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How Cells Release Chemical Energy

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Title: How Cells Release Chemical Energy


1
How Cells Release Chemical Energy
  • Chapter 7

2
Impacts, IssuesWhen Mitochondria Spin Their
Wheels
  • Mitochondria are the organelles responsible for
    releasing the energy stored in foods
  • In Lufts syndrome, the mitochondria are active
    in oxygen consumption, but with little ATP
    formation to show for it
  • In Friedreichs ataxia, too much iron in the
    mitochondria causes an accumulation of free
    radicals that attack valuable molecules of life

3
The Impact
  • Proper, or improper, functioning of mitochondria
    is the difference between health and disease

4
Section 7.1
  • Overview of
  • Energy-Releasing Pathways

5
Producing the Universal Currency of Life
  • All energy-releasing pathways
  • require characteristic starting materials
  • yield predictable products and by-products
  • produce ATP

6
ATP Is Universal Energy Source
  • Photosynthesizers get energy from the sun
  • Animals get energy second- or third-hand from
    plants or other organisms
  • Regardless, the energy is converted to the
    chemical bond energy of ATP

7
Making ATP
  • Plants make ATP during photosynthesis
  • Cells of all organisms make ATP by breaking down
    carbohydrates, fats, and protein

8
Main Types of Energy-Releasing Pathways
  • Aerobic pathways
  • Evolved later
  • Require oxygen
  • Start with glycolysis in cytoplasm
  • Completed in mitochondria
  • Anaerobic pathways
  • Evolved first
  • Dont require oxygen
  • Start with glycolysis in cytoplasm
  • Completed in cytoplasm

9
Energy-Releasing Pathways
10
Overview of Aerobic Respiration
  • C6H1206 6O2 6CO2 6H20
  • glucose oxygen carbon dioxide
    water

11
Overview of Aerobic Respiration
12
Main Pathways Start with Glycolysis
  • Glycolysis occurs in cytoplasm
  • Reactions are catalyzed by enzymes
  • Glucose 2 Pyruvate
  • (six carbons) (three carbons)

13
p.106a
14
Three Series of Reactions Are Required for
Aerobic Respiration
  • Glycolysis is the breakdown of glucose to
    pyruvate
  • Small amounts of ATP are generated

15
Three Series of Reactions Are Required for
Aerobic Respiration
  • The Krebs cycle degrades pyruvate to CO2 and
    water
  • NAD and FAD accept H ions and electrons to be
    carried to the electron transfer chain
  • Small amounts of ATP are generated

16
Three Series of Reactions Are Required for
Aerobic Respiration
  • Electron transfer phosphorylation processes the
    H ions and electrons to generate lots of ATP
  • Oxygen is the final electron acceptor

17
The Role of Coenzymes
  • NAD and FAD accept electrons and hydrogen from
    intermediates during the first two stages
  • When reduced, they are NADH and FADH2
  • In the third stage, these coenzymes deliver the
    electrons and hydrogen to the transfer chain

18
Overview of Aerobic Respiration
19
Section 7.2
  • The First Stage Glycolysis

20
Glucose
  • A simple sugar
  • (C6H12O6)
  • Atoms held together by covalent bonds

21
Glycolysis Occurs in Two Stages
  • Energy-requiring steps
  • ATP energy activates glucose and its six-carbon
    derivatives

22
Glycolysis Occurs in Two Stages
  • Energy-releasing steps
  • The products of the first part are split into
    3-carbon pyruvate molecules
  • ATP and NADH form

23
Energy-Requiring Steps
24
Energy-Releasing Steps
25
Glycolysis in a Nutshell
  • Glucose is first phosphorylated in
    energy-requiring steps, then split to form two
    molecules of PGAL
  • Enzymes remove H and electrons from PGAL to
    change NAD to NADH (which is used later in
    electron transfer
  • PGAL is converted eventually to pyruvate
  • By substrate-level phosphorylation, four ATP are
    produced

26
Substrate-level What?
  • Substrate-level phosphorylation means that there
    is a direct transfer of a phosphate group from
    the substrate of a reaction to some other
    molecule in this case, ADP
  • Substrate is a reactant in a reaction the
    substance being acted upon, for example, by an
    enzyme

27
Net Energy Yield from Glycolysis
  • Energy requiring steps
  • 2 ATP invested
  • Energy releasing steps
  • 2 NADH formed
  • 4 ATP formed
  • Net yield is 2 ATP and 2 NADH

28
Section 7.3
  • Second Stage of Aerobic Respiration

29
Second-Stage Reactions
  • Occur in the mitochondria
  • Pyruvate is broken down to carbon dioxide
  • More ATP is formed
  • More coenzymes are reduced

