Chapter 9: How Cells Harvest Energy
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1 Chapter 9: How Cells Harvest Energy General Pathways for making ATP Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
2 Differentiate between aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration, and fermentation
3 General Pathways for making ATP Three terms describe the ways in which cells generate ATP aerobic respiration a generally efficient process that requires O 2 most, but not all, organisms can use a form of this process at least some of the time also called cellular respiration How is this different from breathing, and how is it related to breathing? anaerobic respiration processes similar to aerobic respiration but that do not use O 2 used mainly by bacteria that live in anaerobic (O 2 -deficient) environments fermentation generally inefficient processes used mainly when other pathways cannot be used or when ATP is needed quickly fermentation processes do not use O 2
4 General Pathways for making ATP These processes generally occur in a series of steps, allowing for small energy changes per step Smaller energy changes allow for easier capture of energy The overall energy change is the same as if it was one big step
5 e 1 e 2 E e 3 e4 E = e 1 + e 2 + e 3 + e 4 + e 5 e 5
6 Differentiate between aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration, and fermentation
7 Chapter 9: How Cells Harvest Energy General Pathways for making ATP Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
8 Write the overall chemical equation for aerobic respiration and note what gets oxidized and what gets reduced (you will probably want to put this above your study chart) List and describe the 4 general types of reactions in aerobic respiration
9 Aerobic respiration: a redox process aerobic respiration is used by most organisms nutrients (typically glucose) are catabolized to water and carbon dioxide, and energy is stored in ATP C 6 H 12 O O 2 +6 H 2 O 6 CO H 2 O + energy (stored in ATP molecules)
10 Aerobic respiration: a redox process C 6 H 12 O O 2 +6 H 2 O 6 CO H 2 O + energy (36-38 ATP) this is a redox process glucose is oxidized to carbon dioxide, and oxygen is reduced to water above equation is overall; aerobic respiration is actually is series of reactions water is shown on both sides above because it is consumed in some reactions and generated in others the overall process is the same as what you would get from burning glucose (but the energy would all be lost as heat)
11 Aerobic respiration: a redox process aerobic respiration is a complex series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions that can be grouped into four types of reactions: substrate-level phosphorylation coupled reactions that directly phosphorylate ADP or GDP dehydrogenation reactions redox reactions that transfer hydrogens to NAD + or FAD decarboxylation reactions carboxyl groups are removed and releases as CO 2 preparation reactions molecules are rearranged to prepare for other reactions of the above, only substrate-level phosphorylation and dehydrogenation provide energy for cells
12 Write the overall chemical equation for aerobic respiration and note what gets oxidized and what gets reduced (you will probably want to put this above your study chart) List and describe the 4 general types of reactions in aerobic respiration
13 Fill out aerobic respiration chart (class activity)
14 Aerobic respiration is conventionally divided into four stages glycolysis formation of acetyl- CoA (pyruvate oxidation) citric acid cycle (Krebs cycle, TCA cycle) oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport and chemiosmosis)
15 glycolysis occurs in the cytosol (both in prokaryotes and eukaryotes) overall, glucose is converted to 2 pyruvate molecules (a 3-carbon molecule) released energy is stored in a net yield of 2 ATP and 2 NADH molecules occurs under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions (no O 2 required) actually a series of ten reactions, each catalyzed by a different enzyme; broken into two phases (energy investment and energy payoff)
16 glycolysis first phase requires energy investment phosphorylation, using two ATP, charges the sugar with two phosphates 2 molecules of glyceraldehyde 3- phosphate (G3P) are formed
17 glycolysis second phase, the energy payoff phase, yields pyruvate and energy captured in ATP and NADH each G3P is converted to pyruvate, C 3 H 3 O 3- (net of 2 pyruvates) produces 4 ATP (net of 2 ATP) produces 2 NADH + H + overall: C 6 H 12 O ADP +2 P i + 2 NAD + 2 C 3 H 3 O ATP + 2 NADH + 4 H H 2 O
18 some single and double nucleotides have important biological functions nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ) is an electron carrier which is oxidized or reduced in many metabolic reactions
19 ASIDE: -ic acid and -ate -ic acid form has a carboxyl group -ate form has lost a proton and thus has a negative charge In cells, the -ate and -ic acid forms are in equilibrium, so it doesn t matter much which term we use Examples: pyruvic acid / pyruvate; citric acid / citrate
20 formation of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-coa) from pyruvate also called pyruvate oxidation pyruvate is sent to the mitochondria in eukaryotes (stays in cytosol of prokaryotes) set of three enzymes catalyze the reactions, grouped together in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
