carbon-carbon bond formation dehydration hydration decarboxylation oxidation reduction substrate level phosphorylation isomerization



Similar documents
Chapter 16 The Citric Acid Cycle

Chapter 16 The Citric Acid Cycle

Energy Production In A Cell (Chapter 25 Metabolism)

Summary of Metabolism. Mechanism of Enzyme Action

Cellular Respiration and Fermentation

Citric Acid Cycle. Cycle Overview. Metabolic Sources of Acetyl-Coenzyme A. Enzymes of the Citric Acid Cycle. Regulation of the Citric Acid Cycle

CELLULAR RESPIRATION. Chapter 19 & 20. Biochemistry by Campbell and Farell (7 th Edition) By Prof M A Mogale

Chapter 7 Active Reading Guide Cellular Respiration and Fermentation

AP BIOLOGY CHAPTER 7 Cellular Respiration Outline

CITRIC ACID (KREB S, TCA) CYCLE

Lactic Acid Dehydrogenase

Electron Transport System. May 16, 2014 Hagop Atamian

The correct answer is d C. Answer c is incorrect. Reliance on the energy produced by others is a characteristic of heterotrophs.

What affects an enzyme s activity? General environmental factors, such as temperature and ph. Chemicals that specifically influence the enzyme.

1. Explain the difference between fermentation and cellular respiration.

Copyright Mark Brandt, Ph.D. 54

The Citric Acid Cycle

BCOR 011 Exam 2, 2004

Anabolic and Catabolic Reactions are Linked by ATP in Living Organisms

Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter Twenty Three 1

AP Bio Photosynthesis & Respiration

CHAPTER 15: ANSWERS TO SELECTED PROBLEMS

ATP accounting so far ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN & CHEMIOSMOSIS. The Essence of ETC: The Electron Transport Chain O 2

1. Enzymes. Biochemical Reactions. Chapter 5: Microbial Metabolism. 1. Enzymes. 2. ATP Production. 3. Autotrophic Processes

Chapter 7 Cellular Respiration

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Cellular Respiration Stage 4: Electron Transport Chain

Chem 306 Chapter 21 Bioenergetics Lecture Outline III

Chapter 14- RESPIRATION IN PLANTS

Todays Outline. Metabolism. Why do cells need energy? How do cells acquire energy? Metabolism. Concepts & Processes. The cells capacity to:

- Oxygen is needed for cellular respiration [OVERHEAD, fig. 6.2, p. 90 / 4th: 6.1] - lungs provide oxygen to blood, blood brings oxygen to the cells.

Bioenergetics. Free Energy Change

008 Chapter 8. Student:

Regulation of the Citric Acid Cycle

The Aerobic Fate of Pyruvate

Biology 20 Cellular Respiration Review NG Know the process of Cellular Respiration (use this picture if it helps):

Electron transport chain, oxidative phosphorylation & mitochondrial transport systems. Joško Ivica

Photosynthesis takes place in three stages:

Cellular Respiration An Overview

Chapter 9 Mitochondrial Structure and Function

Electron Transport and Oxidative Phosphorylation

-Loss of energy -Loss of hydrogen from carbons. -Gain of energy -Gain of hydrogen to carbons

Cellular Respiration & Metabolism. Metabolism. Coupled Reactions: Bioenergetics. Cellular Respiration: ATP is the cell s rechargable battery

* Is chemical energy potential or kinetic energy? The position of what is storing energy?

Harvesting Energy: Glycolysis and Cellular Respiration. Chapter 8

RESPIRATION AND FERMENTATION: AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC OXIDATION OF ORGANIC MOLECULES. Bio 171 Week 6

Copyright Mark Brandt, Ph.D. 59

Chapter 9 Review Worksheet Cellular Respiration

The amount of cellular adenine is constant. -It exists as either ATP, ADP, or AMP (the concentration of these vary)

Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration

Microbial Metabolism. Chapter 5. Enzymes. Enzyme Components. Mechanism of Enzymatic Action

SOME Important Points About Cellular Energetics by Dr. Ty C.M. Hoffman

Chapter 14 Glycolysis. Glucose. 2 Pyruvate 2 Lactate (sent to liver to be converted back to glucose) TCA Cycle

Metabolism Lecture 7 METABOLIC_REGULATION Restricted for students enrolled in MCB102, UC Berkeley, Spring 2008 ONLY

Figure 5. Energy of activation with and without an enzyme.

