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Chapter 6 How cells harvest chemical energy Musebio101 summer 2010 Photosynthesis and cellular respiration provide energy for life • Energy is necessary for life processes – These include growth, transport, manufacture, movement, reproduction, and others – Energy that supports life on Earth is captured from sun rays reaching Earth through plant, algae, protist, and bacterial photosynthesis Sunlight energy ECOSYSTEM Photosynthesis in chloroplasts CO2 Glucose + + H2O O2 Cellular respiration in mitochondria ATP (for cellular work) Heat energy Cellular respiration banks energy in ATP molecules • Cellular respiration is an exergonic process that transfers energy from the bonds in glucose to ATP – Cellular respiration produces 38 ATP molecules from each glucose molecule – Other foods (organic molecules) can be used as a source of energy as well Introduction to Metabolism • Cells break down organic molecules to obtain energy – Used to generate ATP • Most energy production takes place in mitochondria Metabolism • Metabolism – refers to all chemical reaction occurring in body – Catabolism – break down complex molecules • Exergonic – produce more energy than they consume – Anabolism – combine simple molecules into complex ones • Endergonic – consume more energy than they produce • Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) – “energy currency” – ADP + P + energy ↔ ATP Potential energy of molecules Reactants Amount of energy released Energy released Products Metabolism • Catabolism – Is the breakdown of organic substrates – Releases energy used to synthesize high-energy compounds (e.g., ATP) • Anabolism – Is the synthesis of new organic molecules Cellular respiration is a catabolic reaction C6H12O6 Glucose + 6 O2 Oxygen 6 CO2 Carbon dioxide + 6 H2O Water + ATPs Energy Fuel Energy conversion Waste products Heat Glucose Cellular respiration Oxygen Carbon dioxide Water Energy for cellular work Energy conversion in a cell Energy from exergonic reactions Energy for endergonic reactions Role of ATP in linking anabolic and catabolic reactions Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) Phosphate group Adenine Ribose Hydrolysis + Adenosine Diphosphate (ADP) Carbohydrate Metabolism • Mitochondrial Membranes – Outer membrane • Contains large-diameter pores • Permeable to ions and small organic molecules (pyruvic acid) – Inner membrane • Contains carrier protein • Moves pyruvic acid into mitochondrial matrix – Intermembrane space • Separates outer and inner membranes Chemical energy (high-energy electrons) Chemical energy Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvic acid Cytosol Krebs cycle Mitochondrial cristae Via substrate-level phosphorylation 1uring glycolysis, D each glucose molecule is broken down into two molecules of pyruvic acid in the cytosol. Electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation Mitochondrion Via oxidative phosphorylation 2 The pyruvic acid then enters 3 Energy-rich electrons picked up the mitochondrial matrix, where bycoenzymes are transferred to the the Krebs cycle decomposes it electron transport chain, built into to CO2. During glycolysis and the cristae membrane. The electron the Krebs cycle, small amounts transport chain carries out of ATP are formed by substrate- oxidative phosphorylation, which accounts for most of the ATP Figure 24.5 level phosphorylation. Cellular respiration begins with glycolysis Carbohydrate Metabolism • Glucose Breakdown – Occurs in small steps • Which release energy to convert ADP to ATP – One molecule of glucose nets 36 molecules of ATP – Glycolysis • Breaks down glucose in cytosol into smaller molecules used by mitochondria • Does not require oxygen: anaerobic reaction – Aerobic Reactions • Also called aerobic metabolism or cellular respiration • Occur in mitochondria, consume oxygen, and produce ATP Catalysis Enzyme Enzyme (a) Substrate-level phosphorylation ENERGY INVESTMENT PHASE Glucose ATP Steps 1 – 3 A fuel molecule is energized, using ATP. Step 1 ADP P Glucose-6-phosphate P Fructose-6-phosphate P Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate 2 ATP 3 ADP P Step 4 A six-carbon intermediate splits Into two three-carbon intermediates. 