21 formation of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-coa) from pyruvate oxidative decarboxylation: a carboxyl group is removed from pyruvate (CO 2 is produced) remaining 2-carbon fragment is oxidized (loses 2 electrons); NADH is produced remaining 2-carbon fragment, an acetyl group, is joined to coenzyme A (from B-vitamin pantothenic acid) to form acetyl-coa
22 formation of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-coa) from pyruvate overall: C 3 H 3 O NAD + + CoA acetyl-coa + CO 2 + NADH and so far: C 6 H 12 O ADP +2 P i + 4 NAD CoA 2 acetyl-coa + 2 CO ATP + 4 NADH + 4 H H 2 O
23 citric acid cycle also known as tricarboxylic acid cycle, TCA cycle, Krebs cycle still in mitochondria of eukaryotes series of eight enzymecatalyzed steps, and one side reaction where GTP + ADP GDP + ATP entry: acetyl-coa + oxaloacetate citrate + CoA rest of cycle: citrate + H 2 O 2 CO 2 + oxaloacetate + energy note there is no net gain or loss of oxaloacetate in the cycle
24 citric acid cycle energy is stored in three NADH and one FADH 2 for each cycle, plus one ATP overall: acetyl-coa +3 NAD + + FAD + ADP + P i CoA + 2 CO NADH + 3 H + + FADH 2 + ATP + H 2 O and so far: C 6 H 12 O ADP + 4 P i + 10 NAD FAD 6 CO ATP + 10 NADH + 10 H FADH H 2 O at this point glucose has been completely catabolized, yet only 4 ATP have been formed; the rest of the energy is stored in NADH and FADH 2
25 oxidative phosphorylation: the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis occurs in mitochondria of eukaryotes, and on membrane surface in prokaryotes electrons from NADH and FADH 2 are transferred to a chain of membrane-bound electron acceptors, and eventually passed to oxygen acceptors include flavin mononucleotide (FMN), ubiquinone, iron-sulfur proteins, cytochromes in the end, electrons wind up on molecular oxygen, and water is formed (NADH or FADH 2 ) + ½ O 2 H 2 O + (NAD + or FAD) + energy lack of oxygen or the presence of compounds like cyanide stops the transport chain, and energy cannot be obtained from NADH and FADH 2 this usually starves cells
26 oxidative phosphorylation: the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis occurs in mitochondria of eukaryotes, and on membrane surface in prokaryotes electrons from NADH and FADH 2 are transferred to a chain of membrane-bound electron acceptors, and eventually passed to oxygen acceptors include flavin mononucleotide (FMN), ubiquinone, iron-sulfur proteins, cytochromes in the end, electrons wind up on molecular oxygen, and water is formed (NADH or FADH 2 ) + ½ O 2 H 2 O + (NAD + or FAD) + energy lack of oxygen or the presence of compounds like cyanide stops the transport chain, and energy cannot be obtained from NADH and FADH 2 this usually starves cells
27 oxidative phosphorylation: the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis stepped nature of the electron transport chain allows for controlled release of energy, used to move protons and eventually to make ATP hydrogen ions (protons) are pumped across the inner mitochondrial membrane creates a concentration gradient with high proton concentration in the intermembrane space energy for the pumping comes from energy lost as electrons are transferred gradient allows opportunity for energy capture
28 oxidative phosphorylation: the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis chemiosmosis produces ATP protons are charged and do not readily cross a cell membrane special protein channel, ATP synthase, allows proton transport with the gradient energy is captured and used to make ATP energy from oxidation of NADH yields ~3 ATP only ~2 if the electrons from the NADH from glycolysis wind up on FADH 2 after being shuttled across the mitochondrial membrane energy from oxidation of FADH 2 yields ~2 ATP
29 Aerobic respiration theoretically yields 36 or 38 ATP molecules from one glucose molecule Glycolysis Citric Acid Cycle FADH 2 oxidation (2 x 2) NADH oxidation (8 x 3, 2 x 2 or 3) TOTAL 2 ATP 2 ATP 4 ATP ATP ATP
30 The actual yield is typically about 30 ATP per glucose Why only ~30? Chemiosmosis doesn t actually give round figures, and some of the energy from the proton gradient is used for other things too, like bringing pyruvate into the mitochondrion The overall efficiency of aerobic respiration is typically about 32% (30 x 73 / 686) The rest of the energy from combustion of glucose is released as heat Compare this to a car s internal combustion engine, typically about 20-25% efficiency
31 Describe the use of proteins as an energy source Include discussion of relative energy provision, pathway entry point(s), and key terms (amino acid, deamination)
32 Non-glucose energy sources other substances can be oxidized to produce ATP in living systems along with carbohydrates, proteins and lipids (fats) are generally major energy sources in foods nucleic acids are not present in high amounts in foods and thus aren t as important in providing cells with energy
33 Non-glucose energy sources proteins are broken into amino acids, which can be broken down further amino group is removed (deamination) amino group may eventually be converted to urea and excreted remaining carbon chain enters aerobic respiration at various points, depending on chain length provide roughly the same amount of energy per unit weight as does glucose
34 Describe the use of proteins as an energy source Include discussion of relative energy provision, pathway entry point(s), and key terms (amino acid, deamination)
35 Describe the use of triacylglycerol lipids as an energy source Include discussion of relative energy provision, pathway entry point(s), and key terms (glycerol, fatty acid, G3P, b oxidation)