Problem Set 2 (multiple choice) Biochemistry 3300

Chapter 19a Oxidative Phosphorylation and Photophosphorylation. Multiple Choice Questions

PRACTICE SET 1. Free energy changes and equilibrium constants

How Cells Release Chemical Energy Cellular Respiration

Name Date Class. energy phosphate adenine charged ATP chemical bonds work ribose

Overview of Glycolysis Under anaerobic conditions, the glycolytic pathway present in most species results in a balanced reaction:

Photosynthesis (CO 2 + H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 + O 2 )

Microbial Metabolism. Biochemical diversity

I N V E S T I C E D O R O Z V O J E V Z D Ě L Á V Á N Í ENZYMES

AP BIOLOGY 2015 SCORING GUIDELINES

Keystone Review Practice Test Module A Cells and Cell Processes. 1. Which characteristic is shared by all prokaryotes and eukaryotes?

Cellular Respiration Worksheet What are the 3 phases of the cellular respiration process? Glycolysis, Krebs Cycle, Electron Transport Chain.

1- Fatty acids are activated to acyl-coas and the acyl group is further transferred to carnitine because:

1. The diagram below represents a biological process

Integration of Metabolism

ATP Synthesis. Lecture 13. Dr. Neil Docherty

The diagram below summarizes the effects of the compounds that cells use to regulate their own metabolism.

Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism Poster Questions

How To Understand The Chemistry Of An Enzyme

PRACTICE SET 6. A. Questions on Lipid Metabolism and Glyoxylate Cycle

Chapter 8: Energy and Metabolism

Electron Transport and Oxidative Phosphorylation. The Mitochondrion. Electron Transport. Oxidative Phosphorylation. Control of ATP Production

Transmembrane proteins span the bilayer. α-helix transmembrane domain. Multiple transmembrane helices in one polypeptide

Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen

Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Cellular Energy: ATP & Enzymes. What is it? Where do organism s get it? How do they use it?

Oxidative Phosphorylation

Unsaturated and Odd-Chain Fatty Acid Catabolism

Work and Energy in Muscles

CELL/ PHOTOSYNTHESIS/ CELLULAR RESPIRATION Test 2011 ANSWER 250 POINTS ANY WAY IN WHICH YOU WANT

Student name ID # 2. (4 pts) What is the terminal electron acceptor in respiration? In photosynthesis? O2, NADP+

The Structure and Function of Macromolecules: Carbohydrates, Lipids & Phospholipids

by a hydration reaction to form isocitrate. The standard free energy change for this reaction is +6.3 kj/mol; At equilibrium, the ratio of

Phosphogluconate pathway (pentose shunt) Classes of lipids. Phosphogluconate pathway (pentose shunt) Phosphogluconate pathway. G-6-P DHase.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

b. What is/are the overall function(s) of photosystem II?

Evolution of Metabolism. Introduction. Introduction. Introduction. How Cells Harvest Energy. Chapter 7 & 8

The 3 stages of Glycolysis

Chapter 15 Lecture Notes: Metabolism

Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology, 5e (Martini/Nath) Chapter 17 Nutrition and Metabolism. Multiple-Choice Questions

21.8 The Citric Acid Cycle

PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Management of Fibromyalgia: Rationale for the use of Magnesium and Malic Acid. Journal of Nutritional Medicine

Enzymes and Metabolic Pathways

Transcription:

