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Section 4. Fuel oxidation, generation of ATP

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Title: Section 4. Fuel oxidation, generation of ATP


1
Section 4. Fuel oxidation, generation of ATP
  • Section 4. Overview of
  • Fuel oxidation, ATP generation
  • Physiological processes require energy
  • transfer from chemical bonds in food
  • Electrochemical gradient
  • Movement of muscle
  • Biosynthesis of complex molecules
  • 3 phases
  • Oxidation of fuels (carbs, fats, protein)
  • Conversion of energy to PO4 of ATP
  • Utilization of ATP to drive energy-requiring
    reactions

Fig.iv.1
2
Fuel oxidation overview - respiration
  • Phase 1 energy (e-) from fuel transfer to NAD
    and FAD
  • Acetyl CoA, TCA intermediates are central
    compounds
  • Phase 2 electron transport chain convert e- to
    ATP
  • membrane proton gradient drives ATP synthase
  • Phase 3 ATP
  • powers processes

Fig. iv.2
3
Respiration occurs in mitochondria
  • Respiration occurs in mitochondria
  • Most enzymes in matrix
  • Inner surface has
  • e- transport chain
  • ATP synthase
  • ATP transported through
  • inner membrane,
  • diffuses through outer
  • Some enzymes encoded
  • by mitochondrion genome,
  • most by nuclear genes

Fig. iv.3
4
Glucose is universal fuel for every cell
  • Glycolysis is universal fuel
  • 1 glucose -gt 2 pyruvate 2 NADH 2 ATP
  • Aerobic path
  • Continued oxidation
  • Acetyl CoA -gt TCA,
  • NADH, FAD(2H) -gt e- transport chain
  • Lots of ATP
  • Anaerobic fermentation
  • anaerobic glycolysis
  • Oxidation of NADH to NAD
  • Wasteful reduction of pyruvate
  • to lactate in muscles
  • to ethanol, CO2 by yeast

Fig. iv.4
5
Chapt. 19 Cellular bioenergetics of ATP, O2
  • Ch. 19 Cellular bioenergetics
  • Student Learning Outcomes
  • Explain the ATP-ADP cycle
  • Describe how chemical bond energy of fuels can do
    cellular work through PO4 bond of ATP
  • Explain how NADH, FAD(2H) coenzymes carry
    electrons to electron transport chain
  • Describe how ATP synthesis is endergonic
    (requires energy)
  • Describe how ATP hydrolysis (exergonic) powers
    biosynthesis, movement, transport

6
Fuel oxidation makes ATP
  • Cellular Bioenergetics of ATP and O2
  • Chemical bond energy of fuels transforms to
    physiological responses necessary for life
  • Fuel oxidation generates ATP
  • ATP hydrolysis provides energy for most work
  • High energy bonds of ATP
  • Energy currency of cell

Fig. 19.1
7
ATP
  • High energy phosphate bond of ATP
  • Strained phosphoanhydride bond
  • DG0 -7.3 kcal/mol standard conditions
  • Hydrolysis of ATP to ADP Pi transfers PO4 to
    metabolic intermediate or protein, for next step

Fig. 19.2
8
Thermodynamics brief
  • Thermodynamics states what is possible
  • DG change in Gibbs free energy of reaction
  • DG DG0 RT ln P/S (R gas const T
    temp oK)
  • DG0 DG at standard conditions of1 M substrate
    product and proceeding to equilibrium)
  • DG0 DG0 under standard conditions of H2O
    55.5 M,
  • pH 7.0, and 25oC 37oC not much different
  • Concentrations of substrate(s) and products(s)
  • At equilibrium, DG 0, therefore
  • DG0 -RT lnKeq -RT lnP/S

9
Thermodynamics brief
  • Thermodynamics states what is possible
  • Exergonic reactions give off energy (DG0 lt 0)
  • typically catabolic
  • Endergonic reactions require energy (DG0 gt 0)
  • typically anabolic
  • Unfavorable reactions are coupled to favorable
    reactions
  • Hydrolysis of ATP is very favorable
  • Additive DG0 values determine overall direction

10
C. Exogonic, endogonic reactions
  • Phosphoglucomutase converts G6P to/from G1P
  • G6P to glycolysis
  • G1P to glycogen synthesis
  • Equilibrium favors G6P
  • Exergonic reactions give off energy (DG0 lt 0)
  • Endergonic reactions require energy (DG0 gt 0)

Fig. 19.3
11
III. Energy transformation for mechanical work
  • ATP hydrolysis can power muscle movement
  • Myosin ATPase hydrolyzes ATP, changes shape
  • ADP form changes shape back, moves along
  • Actin was activated by Ca2

Fig. 19.4
12
ATP powers transport
  • Active transport ATP hydrolysis moves
    molecules
  • Na, K ATPase sets up ion gradient bring in
    items
  • Vesicle ATPases pump protons into lysosome
  • Ca2-ATPases pump Ca2 into ER, out of cell