30
Fig. 7-5b, p.112
31
  • Second Stage of Aerobic Respiration

32
Two Parts of Second Stage
  • Preparatory reactions
  • Pyruvate is oxidized into two-carbon acetyl units
    and carbon dioxide
  • NAD is reduced
  • Krebs cycle
  • The acetyl units are oxidized to carbon dioxide
  • NAD and FAD are reduced

33
Preparatory Reactions
  • pyruvate coenzyme A NAD
  • acetyl-CoA NADH CO2
  • One of the carbons from pyruvate is released in
    CO2
  • Two carbons are attached to coenzyme A and
    continue on to the Krebs cycle

34
What Is Acetyl-CoA?
  • A two-carbon acetyl group linked to coenzyme
    A CH3
  • CO
  • S
  • Coenzyme A

Acetyl group
35
  • Second Stage of Aerobic Respiration

36
CoA
KREBS CYCLE
acetyl-CoA
CoA
oxaloacetate
citrate
isocitrate
a-ketoglutarate
Stepped Art
Fig. 7-7a, p.113
37
The Krebs Cycle
  • Overall Products
  • Coenzyme A
  • 2 CO2
  • 3 NADH
  • FADH2
  • ATP
  • Overall Reactants
  • Acetyl-CoA
  • 3 NAD
  • FAD
  • ADP and Pi

38
Results of the Second Stage
  • All of the carbon molecules in pyruvate end up in
    carbon dioxide
  • Coenzymes are reduced (they pick up electrons and
    hydrogen)
  • One molecule of ATP is formed
  • Four-carbon oxaloacetate is regenerated

39
Two pyruvates cross the inner mitochondrial
membrane.
outer mitochondrial compartment
inner mitochondrial compartment
NADH
2
NADH
6
Krebs Cycle
Eight NADH, two FADH 2, and two ATP are the
payoff from the complete break-down of two
pyruvates in the second-stage reactions.
FADH2
2
ATP
2
The six carbon atoms from two pyruvates diffuse
out of the mitochondrion, then out of the cell,
in six CO
6 CO2
Fig. 7-6, p.112
40
Coenzyme Reductions during First Two Stages
  • Glycolysis 2 NADH
  • Preparatory 2 NADH
  • reactions
  • Krebs cycle 2 FADH2 6 NADH
  • Total 2 FADH2 10 NADH

41
Section 7.4
  • Third Stage of Aerobic Respiration The Big
    Energy Payoff

42
Electron Transfer Phosphorylation
  • Occurs in the mitochondria
  • Coenzymes deliver electrons to electron transfer
    chains
  • Electron transfer sets up H ion gradients
  • Flow of H down gradients powers ATP formation

43
Electron Transfer Phosphorylation
  • Electron transfer chains are embedded in inner
    mitochondrial compartment
  • NADH and FADH2 give up electrons that they picked
    up in earlier stages to electron transfer chain
  • Electrons are transferred through the chain
  • The final electron acceptor is oxygen

44
Creating an H Gradient
OUTER COMPARTMENT
NADH
INNER COMPARTMENT
45
ATP Formation
ATP
INNER COMPARTMENT
ADPPi
46
Summary of Transfers
47
Importance of Oxygen
  • Electron transfer phosphorylation requires the
    presence of oxygen
  • Oxygen withdraws spent electrons from the
    electron transfer chain, then combines with H to
    form water

48
Summary of Energy Harvest(per molecule of
glucose)
  • Glycolysis
  • 2 ATP formed by substrate-level phosphorylation
  • Krebs cycle and preparatory reactions
  • 2 ATP formed by substrate-level phosphorylation
  • Electron transfer phosphorylation
  • 32 ATP formed

49
Energy Harvest from Coenzyme Reductions
  • What are the sources of electrons used to
    generate the 32 ATP in the final stage?
  • 4 ATP - generated using electrons released during
    glycolysis and carried by NADH
  • 28 ATP - generated using electrons formed during
    second-stage reactions and carried by NADH and
    FADH2

50
Energy Harvest Varies
  • NADH formed in cytoplasm cannot enter
    mitochondrion
  • It delivers electrons to mitochondrial membrane
  • Membrane proteins shuttle electrons to NAD or
    FAD inside mitochondrion
  • Electrons given to FAD yield less ATP than those
    given to NAD

51
Energy Harvest Varies
  • Liver, kidney, heart cells
  • Electrons from first-stage reactions are
    delivered to NAD in mitochondria
  • Total energy harvest is 38 ATP
  • Skeletal muscle and brain cells
  • Electrons from first-stage reactions are
    delivered to FAD in mitochondria
  • Total energy harvest is 36 ATP

