1 / 31

Metabolism

Metabolism. Catabolism-Glycolysis (Kreb Cycle) Anabolism-Photosynthesis. Metabolism. Sum of all chemical reactions Catabolism Exergonic reaction Most of energy in ATP –last phosphate bond. Metabolism. Anabolism Consume more energy than produce Use ATP for energy. Enzymes.

tate
Télécharger la présentation

Metabolism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Metabolism Catabolism-Glycolysis (Kreb Cycle) Anabolism-Photosynthesis

  2. Metabolism • Sum of all chemical reactions • Catabolism • Exergonic reaction • Most of energy in ATP –last phosphate bond

  3. Metabolism • Anabolism • Consume more energy than produce • Use ATP for energy

  4. Enzymes • Biological catalysts • Energy of activation • Specificity • Primary structure • Secondary structure • Tertiary structure • Quaternary structure

  5. Components of Enzymes • Apoenzyme-protein only • Cofactor-nonprotein • Trace elements • Coenzyme-organic cofactor • Carriers of electrons etc • NAD+

  6. Enzyme-substrate Complex • Active site on enzyme • Transformation in substrate • Products released • Enzyme orients substrate • Lowers energy of activation

  7. Denaturation • Structure of enzyme is disrupted • No longer active • Temperature • pH • Substrate concentration • Enzyme becomes saturated

  8. Inhibitors • Competitive inhibitors • Noncompetitive inhibitors • Allosteric site

  9. Feedback Inhibition • End product inhibition • Series of enzymes –end product

  10. Energy Production • Oxidation-reduction reactions • Generation of ATP • Phosphorylation • Used for metabolism, binary fission, endospore formation movement

  11. Types of Phosphorylation • Substrate level • Oxidative phosphorylation • Photophosphorylation

  12. Carbohydrate Metabolism • Glucose as an example • Two energy processes • Cellular respiration • Fermentation • Glycolysis • Respiration-Krebs cycle & electron transport chain

  13. Glucose Metabolism C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 38 ADP +38 P 6CO2 + 6H2O + 38 ATP

  14. Glycolysis • Summary of glycolysis • 2 molecules of pyruvate (3 C) • Production of 2 NADH & 2H+ • Net of 2 ATP • Substrate phosphorylation • Takes place in cytosol of bacteria & eukaryotes • No oxygen is required • Alternate pathways

  15. Cellular Respiration • Cellular respiration • Final electron acceptor is inorganic molecule • Two types based on final electron acceptor

  16. Aerobic Respiration • Krebs cycle • Mitochondria of eukaryotes-matrix • Cytosol in prokaryotes • Intermediary step- production of acetyl CoA • 2 CO2 & 2 NADH

  17. Aerobic Respiration • Acetyl Co enters Krebs cycle • 4 carbons of glucose released as CO2 • 6 NADH & 2 FADH2 produced • 2 ATP by substrate phosphorylation

  18. Electron Transport Chain • Series of redox reactions • Stepwise release of energy • Oxygen final acceptor of electrons • Inner membrane of mitochondria in eukaryotes • Foldings of plasma membrane or thylakoid infoldings( photosynthesis) • Occurs only in intact membranes

  19. Carrier Molecules • Some carry both electrons & protons (H+) • Cytochromes transfer electrons only • Oxygen is last link of chain

  20. Chemiosmosis • ATP generation • Proton pumps • Proton motive force • Protein channels with ATP synthases

  21. ATP Production • Protons release energy as rush through pore • ATP produced via oxidative phosphorylation • Damage to membrane ceases proton movement

  22. Anaerobic Respiration • Final electron acceptor is an inorganic molecule other than oxygen • Some use NO3 - ,SO42- • Important in nitrogen and sulfur cycles • ATP varies, less than 38 • Only part of Krebs cycle & ETC used

  23. Fermentation • Pyruvate converted to organic product • NAD+ regenerated • Doesn’t require oxygen • Does not use Krebs cycle or ETC • Shut down • Organic molecule is final electron acceptor • Produces 2 ATP max

  24. Photosynthesis • Conversion of light energy into chemical energy • Anabolism (carbon fixation)-produce sugars from CO2 • Two stages

  25. Overall Reaction 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP C6H12O6 + 6O2 + ADP + P

  26. Light Reactions • Photophosphorylation-production of ATP • Only in photosynthetic cells • Light energy (electromagnetic radiation) absorbed by chlorophylls • Chlorophyll a • Located in membranous thylakoids of chloroplasts-plants & algae • Infoldings of plasma membrane of cyanobacteria

  27. Light Reactions • Electrons flow through ETC • Electron carrier is NADP+ • ATP produced by chemiosmosis

  28. Noncyclic Photophosphorylation • Plants, algae, cyanobacteria • 2 photosystems • Produce both ATP via chemiosmosis • Produce NADPH • Used to reduce CO2 in dark reactions • Able to produce sugars

  29. Summary • ATP produced by chemiosmosis • Uses energy released in ETC • Oxygen produced from splitting of water • H2O→ 2H+ +2 e + O • Replace electrons lost from chlorophyll • NADPH produced in second photosystem

  30. Dark Reactions • Calvin-Benson Cycle • Requires no light • Uses energy from ATP (light reactions) to reduce CO2 to sugars • Carbon fixation

  31. Summary • Light H20 CO2 Calvin Cycle Photosystems & ETC Chlorophyll a Chemiosmosis NADP+ ADP+ P ATP NADPH Cellular respiration Organic cpds sugars O2

More Related