Cellular Resp
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Transcript Cellular Resp
Cellular Respiration II
Glycolysis, Krebs cycle, Electron
transport chain
Food Molecules are Broken
Down in 3 Stages to
Produce ATP
Extracellular/
lysosome
Cytosol
Mitochondria
Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis
Krebs
Cycle
Electron Transport Chain
An overview of cellular respiration
Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis
Krebs
Cycle
Electron Transport Chain
An overview of cellular respiration (Layer 1)
No oxygen here!
Substrate-level phosphorylation
Glycolysis
Glycolysis
3 phases of glycolysis
Energy investment
1.
Cleavage
2.
Steps 4-5
6 carbon molecule broken into two 3 carbon
molecules of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
Energy liberation
3.
Steps 1-3
2 ATP hydrolyzed to create fructose-1,6 bisphosphate
Steps 6-10
Two glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate molecules broken
down into two pyruvate molecules producing 2 NADH
and 4 ATP
Net yield in ATP of 2
10
A closer look at glycolysis: energy investment phase
ENERGY INVESTMENT = 1 ATP!
A closer look at glycolysis: energy investment phase
ENERGY INVESTMENT = 1 ATP!
A closer look at glycolysis: energy payoff phase
ENERGY PAYOFF !=
•2 NADH
•2 ATP
A closer look at glycolysis: energy payoff phase
ENERGY PAYOFF !=
•2 ATP
The energy input and output of glycolysis
Glycolysis costs ____ATPs, but makes
___ATPs; thus it has a net yield of
___ATPs.
33%
1.
2.
3.
33%
33%
3, 6, 3
2, 4, 2
4, 8, 4
1
2
3
All of the glycolysis reactions do not
require oxygen and can take place in
an anaerobic environment.
50%
1.
2.
50%
This is true
This is false
1
2
During glycolysis, ATP is
produced by
1.
2.
3.
Oxidative
phosphorylation
Substrate-level
phosphorylation
Both of the above
33%
1
33%
2
33%
3
Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis
Krebs
Cycle
Electron Transport Chain
An overview of cellular respiration
Conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA, the junction between glycolysis and the Krebs
cycle
Stage 2: Breakdown of pyruvate to
an acetyl group
In
eukaryotes, pyruvate in transported to
the mitochondrial matrix
Broken down by pyruvate dehydrogenase
Molecule of CO2 removed from each
pyruvate
Remaining acetyl group attached to CoA
to make acetyl CoA
1 NADH is made for each pyruvate
22
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O–
C O
C O
Outer
CH3
membrane
channel
O–
H+/pyruvate
C O
symporter
H+
C O
+ CoA SH
CH3
+
NAD+
Pyruvate
dehydrogenase
S CoA
C O + CO2 + NADH
CH3
Acetyl CoA
23
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Glycolysis:
Glucose
2 NADH
2 NADH
6 NADH
Citric
acid
cycle
2 pyruvate
2 CO2
2 CO2
Breakdown of
pyruvate
+2 ATP
2 FADH2
Oxidative
phosphorylation
NADH
CO2
2 CO2
+2 ATP
Citrate
+30–34 ATP
NADH
C C C C C C
C C C C C C
CO2
3
2
C C C C C
4
1
C C C C
Citric acid cycle
O
C C C C
5
Oxaloacetate
H2C C S CoA
Acetyl CoA
8
C C C C
7
NADH
6
C C C C
GTP
C C C C
ATP
FADH2
24
Krebs Cycle
Krebs
citric acid cycle
A closer look at the Krebs cycle
A closer look at the Krebs cycle
A closer look at the Krebs cycle
Flavin Adenine
Dinucleotide
A closer look at the Krebs cycle
A summary of the Krebs cycle
Per molecule of
glucose X 2!
ENERGY PAYOFF !=
•4 NADH
•FADH2
•2 ATP
The 2 carbons in acetyl–CoA
are eventually used to form —
33%
1.
2.
3.
33%
33%
ATP
Pyruvate
Carbon dioxide
1
2
3
What is the function of the
coenzymes, NADH and FADH2 ?
1.
2.
3.
Charging electrons
to power ATP
synthase
Catalyzing the
formation of
acetyl-CoA
Providing
electrons and H+
to the electron
transport chain
33%
1
33%
2
33%
3
What are the main products of
the Kreb’s cycle?
1.
2.
3.
4.
