Title: CH 5 continued
1CH 5 continued.Energy
2What Is Energy?
- Capacity to do work
- Life depends on the fact that energy can be
converted from one form to another - Forms of energy
- Potential energy stored energy (chemical
positional) - Kinetic energy energy of motion (heat, light,
electricity)
3More on potential energy
- Potential energy - stored energy
- Chemical energy potential energy due to
- Concentration gradient
- Energy stored in a chemical bond the potential
energy of molecules
4- Thermodynamics study of energy transformations
- The First Law of Thermodynamics
- Energy can be changed from one form to another
but cannot be created or destroyed - When one form of energy is converted to another
the total energy present remains the same
5- Thermodynamics study of energy transformations
- The Second Law of Thermodynamics
- Energy transformations increase disorder
(entropy) - Each energy transformation in living organisms
releases some of the energy as heat - Heat increases the movement of the particles and
their disorder
6Energy and Cells
- Each time a cell releases energy stored in
chemical bonds that energy is - some is captured in new, lower energy bonds
- some is used to do the work of the cell
- and
- some is released as heat.
- Cells cannot use heat to do the work of the cell
7Heat
Chemical reactions
Carbon dioxide
Glucose
ATP
ATP
Water
Oxygen
Energy for cellular work
8- Chemical reactions either release or store energy
- Exergonic reactions
- Release energy
- Yield products that contain less potential energy
than their reactants - Examples cellular respiration, burning
- Endergonic reactions
- Require an input of energy from the surroundings
- Yield products higher in potential energy than
reactants - Example photosynthesis
9Exergonic reaction
Reactants
Amount of energy released
Energy released
Potential energy of molecules
Products
10Examples of Exergonic Reactions
- Reactions that release energy
- Cellular respiration
- Multi-step process by which energy stored in
glucose is released - Some of the energy released is used to make ATP
- Some of the energy is released as heat
- Hydrolysis of ATP
- ATP ? ADP P energy
11Endergonic reaction
Products
Amount of energy required
Energy required
Potential energy of molecules
Reactants
12Examples of Endergonic Reactions
- Reactions that require an input of energy
- Photosynthesis
- Multi-step process in which the suns energy is
used to convert CO2 and water into high energy
sugar molecules - Synthesis of ATP
- ADP P energy ? ATP
13Energy Coupling
- Coupled Reactions
- Energy given off by the exergonic reaction is
used to fuel/drive the endergonic reaction - Examples
- Active transport
- First step of glycolysis
14ATP
- ATP is the cells primary energy carrier
- ATP adenosine triphosphate
- ATP 1 adenine, 1 ribose, and 3 phosphates
(nucleotide) - The energy in an ATP molecule is in the bonds
between phosphates
15- The hydrolysis of ATP releases energy.
Triphosphate
Adenosine diphosphate
Adenosine
Phosphate group
H2O
P
P
P
P
P
P
Energy
Hydrolysis
Adenine
Ribose
ADP
ATP
16ATP and Coupled Reactions
- The hydrolysis of ATP often transfers a P from
ATP to another molecule - Called a phosphorylation reaction
- As a result the ATP is converted to ADP and is of
lower energy - The phosphorylated molecule is of higher energy
(energized)
17ATP
Chemical work
Mechanical work
Transport work
Membrane protein
Solute
P
Motor protein
P
Reactants
P
P
P
Product
P
Molecule formed
Protein moved
Solute transported
ADP ?
P
18How Enzymes Function
- Even with an abundant source of ATP chemical
reactions in cells would not occur without the
presence of catalysts called enzymes.
19How Enzymes Function
- Chemical reactions require an input of energy to
get started - Called the activation energy (EA)
- Reactions with a large EA are relatively slow.
- Enzymes lower the activation energy
- All reactions in the cell require the presence of
a specific enzyme
20- Enzymes proteins that function as biological
catalysts - Increase the rate of a reaction without
themselves being changed - Decrease the energy of activation needed to begin
a reaction
EA without enzyme
EA with enzyme
Reactants
Energy
Net change in energy
Products
Progress of the reaction
21Enzymes and Substrates
- Enzymes are substrate specific
- Each enzyme has a unique three-dimensional shape
that determines which chemical reaction it
catalyzes - What determines the enzymes 3-D shape?
