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Overview: Life Is Work • Living systems require energy from outside sources • Different organisms have different strategies • Energy harvesting pathways provide great examples of metabolic pathways in general • Also they are central to life • And they are VERY well-studied (about 125 years) • They serve as paradigm for all metabolism Light An ecosystem energy is an open ECOSYSTEM system CO2 + H2O Photosynthesis in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria Organic +O molecules 2 Cellular respiration in mitochondria Energy enters as light and leaves as heat or entropy Energy enters as light ATP ATP powers most cellular work Heat energy Concept 9.1: Catabolic pathways • The breakdown of organic molecules (sugars) is exergonic and involves several multistep pathways • Fermentation is a partial degradation of organic molecules that occurs without O2 • Aerobic respiration complete degradation of organic molecules and requires O2 • Anaerobic respiration is similar to aerobic respiration but requires compounds other than O2 -used by many types of microbes but has lower energy yield • Cellular respiration includes both aerobic and anaerobic respiration but is usually used to refer to aerobic respiration We trace aerobic respiration by following the path of glucose (although many other substances are also consumed as fuel). C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy (ATP + heat) • The movement of electrons during chemical reactions helps to release and move energy stored in organic molecules • The electrons are energy carriers (key point) • This released energy is ultimately used to synthesize ATP • In electron transfer reactions, one substance loses electrons and another gains them. • In an oxidation, a substance loses electrons, or is oxidized • In a reduction, a substance gains electrons, or is reduced • They must occur together • Chemical reactions that transfer electrons between reactants are called oxidation-reduction reactions, or redox reactions Example becomes oxidized becomes reduced In an aqueous environment, protons from water follow the electrons. Therefore the reduced form of Y might be written as YH And the reduced form of X as XH • The electron donor is called the reducing agent • The electron receptor is called the oxidizing agent • During cellular respiration, the fuel (such as glucose) is oxidized, and O2 is reduced • The reactions occur in a series or chain • Electrons carry the energy in these transfer reactions but something is needed to carry the electrons from reaction to reaction • Electrons from organic compounds are usually first transferred to NAD+, a coenzyme (other coenzymes can be used as well) • As an electron acceptor, NAD+ functions as an oxidizing agent during cellular respiration • Each NADH (the reduced form of NAD+) represents stored energy that can be tapped to synthesize ATP or do something else Oxidation/Reduction of NAD 2 e– + 2 H+ 2 e– + H+ NADH H+ Dehydrogenase Reduction of NAD+ NAD+ + + H+ 2[H] Oxidation of NADH Nicotinamide (reduced form) Nicotinamide (oxidized form) Hydrogen (H) follows electrons in an aqueous environment An enzyme that catalyzes an oxidation is a “dehydrogenase” • NADH passes high energy electrons to the electron transport chain • This chain hands off electrons in a series of exergonic steps • Finally they reach O2 which becomes reduced • This is the last stop for the electrons so O2 is called the terminal electron acceptor • The energy given off is used to regenerate ATP • There are three important stages: – Glycolysis (breaks down glucose into two molecules of pyruvate) and yields a little ATP by non-oxidative reaction – The Citric acid cycle (completes the breakdown of glucose) and yields a little ATP by non-oxidative reactions – Oxidative phosphorylation (accounts for most of the ATP synthesis) includes electron transport and reduction of oxygen Electrons carried via NADH and FADH2 Electrons carried via NADH Citric acid cycle Glycolysis Pyruvate Glucose Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis Mitochondrion Cytosol ATP ATP ATP Substrate-level phosphorylation Substrate-level phosphorylation Oxidative phosphorylation • Oxidative phosphorylation involves transfer of electrons from reduced coenzymes to oxygen, the terminal electron acceptor. • A smaller amount of ATP is formed in glycolysis and the citric acid cycle by substrate-level phosphorylation Substrate Level Phosphorylation Enzyme Enzyme ADP P Substrate + Product Direct transfer of high energy phosphate from substrate to substrate ATP Concept 9.2: Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by converting glucose to pyruvate • Glycolysis (“splitting of sugar”) breaks down glucose into two molecules of pyruvate • Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm and has two major phases: – Energy investment phase – Energy payoff phase Overview of Glycolysis Glucose Energy investment phase 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP used 4 ADP + 4 P 4 ATP formed Energy payoff phase 2 NAD+ + 4 e– + 4 H+ 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 Pyruvate + 2 H2O Net Glucose 4 ATP formed – 2 ATP used 2 NAD+ + 4 e– + 4 H+ 2 Pyruvate + 2 H2O 2 ATP 2 NADH + 2 H+ Concept 9.3: The citric acid cycle completes the energy-yielding oxidation of organic molecules (except for coenzymes) • In the presence of O2 , pyruvate is transported into the mitochondrion • First, pyruvate must be converted to acetyl CoA, which links the citric acid cycle to glycolysis Aerobic Metabolism of Pyruvate CYTOSOL MITOCHONDRION NAD+ NADH + H+ 2 1 Pyruvate 3 CO2 Coenzyme A Acetyl CoA Transport protein CoA is derived from a vitamin- Vitamin B5 or pantothenic acid Acetyl CoA links carbohydrate and fatty acid catabolism (beta oxidation) • The citric acid cycle, also called the Krebs cycle, takes place within the mitochondrial matrix • The cycle oxidizes organic fuel