36 Non-glucose energy sources lipids lipids are more reduced than glucose (note less oxygen in lipids), thus more energetic glycerol is converted to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P), entering glycolysis fatty acids are oxidized and split into acetyl groups that are combined with CoA to make acetyl- CoA (b oxidation) typically provide over twice as much energy per unit weight as glucose as an example, oxidation of a 6- carbon fatty acid yields up to 44 ATP
37 Describe the use of triacylglycerol lipids as an energy source Include discussion of relative energy provision, pathway entry point(s), and key terms (glycerol, fatty acid, G3P, b oxidation)
38
39 Regulation of aerobic respiration ATP/ADP balance regulates much of oxidative phosphorylation ATP synthesis continues until ADP stores are largely depleted rapid use of ATP leads to excess ADP, and thus speeds up aerobic respiration phosphofructokinase, the enzyme for one of the earliest steps in glycolysis, is highly regulated in mammals ATP, though a substrate, also serves as an allosteric inhibitor citrate is also an allosteric inhibitor AMP serves as an allosteric activator
40 Differentiate between anaerobic respiration, alcohol fermentation, and lactic acid fermentation Include: comparisons to aerobic respiration in terms of process and energy yield where these processes are found in nature key terms and products (NAD+ regeneration, ethanol, CO 2, lactic acid) human uses of these processes
41 Chapter 9: How Cells Harvest Energy General Pathways for making ATP Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
42 Anaerobic respiration bacteria that live in environments where O 2 is not abundant perform anaerobic respiration still uses an electron transport chain some other compound such as NO 3-, SO 4 2- or CO 2 serves as the ultimate electron acceptor not as efficient as aerobic respiration (exact efficiency varies depending on the process and the species)
43 Chapter 9: How Cells Harvest Energy General Pathways for making ATP Aerobic Respiration Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
44 Fermentation involves no electron transport chain inefficient; net is 2 ATP per glucose molecule (only glycolysis works) if glycolysis only, then NAD + must be regenerated, thus fermentation, where NADH reduces an organic molecule
45 Fermentation alcohol fermentation produces ethanol, CO 2, and NAD + pyruvate is converted to ethanol and CO 2 to regenerate NAD + ethanol is a potentially toxic waste product, and is removed from cells yeast (and many bacteria) perform alcoholic fermentation in low oxygen environments Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker s or brewer s yeast) used in making alcoholic beverages, baking
46 Fermentation lactic acid fermentation pyruvate is reduced to lactate to regenerate NAD+ performed by some bacteria and fungi, and by animals (when muscles need energy fast) used in making cheese, yogurt, sauerkraut
47 Differentiate between anaerobic respiration, alcohol fermentation, and lactic acid fermentation Include: comparisons to aerobic respiration in terms of process and energy yield where these processes are found in nature key terms and products (NAD+ regeneration, ethanol, CO 2, lactic acid) human uses of these processes
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Electron Transport Generates a Proton Gradient Across the Membrane
Electron Transport Generates a Proton Gradient Across the Membrane Each of respiratory enzyme complexes couples the energy released by electron transfer across it to an uptake of protons from water in
The 3 stages of Glycolysis
The Glycolytic pathway describes the oxidation of glucose to pyruvate with the generation of ATP and NADH It is also called as the Embden-Meyerhof Pathway is a universal pathway; present in all organisms:
Oxidative Phosphorylation
Oxidative Phosphorylation NADH from Glycolysis must be transported into the mitochondrion to be oxidized by the respiratory electron transport chain. Only the electrons from NADH are transported, these
Overview of Glycolysis Under anaerobic conditions, the glycolytic pathway present in most species results in a balanced reaction:
Glycolysis Glucose is a valuable molecule. It can be used to generate energy (in red blood cells and in brain under normal conditions, glucose is the sole energy source), and it can be used to generate
Metabolism Dr.kareema Amine Al-Khafaji Assistant professor in microbiology, and dermatologist Babylon University, College of Medicine, Department of
Metabolism Dr.kareema Amine Al-Khafaji Assistant professor in microbiology, and dermatologist Babylon University, College of Medicine, Department of Microbiology. Metabolism sum of all chemical processes
Chapter 10: Photosynthesis
Name Period Chapter 10: Photosynthesis This chapter is as challenging as the one you just finished on cellular respiration. However, conceptually it will be a little easier because the concepts learned
Cellular Respiration and Fermentation. How cells produce ATP when oxygen is present 9.1. looking closer at. Pyruvate oxidation 9.3
Unit 2 ell Structure and Function 9 ellular Respiration and Fermentation This hydroelectric dam on the Duero, a river between Spain and Portugal, uses pumps to move water from the lower reservoir to the
Integration of Metabolism
I. Central Themes of Metabolism 1. ATP is the universal energy carrier. Integration of Metabolism Bryant Miles 2. ATP is generated by the oxidation of metabolic fuels Glucose Fatty Acids Amino Acids 3.