22Enzymes and Substrates
- Terms
- Substrate the reactant that fits into the active
site of an enzyme - Active site a pocket on the enzymes surface
that the substrate attaches to - Each active site binds only specific substrates
23Induced Fit Model
- Binding of the substrate causes the enzyme to
change shape and hold the substrates more
tightly. - This creates conditions that are ideal for the
reaction by - Holding reactants close together
- Orienting reactants properly
- Straining bonds
- Shutting out / bringing in water
- Creating an acid or base environment
24Enzyme available with empty active site
Active site
Substrate (sucrose)
Substrate binds to enzyme with induced fit
Enzyme (sucrase)
Glucose
Fructose
H2O
Products are released
Substrate is converted to products
25Enzyme Summary
- Most enzymes are proteins.
- Speed up reactions by lowering the EA
- Enzymes are substrate specific
- Enzymes are not permanently changed in the
reaction. - Enzymes can be used over and over again.
- A single enzyme may act on thousands or millions
of substrate molecules per second!
26Cellular Environment and Enzymes
- Enzymes must be in their correct 3-D shape to
function - Each enzyme functions at its best under a
specific set of conditions. - Temperature
- pH
- Salinity
- Why do these conditions matter?
27Temperature and Enzyme Activity
28Activity Data for 3 Enzymes
29Co-factors
- Some enzymes require cofactors to function
- Metal ions
- Such as ions of iron, zinc, and calcium
- Organic molecules called coenzymes
- The B vitamins are all coenzymes
30Enzyme Inhibitors
- Inhibitors are substances that interfere with an
enzymes ability to function - Many toxins/poisons are enzyme inhibitors
- For example Mercury binds to sulfur groups on
enzymes and cause the enzyme to change shape and
lose function
31Enzyme Inhibitors
- Inhibitors may bind to the enzyme with covalent
bonds or H bonds - Covalent bonding inhibitors ? Irreversible
inhibition - H bonding inhibitors ? Reversible inhibition
32More on Enzyme Inhibitors
- Some enzyme inhibitors are deadly
- Cyanide inhibits an enzyme needed to make ATP
- Sarin inhibits an enzyme needed for nerve
transmission - Pesticides and herbicides bind to key enzymes
in insects and plants
33More on Enzyme Inhibitors
- Some inhibitors are beneficial
- Antibiotics bind to essential enzymes found in
bacteria - Enzymes not found in eukaryotic cells
- Kills the bacteria
- Protease inhibitors are HIV drugs that bind to
and inhibit an essential viral enzyme - Ibuprofen inhibits the enzyme needed to make
pain/inflammation messengers
34Types of Inhibitors
- Competitive inhibitors compete with the
substrate for binding at the active site - Competitive inhibitors are similar in structure
to the real substrate
35Types of Inhibitors
- Noncompetitive inhibitors bind to the enzyme at
a location other than the active site - Binding changes the shape of the active site so
that the substrate cannot bind - Called allosteric control
- Release of the inhibitor returns the active site
to its proper shape
36Substrate
Active site
Enzyme
Normal binding of substrate
Competitive inhibitor
Noncompetitive Inhibitor -- also called an
allosteric inhibitor
Enzyme inhibition
37- SUMMARY
- A competitive inhibitor takes the place of a
substrate in the active site - Inhibitor blocks entry of the true substrate
- A noncompetitive inhibitor alters an enzyme's
function by binding at a location other than the
active site and the binding changes the shape of
the active site - Also called - allosteric control
38Feedback Inhibition
- The end-product of the pathway is an inhibitor of
the first enzyme in the pathway - When the product is no longer needed, it builds
up, attaches to the 1st enzyme in the pathway ?
turns the enzyme and pathway OFF - When the cell needs to make the product again the
product/inhibitor detaches from the enzyme - the enzyme resumes its original shape and bind
substrate 1 again - .
39Feedback Inhibition of Tryptophan Synthesis
enzyme 2
enzyme 3
enzyme 4
enzyme 5
- enzyme activity of the first enzyme is blocked by
the end-product of the pathway
enzyme 1
Tryptophan builds up in the cell, binds to the
first enzyme in the pathway, the active site
changes shape so that it cannot bind the first
substrate, and tryptophan synthesis stops
END PRODUCT (tryptophan)
SUBSTRATE