Energy Production
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Transcript Energy Production
Microbial Metabolism
Energy Production
Energy production
Nutrient molecules have energy associated
with the electrons that form bonds between
atoms
Catabolic reactions oxidize nutrients by
removing electrons and concentrate their
energy into the bonds of ATP
ATP has “high energy” or unstable bonds
which allows the energy to be released
quickly and easily.
ATP
ATP generation
Cells use oxidation-reduction (redox)
reactions in catabolism to extract energy
from nutrient molecules
This energy is trapped by the generation
of ATP by phosphorylation of ADP
Oxidation-reduction reactions
Oxidation is the removal of electrons from a
molecule
Reduction is the gaining of electrons by a
molecule
Oxidation and reduction reactions are always
coupled (redox reaction)
Many catabolic oxidationreduction reactions are also
dehydrogenation reactions
The removal of electrons also means the
removal of hydrogen atoms [i.e., not just
an electron but also a proton (H+)]
These are transferred to an “electron
carrier”
Electron carriers
2H+ + 2e-
In catabolic
reactions, energy is
extracted from
molecules in the
form of electrons,
which are
transferred, along
with H+ ions, to
electron carriers
like NAD+.
NAD
NADH+ + H+
Mechanisms of ATP generation
Substrate-level phosphorylation
Oxidative phosphorylation
Photophosphorylation
Substrate-level phosphoryation
ATP is generated when a high-energy
phosphate is transferred directly to ADP
from a phosphorylated substrate
Oxidative phosphorylation
Electrons are transferred from organic compounds
through a series of electron carriers to O2 or other
oxidized inorganic or organic molecules
The sequence of electron carriers is called the
electron transport chain
The transfer of
electrons from one
carrier to the next
generates energy
which is used to
make ATP from ADP
by chemiosmosis
Photophosphorylation
Only occurs in photosynthetic cells which
contain light trapping pigment such as
chlorophyll
Light causes chlorophyll to give up electrons
Energy released by
the transfer of
electrons from
chlorophyll to carrier
molecules is used to
generate ATP
How do chemoheterotrophs
generate energy?
Sources of energy: carbohydrate, fat,
protein, minerals.
Most microorganisms oxidize
carbohydrates as the major source of
cellular energy
Energy can also be derived from the
oxidation of fats, proteins, and minerals.
Carbohydrate
catabolism
Microbes use two
general processes to
generate energy from
glucose
Aerobic respiration
Fermentation
Both start with
glycolysis
(= Emden Meyerhoff pathway)
Aerobic Respiration
Glycolysis (Embden-Meyerhof)
TCA cycle (Kreb’s cycle)
Glucose is oxidized to pyruvic acid
Pyruvic acid is oxidized to acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA is oxidized to CO2
Electron transport chain
Reduced NADH and FADH2 from the
above are oxidized through a series of
redox reactions through an electron
transport chain.
Glycolysis
Starting point for cellular respiration and
fermentation.
10 step catabolic pathway
Two stages
Preparatory stage
Energy conserving stage
Glycolysis: preparatory stage
Glucose
ATP
Hexokinase
2 ATPs are used
Glucose is split to
form 2 molecules
of Glyceraldehyde3-phosphate
ADP
P
Glucose
6-phosphate
Phosphoglucoisomerase
P
Fructose
6-phosphate
ATP
Phosphofructokinase
ADP
P
Dihydroxyacetone
P
phosphate
P
Fructose
1,6-diphosphate
aldolase
Triose phosphate
isomerase
P
Glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate
Glycolysis: energy conserving stage
P
NAD+
For each initial
glucose molecule;
2
Glyceraldehyde3-phosphate
oxidized to 2 Pyruvic
acid
4 ATP produced
2 NADH produced
NAD+
NADH
Diphosphoglyceric
acid
P
P
P
ADP
P
ADP
Phosphoglycerokinase
ATP
ATP
3-phosphoglyceric
acid
P
Phosphoglyceromutase
P
H2O
2-phosphoglyceric
acid
P
P
H2O
Enolase
P
ATP
P
P Triose phosphate P
dehydrogenase
NADH
ADP
Glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate
Phosphoenolpyruvic
acid
Pyruvate kinase
Pyruvic acid
P
ADP
ATP
Summary of glycolysis
Glucose (C6H12O6) is split and oxidized
through a ten step pathway to two
molecules of pyruvic acid (C3H4O3)
Net gain of 2 ATP molecules, 4 from energy
conserving phase (by substrate level
phosphorylation) minus 2 from preparatory
phase
2 NADH molecules produced
Pyruvic acid can now undergo either
fermentation or respiration
Alternatives to glycolysis
Many bacteria have an alternative
pathway to glycolysis for the oxidation of
glucose
Entner-doudoroff reaction
Phosphogluconate pathway
Some bacteria oxidize inorganic
compounds instead of glucose to get
energy. (the Lithotrophs)
Use of Inorganic ions as electron
“SOURCES” (Lithotrophs)
Bacteria, by Energy sources
Phototrophs
Chemotrophs
Oxidize organic compounds for Energy:
Chemoorganotrophs
Oxidize inorganic compounds for Energy:
Chemolithotrophs