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ATP 2009-2010 ATP 2009-2010 Synthesis Reproduction Active Transport Movement Glucose ATP Animals eat these organic molecules to release that energy as ATP ( Adenosine Triphosphate ) Cells break down GLUCOSE and release the energy that they contain in their chemical bonds. The energy in glucose is converted into a form of energy the organism can use ►ATP ATP (adenosine triphosphate) the primary source of energy for the cell The HIGH ENERGY BOND is in the TERMINAL PHOSPHATE BOND P P P Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) H2O P i + P P Figure 8.9Inorganic phosphate Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) Energy 1. ATP releases small quantities of energy which are appropriate for most cell activities 2. ATP’s energy can be released with just one reaction 3. ATP can be recycled Hydrolysis of ATP ATPase H2O + ATP → ADP + P + ENERGY Cellular Respiration is used to produce ATP molecules from ADP ATPase ENERGY + P + ADP → ATP + H2O The Recycling of ATP In cellular respiration, glucose is broken down gradually in a series of enzyme-controlled steps If respiration involves the use of O2 the process is aerobic If no O2 is used - the process is anaerobic Anaerobic respiration takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell Aerobic respiration takes place in the Mitochondria of the cell 1. Glycolysis (occurs in cytoplasm 2. Krebs cycle (occurs in mitochondria) 3. Electron Transport Chain (occurs in the mitochondria) ( AKA – Oxidative Phosphorylation ) Overall Reaction C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + 36 ATP 1. The Respiration Pathway begins with a process called glycolysis ( Breaking Glucose) 2. High Energy Electrons are released 3. These electrons are used to make ATP Oxidation: an atom or molecule loses a high energy electron (Glucose) Reduction: an atom or molecule gains a high energy electron ( Coenzymes ) OIL - RIG High energy electrons (e-) are released from glucose (Oxidation) They then are passed to NAD+ (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide) which gains electrons ( Reduction ) NAD+ + 2e- → NADH High energy electrons (e-) are released during Krebs cycle They then are passed FADH2 (Flavine Adenine Dinucleotide) which gains electrons ( Reduction ) NADH and FADH hold the electrons until they can be used in the Electron Transport Chain The Respiration Pathway begins with a process called glycolysis “splitting of sugar” involves a reactions which break Glucose into 2 molecules of Pyruvate THIS TAKES PLACE IN THE CYTOPLASM NO OXYGEN NEEDED Preview to Glycolysis glucose is a very stable molecule glycolysis requires an investment of 2 ATP molecules to get the process started glucose is a very stable molecule glycolysis requires an investment of 2 ATP molecules to get the process started 2 ATP + C6H12O6 2 pyruvate + 4 ATP 2 NAD+ 2 NADH+ NET GAIN OF ATP: _____ Net Gain of NADH______ glycolysis animation Glycolysis Video The pyruvic acid from glycolysis is used by the mitochondria for the aerobic phases of cell respiration Only 10 % of energy stored in Glucose is used during Glycolysis Mitochondria have an external membrane and an inner membrane with numerous folds called cristae The cristae project into the gel-like matrix electron micrograph: Krebs cycle (occurs in the matrix of the mitochondria) – Needs O2 electron transport (occurs in the cristae of the mitochondria) – Needs O2 British biochemist Won Nobel Prize in 1953 for the discovery of the Citric acid cycle or Krebs cycle in 1937 During the Krebs cycle, pyruvic acid is broken down and releases carbon dioxide Pyruvic acid must be converted into a two carbon molecule: Acetyl CoA to enter the Krebs cycle 3 carbon 2 carbon What is released?________ Acetyl Co-A is converted into citric acid Citric acid is broken down in series of steps Electrons are transferred to NADH and a FADH2 (Flavine Adenine Dinucleotide) CO2 is released as a waste product Net gain per glucose: Two Turns of the Cycle 2 ATP 6 NADH 2 FADH2 6 CO2 are released as a waste product Carbohydrates: cells use glycogen supplies stored in the liver Proteins: amino acids are fed into the Krebs cycle. Fats: Excess fats stored in adipose tissue are digested into glycerol (which enters glycolysis) and fatty acids (which enter the Krebs cycle). Proteins and lipids can form many ATP but waste products are toxic Krebs cycle animation Uses high-energy electrons stored in NADH and FADH2 from the Krebs cycle to convert ADP into ATP Each FADH2 produces - 2 ATP Each NADH produces - 3 ATP Electron transport chains are proteins in in the inner membrane of the mitochondria High energy electrons are passed from one protein to the next This energy is used to pump H+ ions into the inter-membrane space, making it positively charged The inner membranes of the mitochondria contain protein spheres called ATP synthases As H+ ions escape through channels into these proteins, the ATP synthases spin Each time it rotates the enzyme grabs an ADP and attaches a phosphate, forming ATP ATP Synthase Animation INTERMEMBRANE SPACE H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ A rotor within the membrane spins clockwise when H+ flows past it down the H+ gradient. H+ A stator anchored in the membrane holds the knob stationary. H+ ADP + Pi Figure 9.14 MITOCHONDRIAL MATRIX ATP A rod (for “stalk”) extending into the knob also spins, activating catalytic sites in the knob. Three catalytic sites in the stationary knob join inorganic Phosphate to ADP to make ATP. At the end of the electron transport chain is an enzyme that combines electrons from the electron chain with hydrogen ions and oxygen to form water Oxygen serves as the final electron acceptor electron transport animation Glycolysis is the breakdown of glucose to pyruvate. 2 ATP generated. The Krebs Cycle breaks down pyruvate to carbon dioxide and water. 2 ATP generated. NAD and FAD accept H+ ions and electrons to be carried to the electron transport chain. Electron transport chain processes the H+ ions and electrons to generate 32 ATP. Oxygen is the final electron acceptor. Electron shuttles span membrane CYTOSOL MITOCHONDRION 2 NADH or 2 FADH2 2 NADH 2 NADH 6 NADH Glycolysis Glucose 2 Pyruvate 2 Acetyl CoA + 2 ATP + 2 ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation Maximum per glucose: Figure 9.16 Citric acid cycle by substrate-level phosphorylation About 36 or 38 ATP 2 FADH2 Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis + about 32 or 34 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation, depending on which shuttle transports electrons from NADH in cytosol Great Review - Crash Course 36 ATP molecules produced from each molecule of glucose CO2 and H20 are waste products Great Cellular Respiration Review Also called - Fermentation Two Ways: Used by organisms that lack the enzymes necessary to utilize O2 Other organisms are aerobic but revert to anaerobic respiration if O2 is not available Cell respiration stops with glycolysis 2 ATP + C6H12O6 2 pyruvate + 4 ATP → also used to produce soy sauce from soybeans, to pickle cucumbers, and to produce sausage, pepperoni, and salami → used in dairy industry to manufacture cheese, butter, sour cream and yogurt (produces sharp or sour taste) Animal cells utilize fermentation if O2 is not available Lactic acid is produced → associated with muscle soreness and fatigue Yeast (a fungus) can perform aerobic or anaerobic respiration → used by brewing and baking industries Fermentation of Cheese