1. A. Name each enzyme present in the citric acid cycle and specify which of the following describes the reaction that is catalyzed when the cycle functions in the physiological direction: carbon-carbon bond formation dehydration hydration decarboxylation oxidation reduction substrate level phosphorylation isomerization In each case show the reaction that is catalyzed and explain why you believe that it conforms to the type of reaction you propose. [Don t assume that all of the above classes of reaction are relevant. There may be more than one option for each enzyme.] Look up all balanced eqn in the textbook or class notes. 1. Citrate synthase: C-C bond formation. 2. Aconitase-This is an isomerase rxn but not an epimerization; more accurately it s a mutase rxn. 3. Isocitrate. D. decarboxylation & oxidation-reduction. 4. α Kg. D. decarboxylation & oxidation-reduction. In one sense it is also a substrate level phosphorylation because the pdct is succinyl CoA which is the substrate for 5. Succinyl CoA transferase-makes GTP so is a substrate level phosphorylation. 6. Succinate D.-oxidation reduction. 7. Fumarase-hydration. 8. Malate D. oxidation-reduction. B. Minced muscle that has been depleted of glycogen (and only glycogen) is incubated with pyruvate. When the incubation is conducted aerobically the pyruvate is quantitatively converted to CO 2. However when the reaction is conducted anaerobically there is a brief initial evolution of CO 2 and then the CO 2 evolution stops leaving most of the pyruvate unmetabolized. Why? PDH makes acetyl CoA + CO2 + NADH. In the presence of air the NADH can be recycled via the ET chain; in the absence of air it can only be metabolized to the extent that there is NAD available. C. The oxidation of pyruvate by the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex consists of 5 enzyme catalyzed steps. Only the first three involve the carbon skeleton of pyruvate. Whey are the last two necessary for the proper operation of this enzyme? A product of the first three steps is reduced lipoic acid.it is converted back to oxidized lipoic acid by the 4 th rxn but in so doing makes FADH2. The 5 th reaction serves to restore FADH2 to FAD so that the enzyme is ready for the next cycle.

D You are provided with pyruvic acid radiolabeled in the α-carbonyl group. You incubate this pyruvate with a preparation of enzymes competent to carry out the citric acid cycle but which lacks dialyzable cofactors. When is radioactive carbon dioxide evolved? (i) Immediately (ii) After addition of CoA (iii) After addition of CoA + NAD + (iv) After addition of CoA + NAD + + GDP + ADP (v) After addition of CoA + NAD + + GDP + ADP + α-ketoglutarate. Explain your answer. The carbonyl C of pyruvate is incorporated into citrate as the COOH at the top and will be released as CO2 after the first revolution of the TCA. Both of these steps require the presence of oxalacetate which in turn requires that we have a-ketoglutarate. Pyruvate is not a sparker. E. The intermediates of the citric acid cycle can be used for biosynthetic reactions and if not replenished the cycle would slowly run down. Several reactions exist to replenish these intermediates. One of them is the conversion of propionate to succinyl CoA. How is this conversion accomplished? Indicate all enzymes, intermediates and any cofactors. The sequence is: Propionate to propionyl CoA to D/S-methylmalonyl CoA (biotin) to L/R-methylmalonyl CoA to succinyl CoA (B12). See class notes for names of enzymes. 2 A. What is the important difference between the 2-electron reaction carried out by NAD + and that by FAD. NAD is a substrate and serves to carry 2H between different enzymes; FAD is a prosthetic grp and serves to carry H from a donor to an acceptor in a reaction catalyzed by a single enzyme. B. In "designing" a metabolic pathway you find it necessary to extend a carbon chain by 1 carbon atom. Would you select an enzyme which uses thiamin pyrophosphate as prosthetic group or one that uses biotin? Why? TPP carries a 2-C fragment, biotin activates CO2. I would use biotin. C. In the same metabolic pathway you find it necessary to convert a carbonyl to a methylenic carbon? What sequence of reactions would you devise for this purpose? Are any prosthetic groups or any other cofactors needed for your sequence? Focus on the two internal C atoms in the sequence represented by Oxalacetate to malate (needs NADH) to fumarate to succinate (needs FADH2).

