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Unit Four

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Title: Unit Four


1
Unit Four
  • Chapters 6, 7, and 8

2
Energy and MetABOLISM
  • Chapter 6

3
First Law of Thermodynamics
  • Concerns the amount of energy in the universe
  • States that energy can not be created or
    destroyed it can only change from one form to
    another
  • The total amount of energy in the universe
    remains constant

4
Second Law of Thermodynamics
  • Concerns the transformation of potential energy
    into heat or random molecular motion during an
    energy transaction
  • Disorder, or entropy, is constantly increasing
  • In general reactions spontaneously proceed to
    turn more ordered, less stable form into a less
    ordered more stable form

5
Free Energy
  • Energy available to do work
  • G Gibbs free energy
  • H enthalpy, energy in the chemical bonds
  • T absolute temperature in Kelvin
  • S entropy, disorder of system
  • G H TS
  • ?G ?H - T?S
  • Assumptions
  • Constant temperature
  • Constant pressure
  • Constant volume

6
Predicting Reactions
  • Endergonic
  • Exergonic
  • ?G is positive
  • Input of energy
  • ?G is negative
  • Energy is released
  • Spontaneously proceeding reactions

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Activation energy
  • Extra energy needed to destabilize chemical bonds
  • Initiates the reaction
  • Larger activation energy requirements tend to
    proceed more slowly
  • Rate of reaction can be increased two ways
  • Increase the energy of the reacting molecules
  • Lower activation energy

9
Catalysts
  • Process of influencing chemical bonds is called
    catalysis
  • Catalysts affect the transition state of
    chemicals making them more stable and thus
    lowering the activation energy

10
Why run reactions??
11
ATP cycle
  • Most cells dont stockpile ATP
  • Cells keep a few seconds worth of ATP on hand
  • Constantly producing more from ADP and inorganic
    phosphate

12
Enzymes Biological Catalysts
  • The unique 3D shape of the enzyme is hugely
    important
  • The enzyme creates a temporary association
    between the substrates
  • Carbonic anhydrase example
  • CO2 H2O H2CO3
  • proceeds either direction, but huge activation
    energy
  • Under normal conditions perhaps 200 molecules per
    hour
  • When catalyzed 600,000 molecules can be produced
    per second

13
Enzyme active sites
  • Active site is a pocket for the substrate
  • Once the substrate bonds the whole structure is
    called the enzyme-substrate complex
  • The amino acid side chains of the substrate and
    enzyme interact to weaken bonds and thus lower
    activation energy
  • Substrate binding changes the enzyme
    shapeinduced fit

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16
Multienzyme complexes
  • Pyruvate dehydrogenase has 60 sububnits
  • Why have these?
  • Increase rate of reaction
  • Limits unwanted side reactions
  • All reactions can be controlled

17
Nonprotein enzymes ribozymes
  • Thomas R. Cech, University of Colorado, 1981
  • Discovered that certain reactions seemed to be
    catalyzed by RNA rather than enzymes
  • Extraordinary specificity
  • Intramolecular catalysisrun reactions on
    themselves
  • Intermolecular catalysisrun reactions on other
    molecules
  • Ribosomal RNA plays a role in ribosome function,
    the ribosome is a ribozyme

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Enzyme sensitivity
  • Concentrations of enzyme and substrate
  • Temperature
  • pH

20
Turning Enzymes On and Off
  • Activator
  • Inhibitor
  • A substrate that binds and increases activity
  • A substrate that binds and decreases activity
  • Many times the end product of a pathway is the
    inhibitor

21
Types of Inhibitors
  • Competitivecompete with the substrate for the
    active site
  • Noncompetitivebind the enzyme at a point other
    than the active site and cause a conformational
    shape change
  • Many of the noncompetitive inhibitors bind at a
    place called the allosteric site, hence these are
    called allosteric inhibitors

22
Enzyme cofACTORS and coenzymes
  • Typically metal ions that are found in the active
    site and directly participate in the catalysis
  • Zinc, Molybdenum, and Manganese
  • If the cofactor is a nonprotein organic molecule
    it is a coenzyme
  • B6 and B12

23
Whats the point??
  • Metabolism is totally based on biochemical
    pathways, proteins, and enzyme function
  • Anabolismbuilding
  • Catabolismbreaking

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25
Feedback Inhibition
  • End product many times binds the allosteric site

