyl CoA has high potential energy • Pyruvate (2 per glucose) is broken down to 3 carbon dioxides • Produces 1 ATP per turn • Most energy is transferred to NAD+ and FAD – NADH and FADH2 are then transferred to the ETC Electron Transport Chain • Collection of molecules embedded in the inner membrane of the mitochondria – Largely proteins, but also have prosthetic groups which are nonprotein compounds • Each component becomes reduced as it accepts electrons from its ‘uphill’ neighbor…. Each step down is more electronegative Chemiosmosis • In the inner membrane of the mitochondria are many copies of the protein complex ATP synthase (ATP synthetase) – Enzyme that makes ATP from ADP • Power source for the ATP synthase is a difference in concentration of H+ on opposite sides of the mitochondrial membrane • This is chemiosmosis (referring to the flow of H+ across a membrane) Chemiosmosis Energy Yield Anaerobic Respiration vs. Fermentation • Anaerobic Respiration – uses an electron transport chain, but does not use oxygen as a final electron acceptor – May use sulfate ion • Fermentation – harvests energy without using oxygen or an ETC – An extension of glycolysis that allows ATP to be continually made – Replaces NAD+ for glycolysis to continue Fermentation • Alcoholic – pyruvate is converted to ethyl alcohol – Releases carbon dioxide – Used in winemaking, brewing and baking – Bacteria (yeast) • Lactic Acid – pyruvate is reduced directly by NADH to form lactate – No release of carbon dioxide – Used to make yogurt and cheese – Fungi and bacteria Beyond Glucose • Your body can use a variety of carbohydrates to complete cellular respiration – Must be broken down to glucose (monomer) • Proteins must be broken down to amino acids and amino groups must be removed • Fats broken into glycerol and fatty acid – Fatty acid must go through beta oxidation to break down Feedback Mechanisms in Cellular Respiration