NADH
FADH2
ATP
All of the above
25%
1
25%
25%
2
3
25%
4
Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis
Krebs
Cycle
Electron Transport Chain
An overview of cellular respiration
The pathway of electron transport
Collection
of
molecules in the
inner membrane of
the mitochondrion
Stage 4: Oxidative phosphorylation
High
energy electrons removed from
NADH and FADH2 to make ATP
Typically requires oxygen
Oxidative process involves electron
transport chain
Phosphorylation occurs by ATP synthase
37
Oxidation: ETC
Electron transport chains (ETC)
Group of protein complexes and small organic
molecules embedded in the inner mitochondrial
membrane
Can accept and donate electrons in a linear
manner in a series of redox reactions
Movement of electrons generates H+
electrochemical gradient/ proton-motive force
Excess of positive charges outside of matrix
38
The pathway of electron transport
Electrons
pass through a series of
membrane-associated electron carriers
Flow of electrons along the chain
accomplishes the active transport of
protons (H+) across the inner
mitochondrial membrane
Protons diffuse back into the mitochondrial
matrix through a proton channel which
couples the diffusion to ATP synthesis
Free-energy change during electron transport
Ubiquinone
Integral membrane
proteins
Cytochrome C
NADH dehydrogenase
NADH
I
H+
H+
H+
KEY
NAD+ + H+
Succinate
reductase
Q
Electron
transport
chain
H+
II
FADH2
FAD + 2
H+ movement
e– movement
Ubiquinone
H+
H+
H- Cytochrome b-c1
III
H+
H+
Cytochrome c
c
H+
H+
2 H+ + ½ O2
IV
Cytochrome oxidase
H+
H+
H2O
H+
Matrix
H+
ATP synthase
H+
ADP + Pi
H+
ATP
Inner mitochondrial
membrane
ATP
synthesis
H+
Intermembrane
space
41
Electron transport
Animation
of Electron transport in
Mitochondria
Proton diffusion is coupled
to ATP synthesis
Chemiosmosis
Chemiosmosis couples the electron transport chain to ATP synthesis
Chemiosmosis
Flow
of electrons from one electron carrier
to another is exergonic
The exergonic reactions drive the
endergonic pump of H+ across the
mitochondrial membrane
The potential energy of the H+ gradient is
used by ATP synthase to generate ATP
Figure 9.14 ATP synthase, a molecular mill
ATP synthase
Animation
of ATP synthesis in
Mitochondria
ATP synthesis
ATP
leaves the mitochondrial membrane
as soon as it is made
From one molecule of glucose = 38 ATP
molecule (under ideal conditions)
Review: how each molecule of glucose yields many ATP molecules during cellular
respiration
ATP synthase
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Is an H+ channel
Is embedded in
the cristae
Spins due to the
flow of H+
Uses rotational
energy to form
ATP
All of the above
20%
1
20%
20%
2
3
20%
4
20%
5
Cyanide inhibits cytochrome
oxidase. Why is this lethal?
1.
2.
3.
NAD+ can no
longer be reduced
to NADH
Electron transport
chain is shut down
Glycolysis is
inhibited
33%
1
33%
2
33%
3
The catabolism of various food molecules
Control of cellular respiration
Controlled
by feedback mechanisms
Feedback inhibition
The end product of the anabolic pathway
inhibits the enzyme that catalyzes an early
step of the pathway
Phosphofructokinase
Allosteric enzyme
Inhibited by ATP
Activated by AMP
– key step
The control of cellular respiration
Anaerobic metabolism
For
environments that lack oxygen or
during oxygen deficits
2 strategies
Use substance other than O2 as final electron
acceptor in electron transport chain
Produce ATP only via substrate-level
phosphorylation
55
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Other acceptors
E. coli uses nitrate
(NO3-) under
anaerobic conditions
Makes ATP via
chemiosmosis even
under aerobic
conditions
KE Y
H+ movement
e– movement
NADH dehydrogenase
NADH
H+
NAD+ +
H+
H+
H+
Ubiquinone
H+
Cytochrome b
Cytoplasm
H+
H+
NO3– + 2 H+
Nitrate reductase
H+
NO2– + H2O
ADP + Pi
ATP
H+
56
H+
ATP synthase
H+
Extracellular
fluid
Fermentation
Fermentation
keeps ATP production going
when oxygen is unavailable
Fermentation
Many
organisms can only use O2 as final
electron acceptor
Make ATP via glycolysis only
Need to regenerate NAD+ to keep
glycolysis running
Muscle cells produce lactate
Yeast make ethanol
Produces far less ATP
58
Fermentation
Reaction
pathways
NADH delivers electrons
from glycolysis to organic acceptor molecules
converting NADH back to NAD+
Fermentation
NAD+
removed from sugars in glycolysis
ATP
free to accept more electrons
production by glycolysis
continues in absence of oxygen
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2 ADP + 2 Pi
2 ATP
O—
2 ADP + 2 Pi
2 ATP
C O
C O
C O
C O
Glucose
Glycolysis
Glucose
CH3
Glycolysis
CH3
2 pyruvate
2 pyruvate
O—
2 NAD+ + 2 H+
2 NAD+ + 2 H+
2 NADH
C O
H
C OH
CH3
O—
H
2 lactate (secreted from the cell)
H
C OH
C O
2 H+
2 ethanol (secreted from the cell)
(a) Production of lactic acid
(b) Production of ethanol
(weights): © Bill Aron/Photo Edit; (wine barrels): © Jeff Greenberg/The Image Works
61
2 CO2
H
CH3
2 H1
2 NADH
CH3
2 acetaldehyde
Fermentation
Fig. 8-16, p. 173
Cytosol
a. Lactate fermentation
Glycolysis
Glucose
Pyruvate
Lactate
Fig. 8-16a, p. 173
Cytosol
b. Alcoholic fermentation
Glycolysis
Glucose
Pyruvate
Acetaldehyde
Ethyl alcohol
Fig. 8-16b, p. 173