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Chapter 5 Metabolism Of Microorganisms 1 Metabolism Metabolism: sum of all chemical reactions within the cell Two parts: Catabolism: breakdown of complex organic molecules into simpler ones - energy is released Anabolism: building complex organic molecules from simpler ones; energy is used Coupling of these reactions is made possible through ATP So… what does he mean by coupling?” energy retrieved from catabolism is stored in ATP and later released to drive anabolic reactions 2 3 1 Enzymes type of protein which catalyzes reactions in the cell by lowering the activation energy Enzymes are catalysts: not used up during the reaction enzymes are specific to one reaction (won’t drive a different reaction) range in size from 10,000 to several million molecular weight 4 More about enzymes Compounds acted upon by the enzymes are called substrates Maximum number of substrate molecules an enzyme molecule can convert to product each second is called the turnover number So how fast are these enzymes? – VERY FAST typically between 1 – 10,000 reactions per second for each enzyme Some as many as 500,000 per second for each enzyme molecule! 5 Control of Enzymes What ways might an enzyme’s activity be regulated? Control at the level of: ¾Enzyme synthesis (how much enzyme is made/present) ¾Enzyme activity (how active the enzyme is: turned on/off) We will examine some factors affecting enzyme control soon… Naming of enzymes: most end in -ase Often name indicates their function or the substrate/product they work on e.g. ligases are enzymes that ligate or join things (example = DNA ligase) classified by the type of chemical reaction they catalyze (see Table 5.1) 6 2 Composition of Enzymes (what they’re made of) All contain proteins: can be entirely protein, some contain other components Enzyme components: Protein portion is called the apoenzyme Non-protein component is the co-factor Co-factors can be either organic or inorganic If a co-factor is complex organic molecule, it is called a coenzyme When fully assembled they form the holoenzyme 7 8 Important Coenzymes All of the example on this slide serve as electron carriers (more on this function later in this chapter) One of the B vitamins - nicotinic acid (niacin) and compounds derived from it… Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenin dinucleotide (FAD) Vitamin K 9 3 Other uses for Coenzymes Coenzyme A (CoA) – functions in decarboxylation reactions Pantothenic acid (another B vitamin) – Part of CoA molecule important in breakdown of fats and in reactions of the Krebs cycle Vitamin E – needed for cellular & large molecule synthesis Folic acid – synthesis of nucleotides (both purines & pyrimidines) Biotin – fatty acid synthesis & CO2 fixation reactions 10 Inorganic Co-factors Many co-factors are metal ions (e.g. Mg++) One use - required by phosphorylating enzymes Many metabolic trace elements are probably important due to use as co-factors 11 Enzymatic Action 1. Substrate binds to active site on the surface of enzyme 2. Temporary intermediate complex forms - enzyme-substrate complex 3. Substrate transformed (other molecule added, molecule rearranged, bond broken, etc.) 4. Transformed substrate (product or products) no longer conforms to the active site, is released from enzyme 5. Unchanged enzyme is ready to react with more substrate molecules 12 4 13 Some Factors Influencing Enzymes Temperature pH Substrate Concentration Inhibition 14 The Effect of Temperature On Enzymes Temperature – as temperature begins to increase, enzymatic activity increases At some point (unique for each enzyme) optimum temperature will be reached. -Enzyme operates at peak efficiency Higher temperatures will cause protein portion of enzyme to denature, Denaturing = unraveling protein, kills all future function of that molecule. Each enzyme will have a minimum, optimum and maximum operating temperature 15 5 16 Effect of pH on Enzyme Activity As with temperature, enzymes will have a minimum, optimum and a maximum pH. alterations away from the optimum may affect individual amino acids altering the protein’s shape & effectiveness Extreme pH changes can cause the protein portion to denature thus destroying the enzyme. 17 18 6 19 20 21 7 Generation of ATP Three ways that energy is trapped by formation of ATP (ADP + P = ATP) in the process called phosphorylation Substrate-Level Phosphorylation: direct transfer of phosphate to ADP from phosphorylated substrate (from something that has a phosphate) Oxidative Phosphorylation: electrons transferred from organic compounds to electron carriers, energy is transferred down an electron transport chain, which is then used to generate ATP (e.g. NADH and FADH2) Photophosphorylation: light energy is trapped and again uses an electron transport chain to generate ATP 22 Energy Production Oxidation-Reduction reactions: reaction where one substrate loses electrons (oxidation) and the other gains electrons (reduction) 23 Energy Production In biological systems this often includes the transfer of both the electron and the accompanying proton (electron + proton = hydrogen), thus called dehydrogenation reactions Redox reactions used to extract energy from nutrient molecules nutrient is oxidized (e.g. - glucose to carbon dioxide) and the energy eventually trapped