4 P Step 5 A redox reaction generates NADH. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) P NAD+ NAD+ 5 P NADH 5 NADH + H+ ENERGY PAYOFF PHASE P + H+ P P ADP P P 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate ADP 6 6 ATP ATP P P 3-Phosphoglycerate 7 Steps 6 – 9 ATP and pyruvate are produced. 7 P P 2-Phosphoglycerate 8 H2 O P P ADP Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) ADP 9 ATP 8 H2 O 9 ATP Pyruvate Substrate level phosphorylation energy payout phase. 6 CH2OH 5 H H 4 O H 1 H OH HO OH 3 Dihydroxyacetone phosphate 2 OH Glucose (1 molecule) H 1 ATP ADP P OH2C O H H HO OH H H OH OH Glucose 6-phosphate H 2 P OH2C6 O 1 5 CH2OH 2 H H HO OH 4 3 OH Phosphofructokinase 3 H Fructose 6-phosphate ATP ADP P OH2C O H H CH2O P HO OH OH H 4 H C O HCOH CH2O P CH2O P C O CH2OH Fructose 1, 6-bisphosphate Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate 2 NAD++ 22P P 6 2 NADH+ 2H+ CH2O P HCOH C O P 1, 3-Bisphosphoglyceric acid (2 molecules) O 2 ADP 7 2 ATP 5 CH2O P HCOH COOH 8 CH2OH HCO P COOH 9 3-Phosphoglyceric acid (2 molecules) 2-Phosphoglyceric acid (2 molecules) CH2 C O P Phosphoenolpyruvic acid COOH (2 molecules) 2 ADP 10 2 ATP CH3 C O Pyruvic acid COOH (2 molecules) Fate of pyruvic acid 2 ADP +2 P 2 ATP GLYCOLYSIS Glucose 2 NAD+ 2 NADH 2 Pyruvate 2 NADH 2 CO2 released 2 NAD+ 2 Ethanol Alcohol fermentation Glycolysis evolved early in the history of life on Earth • Glycolysis is the universal energy-harvesting process of living organisms – So, all cells can use glycolysis for the energy necessary for viability – The fact that glycolysis has such a widespread distribution is good evidence for evolution Carbohydrate Metabolism • Oxidation and Reduction – Oxidation (loss of electrons) • Electron donor is oxidized – Reduction (gain of electrons) • Electron recipient is reduced – The two reactions are always paired Energy transfer • Oxidation-reduction or redox reactions – Oxidation – removal of electrons • Decrease in potential energy • Dehydrogenation – removal of hydrogens • Liberated hydrogen transferred by coenzymes – Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) – Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) • Glucose is oxidized – Reduction – addition of electrons • Increase in potential energy Carbohydrate Metabolism • The TCA Cycle (citric acid cycle) – The function of the citric acid cycle is • To remove hydrogen atoms from organic molecules and transfer them to coenzymes – In the mitochondrion • Pyruvic acid reacts with NAD and coenzyme A (CoA) • Producing 1 CO2, 1 NADH, 1 acetyl-CoA – Acetyl group transfers • From acetyl-CoA to oxaloacetic acid • Produces citric acid Acetyl CoA CoA CoA CITRIC ACID CYCLE 2 CO2 3 NAD+ FADH2 3 NADH FAD 3 H+ ATP ADP + P Glycolysis Electron transKrebs port chain cycle and oxidative phosphorylation Cytosol Pyruvic acid from glycolysis NAD+ NADH+H+ CO2 Transitional phase Acetyl CoA Carbon atom Mitochondrion Inorganic phosphate (matrix) Oxaloacetic acid Coenzyme A Citric acid NADH+H+ (pickup molecule) (initial reactant) NAD+ Malic acid Isocitric acid NAD+ Krebs cycle CO2 -Ketoglutaric acid Fumaric acid CO2 FADH2 FAD NADH+H+ Succinic acid Succinyl-CoA GTP ADP GDP + NAD+ NADH+H+ Carbohydrate Metabolism • The TCA Cycle – CoA is released to bind another acetyl group – One TCA cycle removes two carbon atoms • Regenerating 4-carbon chain – – – – Several steps involve more than one reaction or enzyme H2O molecules are tied up in two steps CO2 is a waste product The product of one TCA cycle is • One molecule of GTP (guanosine triphosphate) The Krebs Cycle CO2 CH3 CO COOH + Pyruvic NAD acid CoA CO CH3 NADH+ H+ Acetyl To electron transport chain coenzyme A Oxaloacetic acid NADH + H+ NAD+ To electron transport chain COOH HCOH CH2 Malic acid COOH 7 H2 O CoA 1 H2C COOH HOCCOOH H2CCOOHCitric acid 8 COOH CH Fumaric acid HC COOH FADH2 COOH CO CH2 COOH H2O 2 H2C COOH HC COOH HOCCOOH H Isocitric acid KREBS CYCLE 3 6 FAD H2C COOH H2C COOHCoA Succinic acid 5 CO2 NAD+ NADH + H+ H2C COOH CO2 4 HCH H2C COOH GDP CH2 O C COOH ADP Alpha-ketoglutaric acid O C S CoA Succinyl CoA ATP NAD+ GTP NADH + H+ To electron transport chain Carbohydrate Metabolism A Summary of the Energy Yield of Aerobic Metabolism. Carbohydrate Metabolism • Summary: The TCA Cycle (Krebs