D. In a different pathway it is necessary to convert an α amino acid (e.g. alanine) to a β amino acid (e.g. β-alanine). What prosthetic group would you call upon to achieve this conversion? Explain. This interrchanges substituents on 2 adjacent C atoms. This is typically catalyzed by a B12 requiring enzyme. 3. A.. You have a colleague who has just purified a lipid from the unusual organism E. Gillis. As a favor to your colleague you agree to analyze it. The analysis reveals 1 glycerol, 1 choline, 1 phosphate and 2 myristic acid (14:0). You return to your colleague with the question " Did you isolate this organism from Old Faithful". What made you ask that question? (If you do not know what Old Faithful is ask a TA). A PL containg satd fatty acids would be a solid at room temperature. This would be fatal for the organism which must therefore live at a much higher temperature such a thermal geyser such as Old Faithful. B. If you were to replace either (i) the natural lipid of the cell membrane of the liver or (ii) the natural lipid of the post-synaptic membrane, by the lipid described above would the functions of the adrenaline receptor and the acetyl choline receptor be Explain your choice! (a) Equally affected. (b) The adrenaline receptor be more affected (c) The acetyl choline receptor be more affected. (b). The acetyl choline receptor does not itself depend upon membrane fluidity (tho the release of acetyl CoA from the presynaptic membrane does because of the exocytosis of the vesicles containg acetyl CoA). The adrenaline receptor needs to move to find the G-protein. If the student says (a) and gives the qualifier above that s OK. C. Given that the diffusion constant of a membrane phospholipid is 100x larger than a typical intrinsic protein and that it takes a phospholipid about 1 second to have a net movement of 1 umeter, how long would it take the protein to travel the same distance: (a) 0.01 sec. (b) 0.1 sec. (c) 1 sec. (d) 10 sec. (e) 100 sec.

Justify your choice. (e). s2 = 4Dt. S2 is the same so Dt must be the same D. There is an emergency at Methodist hospital and some Type O blood is needed in a hurry! The attending physician rushes to the refrigerator and finds that only Type AB blood is available. Fortunately the physician took Bios 302, so he dashes to his lab for an enzyme which he then incubates with the Type AB blood. What activity do you think this enzyme has? Why A glycosidase that can hydrolyze a sugar1 to sugar2 1alpha 3 glycosidic bond. It can be nonspecific to either sugar 1 or sugar 2 or it can be absolutely specific to sugar 2 and accept either Gal or N-acetyl Gal for sugar 1. 4 A.. The Red Blood Cell (RBC) imports glucose for glycolysis. How do we know that this occurs by facilitated diffusion? 1. It exhibits a plot of Flux vs external glucose that is hyperbolic (hence a carrier) and 2. There is no requirement for metabolic energy. B. How would you modify the RBC so that it could accumulate glucose (without modification) to a concentration much larger than that present in the medium? Explain your answer! I would incorporate a V-type ATPase in the membrane so that ATP hydrolysis generates a proton gradient (acid inside) and modify the existing glucose transporter so that is performs glucose-proton antiport. Other logical answers are acceptable. C. Describe the proton motive force in one-or-two sentences. Present the simple equation that Mitchell employed in defining it explaining the meaning of each term. The proton motive force is an electrochemical gradient across a membrane that is produced by generating a proton gradient across the membrane. P = φ 60 ph (millivolts). The first term is the combined contribution of the membrane potential created because the proton is a cation (the second term) and the osmotic contribution because the proton is a solute (the second term). (If the proton were uncharged only the second term would exist.) D. How is the proton-motive force exploited in the active transport of: 1) chloride 2) malate 3) sucrose

1. Electrophoretic antiport into the domain of high proton conc.- φ 2. Electroneutral symport down the ph gradient.- ph 3. Electrogenic symport down the ph gradient.- P Does the presence of dinitrophenol (DNP) have an affect on the transport of any of the above compounds? Why? It aborts all transport because it abolished P. E. When chloroplasts are incubated with tetra-phenyl boron (TPP, a lipophilic anion) it is found that this anion is accumulated within the chloroplast to a level 1000x that present in the external medium. What can you deduce from this observation? The inside of the chloroplast is positive with respect to the outside. Is this experiment sufficient to quantify the proton-motive force? Why? No-it only allows one to calculate φ.