Cell. (1) This is the most basic unit of life inside of our bodies.
Cytology Overview Cell (1) This is the most basic unit of life inside of our bodies. ATP (2) Each of our cell s requires energy in order to carry out its day to day func>ons. This is the energy all cells
Energy & Enzymes. Life requires energy for maintenance of order, growth, and reproduction. The energy living things use is chemical energy.
Energy & Enzymes Life requires energy for maintenance of order, growth, and reproduction. The energy living things use is chemical energy. 1 Energy exists in two forms - potential and kinetic. Potential
1. The diagram below represents a biological process
1. The diagram below represents a biological process 5. The chart below indicates the elements contained in four different molecules and the number of atoms of each element in those molecules. Which set
THE LIVING CELL. Cells also have variety of shapes. Plant cells are often rectangular or polygonal, while egg cells are usually spherical.
THE LIVING CELL A Tour of the cell The cell is the smallest and the basic unit of structure of all organisms. There are two main types or categories of cells: prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic
PRESTWICK ACADEMY NATIONAL 5 BIOLOGY CELL BIOLOGY SUMMARY
Name PRESTWICK ACADEMY NATIONAL 5 BIOLOGY CELL BIOLOGY SUMMARY Cell Structure Identify animal, plant, fungal and bacterial cell ultrastructure and know the structures functions. Plant cell Animal cell
Copyright 2000-2003 Mark Brandt, Ph.D. 59
The Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle Background (why are eight enzymes necessary?) In principle, acetyl-coa could be converted to carbon dioxide very simply. However, doing so has three potential problems: 1)
The chemical energy used for most cell processes is carried by ATP.
4.1 CHEMICAL ENERGY AND ATP Study Guide KEY CONCEPT All cells need chemical energy. VOCABULARY ATP ADP chemosynthesis MAIN IDEA: The chemical energy used for most cell processes is carried by ATP. 1. What
1- Fatty acids are activated to acyl-coas and the acyl group is further transferred to carnitine because:
Section 10 Multiple Choice 1- Fatty acids are activated to acyl-coas and the acyl group is further transferred to carnitine because: A) acyl-carnitines readily cross the mitochondrial inner membrane, but
Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen
Concept 1 - Thinking Practice 1. If the following molecules were to undergo a dehydration synthesis reaction, what molecules would result? Circle the parts of each amino acid that will interact and draw
THE ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN. Oxidative phosphorylation
THE ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN Oxidative phosphorylation Overview of Metabolism Mitochondria Structure -Schematic Mitochondria Structure -Photomicrograph Overview of ETC Impermiable to ions Permiable via
Unit 5 Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Unit 5 Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Advanced Concepts What is the abbreviated name of this molecule? What is its purpose? What are the three parts of this molecule? Label each part with the
Citric Acid Cycle Review Activity
Citric Acid Cycle Review Activity Goals Students will be able to appreciate the details of steps within the Kreb s Cycle. Students will be able to understand the steps of the Kreb s Cycle at functional
8-3 The Reactions of Photosynthesis Slide 1 of 51
8-3 The of Photosynthesis 1 of 51 Inside a Chloroplast Inside a Chloroplast In plants, photosynthesis takes place inside chloroplasts. Plant Chloroplast Plant cells 2 of 51 Inside a Chloroplast Chloroplasts
Cellular Respiration: Practice Questions #1
Cellular Respiration: Practice Questions #1 1. Which statement best describes one of the events taking place in the chemical reaction? A. Energy is being stored as a result of aerobic respiration. B. Fermentation