26
Cellular Respiration
  • Chapter 7

27
Energy Harvesting
  • Heterotrophs
  • Autotrophs
  • Live on organic compounds
  • fed by others
  • Produce organic compounds
  • self-feeders

28
Cells Oxidize Organic Compounds
  • The reactions we will examine are oxidation
    reactions
  • Transfer of electrons
  • Dehydrogenations reactionsloss of hydrogen
    protons

29
Three Possible outcomes
  • Aerobic respirationthe final electron acceptor
    is oxygen
  • Anaerobic respirationthe final electron acceptor
    is an inorganic molecule other than oxygen
  • Fermentationfinal electron acceptor is an
    organic molecule

30
Burning Carbs
  • C6H12O6 6O2 6CO2 6H2O
    energy (heat and ATP)
  • Change in energy is -686 kcal/mol at STP
  • In a cell the change in energy can be -720
    kcal/mol

31
How do we complete the reaction?
  • Electron movement is critical
  • If the electrons were given directly to O2 it
    would be a combustion reaction
  • Why dont we burst into flames?

32
Intermediate Electron Carrier
  • NAD is a very important electron carrier
  • Made of two nucleotides
  • Nicotinamide monophosphate, active portion of
    molecule
  • Adenosine monophosphate, shape recognition
    portion of molecule

33
Stages of Metabolism
  • Glycolysis
  • Oxidation of pyruvate (sometimes called
    intermediary metabolism)
  • Krebs cycle
  • Electron transport chain

34
What binds the stages together?
  • ATP
  • It is the molecule that drives endergonic
    reactions
  • 7kcal of energy in ATP, activation energy

35
An Overview
36
Glycolysis
  • Literally means sugar splitting
  • ATP needs be fed into the reaction to get it
    startedpriming reactions
  • The glucose needs to be splitcleavage
  • NADH and ATP are formedoxidation

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Gotta Keep processes going
  • Three things happened in glycolysis
  • Glucose is converted to 2 molecules of pyruvate
  • 2 molecules of ADP are converted to ATP using
    substrate level phosphorylation
  • 2 molecules of NAD are reduced to NADH
  • Problem!
  • Energy still locked in pyruvate molecules
  • Need NAD to continue glycolysis

39
Recycling NADHneed another electron acceptor
  • Aerobic Respiration
  • Fermentation
  • Oxygen will ultimately accept the electrons
  • NADH can go back to NAD
  • Organic molecules can accept the electrons
  • NADH can go back to NAD

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41
Oxidation of pyruvate
  • Decarboxylation reaction
  • The carbon that is cleaved is converted to CO2
  • The remaining acetyl group attaches to coenzyme A
  • Acetyl Co-A is the new molecule
  • Pyruvate dehydrogenase60 unit multienzyme

42
Krebs Cycle
  • The 2-carbon acetyl Co-A gets converted to 2
    molecules of CO2
  • Oxidation reactions

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44
What do I do with the NADH and FADH2?
  • Electron transport chain and cash them in for ATP

45
Chemiosmosis
  • The relative difference in electrical potential
    cause molecules to move from high concentration
    to low concentration
  • ATP is made from ADP and Pi in the process

46
ATP synthase
  • Rotary motor
  • F0 complex is membrane bound
  • F1 complex is the stalk, knob, and head
  • Movement cause changes in conformation, which
    causes enzymatic reaction
  • Result is oxidative phosphorylation

47
Molecular accounting
  • How much ATP do we end up with?
  • Each NADH is worth 2.5 ATP
  • Each FADH2 is worth 1.5 ATP
  • Retrace the steps, how much of everything was
    produced?

48
Is 30 or 32 ATP good?
  • Each ATP is worth 7.3 kcal/mol
  • One glucose is 686 kcal/mol
  • (30 x 7.3)/686 32
  • Is that good?