cycle) CH3CO - CoA + 3NAD + FAD + GDP + Pi + 2 H2O CoA + 2 CO2 + 3NADH + FADH2 + 2 H+ + GTP Carbohydrate Metabolism • The Electron Transport System (ETS) – Is the key reaction in oxidative phosphorylation – Is in inner mitochondrial membrane – Electrons carry chemical energy • Within a series of integral and peripheral proteins Carbohydrate Metabolism • Coenzyme FAD – Accepts two hydrogen atoms from TCA cycle: • Gaining two electrons • Coenzyme NAD – Accepts two hydrogen atoms – Gains two electrons – Releases one proton – Forms NADH + H+ 1 Glucose 2 1 GLYCOLYSIS ATP 2 NADH+ 2 H+ 2 Pyruvic acid 2 FORMATION 2 CO2 OF ACETYL COENZYME A 2 NADH+ 2 H+ 2 Acetyl coenzyme A 2 ATP 4 CO2 3 KREBS CYCLE 6 NADH+ 6 H+ 2 FADH2 4 ELECTRON Electrons TRANSPORT CHAIN 32 or 34 ATP e– e– e– 6 O2 6 H2 O NADH NAD+ + ATP 2e– Controlled release of energy for synthesis of ATP H+ 2e– H+ H 2O 1 2 O2 Carbohydrate Metabolism Oxidative Phosphorylation. NADH+H+ Krebs Electron transcycle port chain and oxidative phosphorylation Free energy relative to O2 (kcal/mol) Glycolysis FADH2 Enzyme Complex I Enzyme Complex II Enzyme Complex III Enzyme Complex IV The actions of the three proton pumps and ATP synthase in the inner membrane of mitochondria Space between outer and inner mitochondrial membranes + nner mitochondrial membrane H+ + + + e– – Mitochondrial – matrix + H+ NAD NADH 1 + Cyt c e– e– Q e– H+ – – + H+ + e– – 1 1/2 O2 H+ 2 H+ channel 3 3 H2O – 3 – ADP P + ATP synthaseATP NADH dehydrogenaseCytochrome b-c1 Cytochrome oxidase complex: FMN and complex: cyt b, cyt c1, complex: cyt a, five Fe-S centers and an Fe-S center cyt a3,and two Cu High H+ concentration in intermembrane space Membrane Proton pumps (electron transport chain) ATP synthase Energy from food ADP + + Low H concentration in mitochondrial matrix (b) Oxidative phosphorylation Overview of metabolic processes Stage 1 Digestion in GI tract lumen to PROTEINS CARBOHYDRATES FATS absorbable forms. Transport via blood to Amino acidsGlucose and other sugars Glycerol Fatty acids tissue cells. Glucose Glycogen Stage 2 Anabolism Proteins Fats (incorporation into molecules) and Pyruvic acid catabolism of nutrientsNH3 to form intermediates Acetyl CoA within tissue cells. Stage 3 Oxidative breakdown Krebs of products of stage 2 in Infrequentcycle CO2 mitochondria of tissue cells. O2 CO2 is liberated, and H atoms Oxidative phosphorylation removed are ultimately delivered H2O H (in electron to molecular oxygen, forming transport chain) water. Some energy released is used to form ATP. Summary of cellular respiration Chemical energy (high-energy electrons) Chemical energy Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvic acid Cytosol Mitochondrial cristae Via substrate-level phosphorylation Krebs cycle Electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation Mitochondrion Via oxidative phosphorylation 1 2he pyruvic acid then enters 3 Energy-rich electrons picked up by During glycolysis, T each glucose the mitochondrial matrix, where coenzymes are transferred to the electron transport chain, built into the cris molecule is broken the Krebs cycle decomposes it membrane. The electron transport cha down into two to CO2. During glycolysis and molecules of pyruvic the Krebs cycle, small amounts carries out oxidative phosphorylation, acid in the cytosol. of ATP are formed by substrate- which accounts for most of the ATP generated by cellular respiration. level phosphorylation. Food, such as peanuts Carbohydrates Fats Glycerol Sugars Proteins Fatty acids Amino acids Amino groups Glucose G3P Pyruvate GLYCOLYSIS Acetyl CoA ATP CITRIC ACID CYCLE OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis) Review • Energy is harvested from high energy glucose by the mitochondria • The process begins in the cytoplasm with glycolysis where glucose is converted to pyruvate • The TCA cycle (Krebs cycle) harvests energy from the pyruvate and stores it as reduced electron carrier molecules • The carrier molecules cash in these electrons for ATP in the electron transport chain if oxygen is available Review (cont) • 2 net ATP are made from each glucose in glycolysis • 34 additional ATP are made from each glucose if oxygen is available to help run the TCA cycle and electron transport chain