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Bioenergetics

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Title: Bioenergetics


1
Bioenergetics
  • The Flow of Energy in the Cell

2
Living Versus Nonliving
  • Living cells/organisms maintain order.

3
Life Has 4 Essential
Requirements
  • Molecules that provide basic building blocks
  • Chemical catalysts (enzymes)
  • Information that guide activities
  • Energy to drive reactions and processes
    necessary for life

4
Nonliving Versus Living
5
Maintenance of Order
  • How do cells maintain or create order?

Energy
6
Energy
  • Capacity to cause change capacity to do work
    the ability to rearrange matter.
  • Kinetic energy of motion
  • Examples
  • Heat (random movement of molecules)
  • Light (movement of photons)
  • Potential stored energy or energy of position
  • Example
  • Chemical energy (energy due to structure)

7
Flow of Energy through Biosphere
Against concentration, electrical gradient
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8
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9
Ultimate Fate of All Energy.
  • Is to become randomized in the biosphere as
    increased entropy.
  • Energy flows from nuclear fusion of sun to
    eventual sink, the entropy of the universe.
  • Every process of reaction that occurs in the
    universe leads to greater entropy.

10
Forms of Energy
  • Kinetic
  • associated with motion
  • Heat (thermal energy)
  • kinetic energy of random movement of atoms or
    molecules
  • Potential
  • energy that matter possesses because of its
    location or structure
  • Chemical
  • potential energy available for release in a
    chemical reaction

Energy can be converted from one form to another
11
Energetics
  • Is there a great divide between the living and
    the nonliving?
  • No, according to Erwin Schrödinger
  • Both obey same laws of chemistry physics
  • Thermodynamics laws and principles that govern
    flow of energy.

12
The Laws of Energy Transformation
  • Closed system
  • isolated from its surroundings (liquid in a
    thermos)
  • Open system
  • energy and matter can be transferred between the
    system and its surroundings
  • Organisms are open systems

13
Closed System
System Surroundings Universe
surroundings
system
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14
Open System
  • Energy is transferred to or from the surroundings.

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15
1st Law of Thermodynamics
The law of conservation of energy
  • Energy can be transferred or transformed but
    cannot be created or destroyed.

16
1st Law of Thermodynamics
  • During any reaction the total amount of E that
    leaves the system the E that enters the system
    minus E that is stored within system.
  • ?E difference in internal energy of the system
    before the reaction (E1) and after the reaction
    (E2)

17
Meaning of ?E
  • ?E E2 E1
  • ?E E products E reactants
  • Change in enthalpy, H (heat content)
  • H E PV
  • ?H ?E ?(PV) PV 0
  • ?H H products H reactants
  • ?H Neg (endothermic), Positive (exothermic)

18
2nd Law of Thermodynamics
  • Every energy transfer or transformation increases
    entropy of the universe.

19
Does life violate 2nd law?
  • NO!
  • Life forms are open systems.
  • Energy from complex molecules ? simple molecules
    used to maintain order.
  • Heat generated ? entropy of surroundings.

20
What the First Law Means
  • 1st Law Energy is conserved whenever a process
    or reaction occursall energy that goes into a
    system must either be stored within the system or
    released again to the surroundings.
  • ? H measures how much total enthalpy of a system
    would change if a given process occurs (calories)

21
What the 2nd Law Means
  • In every chemical or physical change, the
    universe always tends toward greater disorder or
    randomness
  • Allows prediction in what direction a reaction
    will proceed, how much energy will be released
  • Thermodynamic spontaneity whether a reaction
    can go (but not will go)

22
2nd Law Allows a Prediction
Greater Entropy ? S
  • Of whether to what extent a process will occur

23
2nd Law of Thermodynamics
Less Entropy ?S
24
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25
Free Energy
  • Free energy of a living system
  • energy that can do work when temperature and
    pressure are uniform
  • ?G - change in free energy during a process
  • ?H - change in enthalpy, or change in total
    energy
  • ?S - change in entropy

26
Measures of Thermodynamic Spontaneity
  • Changes in Entropy ?S
  • Universe vs system
  • Changes in Free Energy ?G
  • Measures spontaneity of a reaction for a system
    based on properties of the system
  • ?H ?G T?S
  • ?G ?H - T?S
  • Every spontaneous reaction has a decrease in free
    energy of the system

27
Free Energy, Stability, and Equilibrium
  • Free energy
  • measure of a systems instability, its tendency
    to change to a more stable state
  • decreases during a spontaneous change
  • stability of a system increases
  • Equilibrium - state of maximum stability
  • A process is spontaneous and can perform work
    only when it is moving toward equilibrium

28
Exergonic and Endergonic Reactions in Metabolism
  • Exergonic reaction
  • proceeds with a net release of free energy
  • spontaneous
  • Endergonic reaction
  • absorbs free energy from its surroundings
  • nonspontaneous

29
DG (Change in Free Energy)
  • DG is convenient way to measure the amount of
    disorder created in the universe when a chemical
    reaction takes place.

30
Energy Profiles
DG Gproducts - Greactants
Exergonic Reaction (Spontaneous)
Endergonic Reaction (Non-spontaneous)
transition state
transition state
Free energy ?
EA
EA
products
DG gt 0
reactants
DG lt 0
products
reactants
Progress of reaction ?
31
What if DG 0?
  • Reaction has reached chemical equilibrium.

32
Dependence of ?G on Numerical Values of ?H and
the Terms (?T?S)
33
Change in G for Oxidation, Synthesis of Glucose
34
Relationship Between Keq DG
(DG 0)
Keq
Pure A
Pure B
35
DG
  • Free energy change under standard conditions
  • indicates pH 7.0
  • indicates
  • products reactants 1.0M (except water)
  • Temperature 25C 298K
  • Pressure 1 atmosphere
  • Useful way to compare reactions.

36
DG
  • Under standards conditions, all of these
    reactions will proceed to right.

37
Relating DG to DG
R 1.987 cal/molK (gas constant) T
temperature in Kelvin
38
Energy Coupling
39
Reaction coupling
The entire process is negative (energy release)
Figure 2-51
40
Energy Cycle
41
  • Activated Carrier Molecules Are Essential for
    Biosynthesis
  • Oxidation of food leads to
  • energy release
  • need temporary storage before
  • using it for biosynthesis
  • Special activated carrier molecules
  • Store energy in easily inter-changeable forms
  • transferable chemical groups
  • high-energy electrons
  • -ATP
  • NADH
  • NADPH

Figure 2-55
42
Activated Carriers
Store energy as readily transferable group
43
  • ATP Is the Most Widely Used Activated Carrier
    Molecule
  • ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is the cells energy
    shuttle
  • ATP is composed of
  • ribose (a sugar),
  • adenine (nitrogenous base),
  • and 3 phosphate groups
  • The bonds between the phosphate groups of ATPs
    tail can be broken by hydrolysis
  • Energy is released from ATP when the terminal
    phosphate bond is broken

Figure 2-57
44
Chapter 2
  • NADH and NADPH Are Important Electron Carriers
  • -Oxidation-reduction reactions
  • Carry high-energy electrons
  • and hydrogen atoms
  • NAD and NADP
  • Each pick a packet of energy
  • 2 high-energy electrons proton H
  • Get reduced to NADH (catabolic reactions)and
    NADPH (anabolic reactions)

45
Spontaneity Revisited
  • True or false?
  • A spontaneous chemical reaction will
    automatically take place.
  • False.
  • Example Dissolve sucrose in water. Is the
    sucrose hydrolyzed to yield glucose and fructose?
  • Why is this concept important to living organisms?
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