Fig. 10.6
13
III. ATP powers biochemical work
  • ATP powers biochemical work, synthesis
  • Anabolic paths require energy DGo additive
  • Couple synthesis to ATP hydrolysis
  • Phosphoryl transfer reactions
  • Activated intermediate
  • Ex. Table 19.3
  • glucose Pi -gt glucose 6-P H2O 3.3
    kcal/mol
  • ATP H2O -gt ADP Pi - 7.3 kcal/mol
  • Sum glucose ATP -gt glucose 6-P ADP -4.0
  • Also Glucose -gt G-1-P will be -2.35 kcal/mol
    overall
  • hydrolysis of ATP, through G-6-P to G-1-P

14
Activated intermediates in glycogen synthesis
  • Glycogen synthesis needs 3 P
  • Phosphoryl transfer to G6P
  • Activated intermediate with UDP covalently linked

Fig. 19.5
Fig. 19.6
15
DG depends on substrate, product concentrations
  • DG depends on substrate, product concentrations
  • DG DG0 RT ln P/S
  • Cells do not have 1M concentrations
  • High substrate can drive reactions with positive
    DG0
  • Low product (removal) can drive reactions with
    positive DG0
  • Ex., even though equilibrium (DG0 1.6
    kcal/mol)
  • favors G6P G1P in a ratio 94/6,
  • If G1P is being removed (as glycogen synthesis),
    then equilibrium shifts
  • ex. If ratio 94/3, then DG -0.41 favorable

16
Activated intermediates with bonds
  • Other compounds have high-energy bonds to aid
    biochemical work (equivalent to ATP)
  • UTP, CTP and GTP also (made from ATP NDP)
  • UTP for sugar biosyn, GTP for protein, CTP for
    lipids
  • Some other compounds
  • Creatine PO4 energy reserve muscle, nerve, sperm
  • Glycolysis
  • Ac CoA TCA cycle

Fig. 19.7
17
V. Energy from fuel oxidation
  • Energy transfer from fuels through oxidative
    phosphorylation in mitochondrion
  • NADH, FAD(2H) transfer e- to O2
  • Stepwise process through
  • protein carriers
  • Proton gradient created
  • e- to O2 -gt H2O
  • ATP synthase makes ATP
  • lets in H

Fig. 19.8
18
Oxidation/reduction
  • Oxidation reduction reactions
  • Electron donor gets oxidized recipient is
    reduced
  • LEO GER
  • Loss Electrons oxidation gain electrons is
    reduction
  • use coenzyme e- carriers

Fig. 19.9 NADH
Fig. 19.10 FAD(2H)
19
Redox potentials
  • Redox potentials indicate energetic possibility
  • Energy tower combine half reactions for overall
  • Ex. Table 19.4
  • ½ O2 2H 2e- -gt H2O E0 0.816
  • NAD 2H 2e- -gt NADH H -0.320
  • Combine both reactions (turn NADH -gt NAD)
    0.320
  • Total 1.136 (very big) -53 kcal/mol
  • FAD(2H) gives less, since its only 0.20 (FAD(2H)
    -gt FAD

20
Calorie content of fuels reflects oxidation state
  • Calorie content of fuels reflects oxidation
    state
  • C-H and C-C bonds will be oxidized
  • Glucose has many C-OH already
  • 4 kcal/g
  • Fatty acids very reduced
  • 9 kcal/g
  • Cholesterol no calories
  • not oxidized in reactions giving NADH

21
Anaerobic glycolysis fermentation
  • Anaerobic glycolysis fermentation
  • In absence of O2, cell does wasteful recycling
  • NADH oxidized to NAD (lose potential ATP)
  • pyruvate reduced to lactate
  • glycolysis can continue with new NAD
  • yeast makes ethanol,
  • CO2 from pyruvate
  • bacteria make diverse
  • acids, other products

Fig. 19.11
22
Oxidation not for ATP generation
  • Most O2 used in electron transport chain.
  • Some enzymes use O2 for substrate oxidation,
  • not for ATP generation
  • Oxidases transfer e- to O2
  • Cytochrome oxidase in
  • electron transport chain
  • Peroxidases in peroxisome
  • Oxygenases transfer e-
  • and O2 to substrate
  • Form H2O and S-OH
  • Hydroxylases
  • (eg. Phe -gt Tyr)

Fig. 19.12
23
VII Energy balance
  • Energy expenditure reflects oxygen consumption
  • Most O2 is used
  • by ATPases

Fig. 19.14
24
Energy balance
  • Portion of food metabolized is related to energy
    use
  • Basal metabolic rate
  • Thermogenesis
  • Physical activity
  • Storage of excess
  • If you eat to much
  • and dont exercise,
  • you will get fat
  • (summarizes ATP-ADP cycle)
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