in ATP molecule for later use. 24 8 Carbohydrate Catabolism Three phases – making a total of 38 ATP for each glucose molecule Glycolysis – splits glucose (6-Carbons) in half making two (3-carbon) pyruvic acid molecules --- process releases a small amount of energy and small amount of NADH Krebs Cycle – extracts energy from pyruvic acids (small amount) creates lots of NADH and FADH2 for later use in the…. Electron Transport Chain – extracts lots of energy from NADH and FADH2 (Electron carrying molecules) 25 Glycolysis occurs in cytoplasm Krebs occurs in mitochondria Electron transport chain occurs in mitochondria 26 Glycolysis Glycolysis –splitting of glucose: a 6-carbon molecule into two 3carbon molecules (produced 2 ATP overall) • Preparatory phase – costs cell energy • Energy conserving phase – produces energy Cost = 2 ATP Gain = 4 ATP & 2 NADH (NADH to be used later) Produces two pyruvic acids to send through Krebs Cycle Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm of eukaryotes 27 9 28 29 30 10 Krebs Cycle (plus ‘bridge’ step) Each cycle of Krebs produces 1 ATP 4 NADH Since we can run Krebs twice our total yield is: 1 FADH2 ¾2 ATP ¾8 NADH ¾2 FADH2 Krebs Cycle – runs once for each pyruvic acid each glucose broken produces two pyruvic acids so we can run Krebs twice. The NADH and FADH2 will be used in the next step to recover many ATPs 31 32 33 11 Electron Transport Chain NADH enters at first protein – ejects 2 hydrogen ions (one pair of H+) from the inner membrane of the mitochondria Ejects two more pairs of H+ at the next two steps in the chain A total of 3 pairs of H+ have been ejected when an NADH completes it’s passage along the chain Each pair of H+ ions passes through an ATP Synthase molecule making one ATP as they pass through 34 FADH2 Also uses the electron transport chain but can’t enter at the first step must enter at the second step Because of this it can only move 2 pairs of H+ and will ultimately be responsible for production of 2 ATP molecules 35 36 12 Energy Yield …from Electron Transport Chain 10 NADH = 30 ATP 2 FADH2 = 4 ATP If you add this to the two we got from Krebs plus the two we gain from Glycolysis you have a total produced of 38 from the breakdown of a single glucose molecule 37 Anaerobic Respiration in Prokaryotes Final Electron acceptor is an inorganic molecule other than O2 Examples include: NO3- e.g. Pseudomonas & Bacillus makes nitrous oxide, nitrate or nitrogen gas SO4– e.g. Desulfovibrio makes hydrogen sulfide gas CO3 -- e.g. Methanobacterium makes methane Less efficient that Aerobic respiration, produces less total ATP because of this, anaerobic bacteria tend to grow slower than aerobes 38 Fermentation After the breakdown of glucose to pyruvic acid, other pathways can be taken – Fermentation is one alternative. Fermentation: • • • • • • Releases energy from sugars or other organic molecules Does not require O2 (but can often occur in presence of O2) Does not use Krebs or Electron Transport Uses an organic molecule for electron acceptor Produces few ATP (one or two per start molecule) End products contain much of original energy ¾ ethanol ¾ lactic acid 39 13 40 Industrial Uses for Fermentation Ethanol (ethyl alcohol) beer, wine, fuel Acetic Acid vinegar Lactic acid yogurt, sauerkraut etc methane fuel see table 5.4 p 136 for details 41 Biochemical Tests for Bacterial Identification Useful things for identifying your unknown! Fermentation Test Medium contains: ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ protein one specific carbohydrate (maltose, fructose, glucose, etc) pH indicator (color change if use carbohydrate) Durham tube (glass tube) to collect gas if produced 42 14 Purple Carbohydrate Broth Turns yellow if organism can use The particular carbohydrate for energy source – bubble indicates Gas produced Phenol Red Carbohydrate Broth Turns yellow if organism can use The particular carbohydrate for energy source. Bubble indicates Gas produced 43 Photosynthesis Conversion of light energy into chemical energy using light gathering pigments such as chlorophyll by plants, algae & cyanobacteria Two major reactions: Light Reaction – gathers light, harvests energy, releases oxygen Light-Independant Reaction – CO2 used to produce sugars 44 Bacterial Metabolic Diversity Categorizing bacteria by metabolic styles: Major Categories include Chemotrophs – derive energy from chemical sources such as carbon, sulphur etc Phototrophs – derive energy from light (usually sunlight) 45 15 Self-feeder vs Other-feeder Autotrophs – ‘self-feeders’ assemble simple carbon sources such as CO2 into more complex organic molecules such as carbohydrates to store energy Heterotrophs – ‘feeders-on-others’ require complex organic molecules for a carbon source Heterotrophs can be further broken into two groups Saprophytes – feed on dead organic matter Parasites - feed on living organic matter 46 Thus - Possible Lifestyles: Photoautotrophs – use light for energy and CO2 for carbon source Photoheterotrophs – use light for energy but can’t convert CO2 to sugars, don’t produce oxygen Chemoautotrophs – energy from reduced inorganic compounds (such as sulfur, hydrogen sulfide, ammonia), use CO2 for primary carbon source Chemoheterotrophs – energy from complex organic molecules, carbon from complex organic molecules (we do this as humans) 47 16