derived from pyruvate, generating 1 ATP, 3 NADH, and 1 FADH2 per turn Pyruvate CO2 NAD+ CoA NADH + H+ Acetyl CoA CoA CoA Citric acid cycle FADH2 2 CO2 3 NAD+ 3 NADH FAD + 3 H+ ADP + P i ATP Acetyl CoA CoA—SH NADH +H+ H2O 1 NAD+ 8 Oxaloacetate 2 Malate Citrate Isocitrate Carbon Skeletons NAD+ Citric acid cycle 7 H2O NADH + H+ 3 CO2 Fumarate CoA—SH 6 -Ketoglutarate 4 CoA—SH 5 FADH2 NAD+ FAD Succinate GTP GDP Pi Succinyl CoA NADH + H+ ADP ATP You do not need to memorize this CO2 Can be made into many substances Concept 9.4: During oxidative phosphorylation, chemiosmosis couples electron transport to ATP synthesis • Following glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, NADH and FADH2 carry most of the energy extracted from food in the form of high energy electrons • These two electron carriers hand off the electrons to the electron transport chain, which powers ATP synthesis via oxidative phosphorylation • The electron transport chain is in the cristae of the mitochondrion • Most of the chain’s components are proteins, which exist in the form of huge multiprotein complexes • The carriers alternate reduced and oxidized states as they accept and donate electrons • Electrons drop in free energy as they go down the chain and are finally passed to O2, forming H 2O NADH 50 2 e– NAD+ FADH2 2 e– 40 FMN FAD Multiprotein complexes FAD Fe•S Fe•S Q Cyt b 30 Fe•S Cyt c1 IV Cyt c Cyt a Cyt a3 20 10 2 e– (from NADH or FADH2) 0 You do not need to memorize this 2 H+ + 1/2 O2 H2O • Electrons are transferred from NADH or FADH2 to the electron transport chain • Electrons are passed through a number of proteins including cytochromes (each with an iron atom) and iron-sulfur proteins • The electron transport chain generates no ATP directly • The chain’s function is to break the large freeenergy drop from food to O2 into smaller steps that release energy in manageable amounts • Electron transfer in the electron transport chain causes proteins to pump H+ from the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space • H+ then moves back across the membrane, passing through channels in ATP synthase • ATP synthase uses the exergonic flow of H+ to drive phosphorylation of ATP • This is an example of chemiosmosis, the use of energy in a H+ gradient to drive cellular work (Note-this is an important concept) • The energy stored in the electrochemical H+ gradient across a membrane connects or couples the redox reactions of the electron transport chain to ATP synthesis • The H+ gradient is referred to as a protonmotive force, emphasizing its capacity to do work H+ H+ H+ H+ Protein complex of electron carriers Cyt c V Q ATP synthase FADH2 NADH 2 H+ + 1/2O2 H2O FAD NAD+ ADP + P i (carrying electrons from food) ATP H+ 1 Electron transport chain Oxidative phosphorylation 2 Chemiosmosis How much ATP is produced? • During cellular respiration, most energy flows in this sequence: glucose NADH electron transport chain proton-motive force ATP • Roughly 40% of the energy in a glucose molecule is transferred to ATP during cellular respiration, making about 38 ATP Electron shuttles span membrane CYTOSOL 2 NADH Glycolysis Glucose 2 Pyruvate MITOCHONDRION 2 NADH or 2 FADH2 6 NADH 2 NADH 2 Acetyl CoA + 2 ATP Citric acid cycle + 2 ATP Maximum per glucose: About 36 or 38 ATP 2 FADH2 Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis + about 32 or 34 ATP Concept 9.5: Without oxygen-cells use fermentation or anaerobic respiration to produce ATP • Glycolysis can produce ATP with or without O2 (in aerobic or anaerobic conditions) • In the presence of O2 glycolysis couples with aerobic respiration and uses oxygen as terminal electron to produce ATP • In the absence of O2, glycolysis couples with fermentation or anaerobic respiration to produce ATP • Anaerobic respiration uses an electron transport chain with an electron acceptor other than O2, for example sulfate, ending with H2S not H2O • Fermentation uses phosphorylation instead of an electron transport chain to generate ATP • Note: Fermentation is defined to consist of reactions that regenerate NAD+-these vary from organism to organism Types of Fermentation • alcohol fermentation • lactic acid fermentation • butyric acid fermentation • biohydrogen fermentation 2 ADP + 2 P i Glucose 2 ATP Glycolysis 2 Pyruvate 2 NAD+ 2 Ethanol 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 CO2 2 Acetaldehyde Alcohol fermentation 2 ADP + 2 P i Glucose 2 ATP Glycolysis 2 NAD+ 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 Pyruvate 2 Lactate Lactic acid fermentation • Fermentation vs. aerobic respiration • Both processes use glycolysis to oxidize glucose and other organic fuels to pyruvate • The processes have different terminal electron acceptors: an organic molecule (such as pyruvate or acetaldehyde) in fermentation and O2 in cellular respiration • Cellular respiration produces 38 ATP per glucose molecule; fermentation produces 2 ATP per glucose molecule • Obligate anaerobes carry out fermentation or anaerobic respiration and cannot survive in the presence of O2 • Yeast and many bacteria are facultative anaerobes, meaning that they can survive using either fermentation or cellular respiration Glycolysis in evolution • Glycolysis occurs in nearly all organisms • Glycolysis probably evolved in ancient prokaryotes before there was oxygen in the atmosphere • Later prokaryotes evolved ways to extract more energy from pyruvate by anaerobic respiration • Aerobic respiration was last Proteins Carbohydrates Amino acids Sugars Glycolysis Glucose Glyceraldehyde-3- P NH3 Pyruvate Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation Fats Glycerol Fatty acids Glucose AMP Glycolysis Fructose-6-phosphate – Stimulates + Phosphofructokinase – Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate Inhibits Inhibits Pyruvate ATP Citrate Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation NOTE CARD QUESTION What is meant by the term “chemiosmotic coupling mechanism”