52
Section 7.5
  • Fermentation Pathways

53
Anaerobic Pathways
  • Do not use oxygen
  • Produce less ATP than aerobic pathways
  • Two types of fermentation pathways
  • Alcoholic fermentation
  • Lactate fermentation

54
Fermentation Pathways
  • Begin with glycolysis
  • Do not break glucose down completely to carbon
    dioxide and water
  • Yield only the 2 ATP from glycolysis
  • Steps that follow glycolysis serve only to
    regenerate NAD

55
Alcoholic Fermentation
56
Yeasts
  • Single-celled fungi
  • Carry out alcoholic fermentation
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • Bakers yeast
  • Carbon dioxide makes bread dough rise
  • Saccharomyces ellipsoideus
  • Used to make beer and wine

57
Lactate Fermentation
58
Lactate Fermentation
  • Carried out by certain bacteria
  • Electron transfer chain is in bacterial plasma
    membrane
  • Final electron acceptor is compound from
    environment (such as nitrate), not oxygen
  • ATP yield is low

59
Lactate Fermentation
  • Lactobacillus and some other bacteria produce
    lactate
  • This produces cheeses, yogurt, buttermilk and
    other dairy products
  • Fermenters also are used to cure meats and in
    pickling
  • Sauerkraut is an example
  • Sour taste due to lactic acid (form of lactate)

60
Slow-twitch v. Fast-twitch muscles
  • Slow-twitch muscles make ATP only by aerobic
    respiration (no fermentation)
  • Slow-twitch muscles are for light, steady,
    prolonged activity
  • Slow-twitch muscles are red because they have
    lots of myoglobin, a pigment used to store oxygen
  • They also have many mitochondria

61
Fast-twitch Muscles
  • These pale (lighter colored) muscles have few
    mitochondria and no myoglobin
  • Fast-twitch muscles, which are used for immediate
    and intense energy demands, use lactate
    fermentation to produce ATP
  • It works quickly, but not for long
  • Chickens have fast-twitch breast muscles used for
    quick flights (white meat)
  • Ducks fly long distances what color is their
    breast meat?

62
Alcoholic Fermentation
63
Lactate Fermentation
64
Section 7.6
  • Alternative Energy Sources
  • in the Body

65
The Fate of Glucose
  • After eating, glucose is absorbed into the blood
  • Insulin levels rise, causing greater uptake of
    glucose by cells
  • Glycolysis will follow
  • Excess glucose is converted into glycogen
  • Glycogen is known as animal starch, and is the
    main storage polysaccharide in animals
  • Stored in the muscles and the liver

66
Between Meals
  • When blood levels of glucose decline, pancreas
    releases glucagon, a hormone
  • Glucagon stimulates liver cells to convert
    glycogen back to glucose and to release it to the
    blood
  • Glycogen levels are adequate, but can be depleted
    in 12 hours
  • (Muscle cells do not release their stored
    glycogen)

67
Energy Reserves
  • Glycogen makes up only about 1 percent of the
    bodys energy reserves
  • Proteins make up 21 percent of energy reserves
  • Fat makes up the bulk of reserves (78 percent)

68
Energy from Fats
  • Most stored fats are triglycerides in adipose
    tissue
  • Triglycerides are three-tailed fats
  • Triglycerides are broken down to glycerol and
    fatty acids
  • Glycerol is converted to PGAL, an intermediate of
    glycolysis
  • Fatty acids are broken down and converted to
    acetyl-CoA, which enters Krebs cycle

69
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70
Energy from Proteins
  • Proteins are broken down to amino acids
  • Amino acids are broken apart
  • Amino group is removed, ammonia forms, is
    converted to urea and excreted
  • Carbon backbones can enter the Krebs cycle or its
    preparatory reactions

71
Reaction Sites
72
Section 7.7
  • Perspective on Life

73
Evolution of Metabolic Pathways
  • When life originated, atmosphere had little
    oxygen
  • Earliest organisms used anaerobic pathways
  • Later, cyclic pathway (simple form) of
    photosynthesis increased atmospheric oxygen
  • Much more efficient cells arose that used oxygen
    as final acceptor in electron transfer

74
Processes Are Linked
  • Aerobic Respiration
  • Reactants
  • Sugar
  • Oxygen
  • Products
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Water
  • Photosynthesis
  • Reactants
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Water
  • Products
  • Sugar
  • Oxygen

75
Life Is System of Prolonging Order
  • Powered by energy inputs from sun, life continues
    onward through reproduction
  • Following instructions in DNA, energy and
    materials can be organized, generation after
    generation
  • With death, molecules are released and may be
    cycled as raw material for next generation
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