49
What inhibits Aerobic respiration?
50
Oxidation without O2
  • Methanogens
  • Sulfur bacteria
  • CO2 is the electron acceptor
  • CO2 is reduced to CH4
  • Found in soil
  • Found in cows digestive system
  • SO4 is the electron acceptor
  • SO4 is reduced to H2S
  • Hot springs and hydrothermal vents

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Fermentation
  • Ethanol fermentation
  • some bacteria and yeasts
  • Lactic acid fermentation
  • humans when exercising
  • commercially to produce cheese and yogurt

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54
Protein and fat Catbolism
55
Photosynthesis
  • Chapter 8

56
Two Types of Photosynthesis
  • Anoxygenic
  • Oxygenic
  • Purple bacteria
  • Green sulfur bacteria
  • Green nonsulfur bacteria
  • Heliobacteria
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Seven groups of algae
  • Essentially all land plants

57
Three stages of photosynthesis
  • Capture sunlight
  • Use the sunlight to make ATP and NADPH
  • Use the ATP and NADPH to synthesize organic
    molecules from CO2

58
6CO2 12H20 light C6H12O6 6H2O
6O2
59
Leaf Structure
  • Mesophyll cells
  • Stoma
  • Chloroplast
  • Thylakoids
  • Grana
  • Stroma

60
Overview
61
Pigments and light
  • Any molecule that absorbs light in the visible
    range is a pigment
  • Light can act as a wave or a photon, a discrete
    packet of energy
  • Short wavelength light is high energy
  • Long wavelength light is low energy

62
Photoelectric effect
  • A beam of light is able to remove electrons from
    molecules creating a current
  • Chloroplasts are photoelectric devices
  • Different molecules have different absorption
    spectra

63
Chlorophyll
  • Chlorophyll a is the main light conversion
    pigment in cyanobacteria and green plants
  • Chlorophyll b is an accessory pigment that helps
    chlorophyll a absorb more light
  • Porphyrin ring, alternating double and single
    bonds, magnesium in the middle

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65
Photosystems
  • Experiments on photosynthesis show that output
    increases linearly at low light intensities
  • At high light intensity saturation is reached
  • Investigators used single-celled algae Chlorella
  • One molecule of O2 per 2500 chlorophyll molecules
  • Chlorophyll works in clusters called photosystems

66
Photosystem structure
  • Saturation
  • Antenna Complex

67
Reaction center
  • Transmembrane protein-pigment complex
  • Passes an electron to a neighbor
  • Chlorophyll transfers electron to quinone, the
    primary acceptor
  • Electron replaced with low energy electron from
    splitting of water

68
Light Dependent Reactions
  • Primary photoevent
  • Photon is captured by pigment
  • Electron in the pigment is excited
  • Charge separation
  • Excitation energy transferred to reaction center
  • Electron moves to acceptor molecule
  • Electron transport initiated
  • Electron transport
  • Electrons move through proteins embedded in
    thylakoid membrane
  • Protons move across the membrane to create a
    gradient
  • NADPH produced
  • Chemiosmosis
  • Protons flow through ATP synthase

69
Bacteria and Single Photosystems
  • Cyclic photophosphorylation
  • Anoxygenic process
  • Absorbed electrons are not at a high enough
    excitation level to produce NADPH

70
Coupled, noncyclic photosystems
  • Photosystem I passes electrons to NADP to make
    NADPH
  • Photosystem II can oxidize water to restore
    electrons to the whole process
  • Known as noncyclic photophosphorylation

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Enhancement effect
  • The two photosystems work in series to enhance
    the output of each other

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Carbon Fixation The Calvin Cycle
  • Energy to drive the cycle comes from the ATP made
    in the light dependent reactions
  • Protons and electrons needed to build chemical
    bonds comes from BADPH produced in light
    dependent reactions
  • Enzyme-catalyzed cycle similar to Krebs, but
    building molecules instead of breaking them down
  • C3 photosynthesis because the first intermediate
    compound has 3 carbons
  • CO2 attached to ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP)
    by rubulose bisphophate carboxylase/oxygenase
    (rubisco)

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Photorespiration
  • Rubisco will pick up oxygen and send that into
    the Calvin cycle
  • Why would this be a problem? What wouldnt you
    make?

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Fighting Photorespiration
  • C3 plants fix carbon using the Calvin cycle
    directly
  • C4 plants use and enzyme PEP carboxylase to make
    a four carbon compound malatephysical separation
  • CAM plants open stomata at night, make
    oxaloacetate, store it, use the compounds during
    the day to run Calvin cycletemporal separation

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C4
  • Physical separation yields higher levels of CO2
    entering the Calvin cycle
  • Examples corn, crabgrass, sugarcane

82
Cam plants
  • Temporal separation yields higher levels of CO2
    entering the Calvin cycle
  • Examples cactuses, pineapple, agave, many
    orchids
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