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CELL RESPIRATION & METABOLISM 2 Dr. Perkins OVERALL EQUATION Aerobic Cellular respiration ATP forms in the Mitochondrion Know the parts of the mitochondrion. Click here for a video How does ATP form in the mitochondrion? STEP 1: Formation of Acetyl CoA. After one Click HERE 6-carbon glucose molecule breaks down into two 3-carbon pyruvate molecules, pyruvate enters the mitochondrion. A single carbon is removed and breathed out of the body as carbon dioxide. When carbon dioxide is formed, The other two carbons attach a molecule energyto is released in the form of electrons thatCoenzyme are captured by called Coenzyme A, forming Acetyl NAD to form NADH + H+. A (Acetyl CoA) Yield 1: NADH per pyruvate. The Krebs Cycle PRODUCTS: 3 NADH 1 FADH2 1 ATP (per Pyruvate) WASTE PRODUCTS: 2 carbon dioxide For an explanation, Click HERE Electron Transport Chain 1. NADH or FADH2 bring electrons to the membrane Electron Transport Chain 2. In a series of redox reactions, electrons are transferred from one complex to the next. Electron Transport Chain 3. Some of the energy drives proton pumps. Electron Transport Chain: Chemiosmosis 4. Protons accumulate in the intermembrane space, and they diffuse through ATP synthase driving the synthesis of ATP. Electron Transport Chain: Chemiosmosis 5. Oxygen attracts the electrons at the end of the chain and is converted to water. ATP BALANCE SHEET 2 glucose ATP 4 Glycolysis e- + H + 2 NADH 2 FADH2 CYTOPLASM 2 pyruvate ATP (2 ATP net) e- + H + 2 CO2 2 NADH Overview of Aerobic - + H+ eRespiration 6 NADH e- + H + Krebs 2 FADH2 Cycle e- See page 116 of text 4 CO2 Electron Transfer Phosphorylation H+ 2 30 ATP ATP water e- + oxygen Typical Energy Yield: 36 ATP OF ENERGY NADH 2.5 ATP REVIEW AND FADH 1.5 ATPYIELD from ETC Interconversion of Glucose and Glycogen Glycogenesis Glycogen synthase Glycogenolysis Glycogen phosphorylase Glucose-6-phosphatase Glucose from glycogen is in the form of glucose 1-phosphate, so cannot leave muscle or heart cells. Glucose is Converted to Glycogen or FAT When more food energy is taken into the body than is needed to meet energy demands, glucose is converted into glycogen and fat, and ATP production is inhibited Acetyl CoA is a branchpoint } Lipogenesis Why is fat our long term energy storage molecule? 1 g of fat = 9 kcal of energy 1 g of CH2O or protein = 4 kcal of energy WHITE FAT (White adipose tissue) - where most of our triglyceride are stored. Adipocytes LIPASE carries out lipolysis, the breakdown of triglycerides into fatty acids and glycerol. Lipolysis can happen in adipocytes; free glycerol goes to the liver, where it is used to make glucose, which is sent to the blood β-oxidation Fatty acid breakdown for great ATP production. How much? – depends on length of the chain NOTE THE CONVERSIONS TO ATP ON PAGE 120 OF TEXTBOOK. CLICK HERE FOR A YOU TUBE EXPLANATION OF TALLYING ATPS BROWN ADIPOSE TISSUE - Involved in thermogenesis (heat production), esp. in newborns, but some in adults - Sympathetic release norepinephrine brown fat forms UCPI H+ leaks out of inner mito. membrane, less ATP is formed stimulates beta-oxidation for more heat generation UCP-1: an uncoupling protein KETONE BODIES Can provide energy! a. When the rate of lipolysis exceeds the rate of fatty acid utilization (as in Acetone has dieting, starvation, or diabetes), the a fruity odor in breath concentration of fatty acids in the blood increases. b. Liver cells convert the fatty acids into acetyl CoA and then into ketone bodies. c. These are water-soluble molecules that circulate in the blood. d. Build-up in the blood can cause Can be dangerous at high leve ketosis To read more about it, Click HERE causing ketoacidosis and ketonuria PROTEIN • provides nitrogen; replace other proteins • Excess amino acids: – used for energy – converted into carbohydrates or fat. • Bodies make 12 of the 20 amino acids. 8 of them (9 in children) come from the diet (essential). Nitrogen Balance • NORMAL • POSITIVE – Take in more than excreted • NEGATIVE – Excrete more than is taken in Transamination Oxidative Deamination - Amino acids give their NH3 to α-ketoglutarate, and glutamic acid is formed - Glutamic acid gives its NH3 to CO2 - Remaining keto acids can form glucose (gluconeogenesis) Interconversion of Glycogen, Fat, and Protein Glucose and ketone bodies come from the liver Lactic acid and amino acids come from muscle Fatty acids come from adipose tissue c Additional Resources • ATP & Respiration: Crash Course, click HERE • Easy explanation of cellular respiration, click HERE