Transcript Energy
Energy
An Introduction to Metabolism
Metabolism
catabolism - breakdown
anabolism - synthesize
Metabolic Pathway
Series of enzymatically catalyzed reactions
examples
Cellular respiration
Photosynthesis
http://www.biomedical-engineering-online.com/content/figures/1475-925X-3-15-1-l.jpg
Energy
Capacity to do work, to move matter against
opposing force
Kinetic Energy (KE)
energy of motion
Potential Energy (PE)
energy of location or structure
Energy Transformations
KE --------------------> PE
sunlight
glucose
PE ----------------------> KE
glucose
breathing
Thermodynamics
The study of energy transformations
Unit of energy = Kcal = 1000 calories
Calorie
Heat required to raise the temperature of 1 g of water
1 °C
Laws of Thermodynamics
Laws that govern energy changes
First Law of Thermodynamics
Second Law of Thermodynamics
First Law of Thermodynamics
Law of Conservation of Energy
Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only
transferred and transformed
quantity is constant, not quality
System
collection of matter under study
Closed - system is isolated from its surroundings
Open - energy can be transferred between the system and
surroundings
If energy is constant (1st law), why can’t organisms
recycle their energy?
Every energy transformation or transfer, some
energy becomes unusable (unavailable to do work)
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Entropy (S) increases in the universe
ordered forms of energy are partly converted to heat
Energy transformations are not 100% efficient
it is estimated that in 100 billion years all energy will be
converted to heat
Free Energy
energy available to do work
ΔG = ΔH - TΔS
Δ means "change in"
G = ecosystem
H = change in total energy in the system
T = temperature (°K)→ °C + 273
S = entropy
It informs us if a process can occur spontaneously
free energy is required for spontaneous change
Types of Chemical Reactions
Endergonic reactions
Exergonic reactions
G = free energy
G = G final state - G starting state
G<0
releases energy
Exergonic reaction
spontaneous
G>0
consumes energy
Endergonic reaction
nonspontaneous
G=0
reaction at equilibrium
Exergonic
reactants
products
ΔG<O
example: cellular respiration
C6H12O6 + 6O2
6CO2 + 6H2O
ΔG = -686 Kcal/mole
Exergonic
Releases energy (36-38 ATP)
Endergonic
reactants
products
Example: Photosynthesis
ΔG = +686 Kcal/mole
Endergonic
consumes energy (sun light)
6CO2 + 12H2O
C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H20
ΔG>O
Class Activity
Without ATP
GLU
+
glutamic acid
glutamic acid + ammonia
ΔG = +3.4 Kcal
Is this exergonic or endergonic?
Does it release or consume energy?
Which has greater free energy?
(reactants or products)
How many ATP are needed?
=
NH3
ammonia
glutamine
glutamine
answers
glutamic acid + ammonia
ΔG = +3.4 Kcal
glutamine
Is this exergonic or endergonic? Endergonic, the ΔG is positive
Does it release or consume energy? Consumes
Which has greater free energy? Products
(reactants or products)
How many ATP are needed? About half (one ATP requires 7.3 Kcal)
Cellular Work
Mechanical work
Transport work
movement of cell/organelle
active transport
Chemical work
synthesis of polymers
ATP
Adenosine Tri Phosphate
Adenosine
Adenine
Ribose
3 phosphate
ATP Hydrolysis
In lab conditions (standard conditions)
ΔG = -7.3 kcal/mole
exergonic
ATP + H2O
ADP + Pi
ATP Synthesis
In lab conditions:
ADP + Pi
G= +7.3 kcal/mole
endergonic
ATP + H2O
Activation Energy (EA)
Energy required to break existing bonds before forming
new bonds
The difference between
free energy of the
products and the free
energy of the reactants
is the ΔG.
reactants absorb E to
reach the state allowing
bond breakage A
new bonds form releasing
energy B
A
B
Activation Energy (EA) cont....
Some require a low EA
Thermal energy provided by room temperature is
sufficient to reach the transition state
Most require high EA
Gasoline + oxygen, water evaporation
Heat would speed reactions, but it would also denature
proteins and kill cells
Enzymes speed reactions by lowering EA
The transition state can then be reached even at moderate
temperatures
Catalyst
Chemical agent that accelerates a reaction by
reducing the amount of activation energy
required
They don’t change the ΔG
Enzymes
Class of proteins serving as catalysts
specific
suffix -ase
Catechol oxidase
Sucrase
ATP synthase
Carbonic anhydrase
Enzymes (cont.)
CO2 + H2O
H2CO3
without enzyme: 200 = 2 x 102 per hour
with enzyme: 2,000,000,000 = 2 x 109 per hr
(carbonic anhydrase)
Enzymes are Substrate Specific
Substrate
Active site of enzyme
Induced fit
enzyme-substrate
complex
Enzymes
A single enzyme molecule can catalyze
thousands or more reactions a second
Enzymes are unaffected by the reaction and are
reusable
Most metabolic enzymes can catalyze a reaction
in both the forward and reverse direction
Some Factors that Affect Enzyme
Activity
temperature
pH
specificity
cofactor necessity
ionic concentration
substrate concentration
1. Temperature
As T° increases, activity increases BUT
at some point thermal agitation begins to disrupt the
weak bonds that stabilize the protein’s active
conformation and the protein denatures
each enzyme has an optimal temperature
2. pH
pH also influences shape
each enzyme has an optimal pH
Most enzymes fall between pH 6 - 8
3. Specificity
How discriminating the enzyme is in
catalyzing different potential substrates
4. Cofactor Necessity
Some enzymes require a cofactor (nonprotein portion)
they bind to the enzyme permanently or reversibly
Inorganic (cofactor)→ minerals
Organic cofactors (coenzymes) → vitamins, NAD, FAD
The way in which cofactors assist catalysis are diverse
5. Ionic Concentration
Ions interfere with the enzymes ionic bonds
Can disrupt the tertiary level
6. Substrate Concentration
Substrate concentration is directly proportional
to the rate until saturation of enzyme is reached
ACTIVITY
You are designing an experiment with an
enzyme (amylase) that breaks down starch
and is present in your small intestine.
What temperature will be the best?
What pH will be the best?
What substrate is the best?
What other factors should you consider?
answers
You are designing an experiment with an
enzyme (amylase) that breaks down starch
and is present in your small intestine.
Temperature: 37°C
pH: 8
Substrate: Starch
Other factors to consider: cofactors
Effectors
Chemicals that regulate enzyme activity
Inhibitors
Activators
Inhibitors
Turn enzymes "off"
end product
competitive inhibitor
binds to active site
reversible or permanent
noncompetitive inhibitor
binds to allosteric site
reversible
Applications
Pesticides are toxic to insects; Nerve gas toxic to humans
inhibit key enzymes in the nervous system
DDT, malathion and parathion inhibit acetylcholinesterase
Nerve cells cannot transmit signals, death occurs
Cyanide inhibits enzyme from making ATP
Many antibiotics inhibit enzymes in bacteria
Penicillin inhibits an enzyme used in making cell walls
Cancer drugs inhibit enzymes that promote cell division
Allosteric Enzymes
Enzymes that exist in active or inactive form
Active form
There are 3 forms of regulation
Allosteric activator
Allosteric inhibitor
Cooperativity
Allosteric Activator
Binds to allosteric site
stabilize the conformation that has a functional active
site
Increases enzyme activity
Allosteric Inhibitor (noncompetitive)
Binds to allosteric site
stabilize the conformation that lacks an active site.
Reduces enzyme activity
Cooperativity
enzyme w/multiple subunits
Binding of one substrate to active site causes all subunits
to assume their active conformation
ACTIVITY
A
X
B
C
Z
Y
Which of these (A, B, C) has a non-competitive inhibitor?
What is "X"?
What is “Z"?
What is “Y”?
answers
C
Substrate
Competitive inhibitor
Enzyme
ACTIVITY
C
A
B
What type of enzyme is this?
What is represented by A?
What is the effect of C on the enzyme in this case?
Is B an example of stable or inactive?
answers
Allosteric
Inactive subunit
Activates the enzyme
Stable
Enzyme structure (some)
Types of enzymes
Enzyme: cofactor independent
Holoenzyme: has a permanently bound
cofactor
Enzyme + cofactor
Apoenzyme: has a temporary cofactor
Enzyme portion
Cofactor
Inorganic cofactor - metal ion
Zn, Fe, Mg, Cu
Organic cofactors, coenzymes
vitamins or molecules derived from vitamins
NAD+ , NADP + , FAD
Feedback Inhibition Mechanism
The switching off of a pathway by its end
product
Negative feedback
prevents a cell from wasting resources
Feedback
Inhibition
Too much production
of isoleucine causes
the inhibition of the
enzyme
Activity
catechol + O2 → benzoquinone + H2O
catechol oxidase
what is the substrate?
what is the enzyme?
what is the product?
knowing you need to heat it for the reaction to occur, does it
consume energy?
Is it endergonic or exergonic?
answers
Substrate: Catechol
Enzyme: Catechol oxidase
Product: Benzoquinone
Consumes energy? Yes
Type of reaction: Endergonic
ACTIVITY
lactose + H2O → glucose + galactose
what do you expect the name of the enzyme will be?
it needs the presence of Ca+2 and/or Mg+2, what is their
function?
If having this reaction in the lab, how would you stop it,
considering all factors seen before?
If using negative feed back to stop it, what do you need
to add to the solution where the reaction is taking place?
answers
Lactase
Cofactors
Either:
Increase or decrease in temperature
Lower or increase the pH
Subtract the cofactors
Lactose
The End