Lecture Outline
The Killers Are Coming! The Killers Are Coming!
A. All active organisms, including the infamous
killer bees, use energy on a steady basis.
B. Carbon dioxide and water are metabolic
byproducts produced by living cells.
C. At the biochemical level, there is unity
among all forms of life.
8.1 How Do Cells
Make ATP?
A. ATP is the prime energy carrier for all
cells.
B. Comparison of the Main Types of
Energy-Releasing Pathways
1. Aerobic respiration (with oxygen) is the main
pathway for energy release from carbohydrate to ATP.
2. All energy-releasing pathways start with glycolysis.
a. Glucose is split into two pyruvate
molecules.
b. Glycolysis
reactions occur in the cytoplasm without the use of oxygen.
C. Overview of Aerobic Respiration
1. Aerobic respiration yields thirty-six ATPs; fermentation yields merely two.
2. The aerobic route is summarized:
C6H12O6 + 6O2 ———>
6CO2
+ 6H2O
3. Three series of reactions are required for
aerobic respiration:
a. Glycolysis is the breakdown of glucose to pyruvate; small amounts of ATP are generated.
b. Krebs cycle
degrades pyruvate to carbon dioxide, water, ATP, H+ ions, and electrons (accepted by NAD+
and FAD).
c. Electron
transfer phosphorylation processes the H+ ions and electrons to generate high
yields of ATP; oxygen is the final electron acceptor.
8.2 Glycolysis: First Stage of Energy-Releasing Pathways
A. Enzymes in the cytoplasm catalyze several
steps in glucose breakdown.
1. Glucose is first phosphorylated
in energy-requiring steps, then the six-carbon
intermediate is split to form two molecules of PGAL.
2. Enzymes remove H+ and electrons from PGAL and transfer
them to NAD+
which becomes NADH (used later in electron transfer).
3. By substrate-level phosphorylation,
four ATP are produced.
B. The end products of glycolysis
are: two pyruvates, two ATP (net gain), and two NADH
for each glucose molecule degraded.
8.3 Second Stage
of the Aerobic Pathway
A. Preparatory Steps and the Krebs
Cycle
1. Pyruvate enters the
mitochondria and is converted to acetyl-CoA, which
then joins oxaloacetate already present from a
previous “turn” of the cycle.
2. During each turn of the cycle, three carbon
atoms enter (as pyruvate) and three leave as three
carbon dioxide molecules.
B. Functions of the Second Stage
1. H+ and e– are transferred to NAD+ and FAD.
2. Two molecules of ATP are produced by
substrate-level phosphorylation.
3. Most of the molecules are recycled to
conserve oxaloacetate for continuous processing of
acetyl-CoA.
4. Carbon dioxide is produced as a by-product.
8.4 Third Stage
of the Aerobic Pathway
A. NADH and FADH2 give up their
electrons to transfer (enzyme) systems embedded in the mitochondrial
inner membrane.
B. Electron Transfer Phosphorylation
1. According to the chemiosmotic
model, energy is released in the passage of electrons through components of the
transfer series.
a. The energy is used to pump hydrogen ions out
of the inner compartment.
b. When hydrogen ions flow back through the ATP synthase in the channels, the coupling of Pi to ADP yields ATP.
2. Oxygen joins with the “spent” electrons and H+ to yield water.
C. Summary of the Energy Harvest
1. Electron transfer yields thirty-two ATP; glycolysis yields two ATP; Krebs
yields two ATP for a grand total of thirty-six ATP per glucose molecule.
2. Normally, for every NADH produced within the
mitochondria and processed by the electron transfer chain, three ATP are
formed; FADH2
yields two ATP.
3. But NADH from the cytoplasm cannot enter the
mitochondrion and must transfer its electrons!
a. In most cells
(skeletal, brain) the electrons are transferred to FAD and thus yield two ATP
(for a total yield of thirty-six).
b. But in liver, heart, and kidney cells, NAD+
accepts the
electrons to yield three ATP; because two NADH are produced per glucose, this
gives a total yield of thirty-eight ATP.
8.5 Anaerobic
Routes of ATP Formation
A. Anaerobic pathways operate when oxygen is
absent (or limited); pyruvate from glycolysis is metabolized to produce molecules other than
acetyl-CoA.
B. Fermentation Pathways
1. With an energy yield of only two ATPs, fermentation is restricted to single-celled organisms
and cells of multicelled organisms only at certain
limited times.
2. Glycolysis serves
as the first stage, just as it does in aerobic respiration
3. Lactate Fermentation
a. Certain bacteria (as in milk) and muscle
cells have the enzymes capable of converting pyruvate
to lactate.
b. No additional ATP beyond the net two from glycolysis is produced but NAD+ is regenerated.
4. Alcoholic Fermentation
a. Fermentation begins with glucose degradation
to pyruvate.
b. Cellular enzymes convert pyruvate
to acetaldehyde, which then accepts electrons from NADH to become alcohol.
c. Yeasts are valuable
in the baking industry (carbon dioxide byproduct makes dough “rise”) and in
alcoholic beverage production.
C. Anaerobic Electron Transfer
1. Some kinds of bacteria are able to strip
electrons from organic compounds and send them through a special electron
transfer in their membranes to produce ATP.
2. Examples of such bacteria include those that
reduce sulfate to hydrogen sulfide ( a
foul-smelling gas indeed) and those that convert nitrate to nitrite.
8.6 Alternative
Energy Sources in the Human Body
A. Carbohydrate Breakdown in Perspective.
1. Excess carbohydrate intake is stored as
glycogen in liver and muscle for future use.
2. Free glucose is used until it runs low, then
glycogen reserves are tapped.
B. Energy from Fats.
1. Excess fats (including those made from
carbohydrates) are stored away in cells of adipose tissue.
2. Fats are digested into glycerol, which enters
glycolysis, and fatty acids, which enter the Krebs cycle.
3. Because fatty acids have many more carbon and
hydrogen atoms, they are degraded more slowly and yield greater amounts of ATP.
C. Energy from Proteins
1. Amino acids are released by digestion and
travel in the blood.
2. After
the amino group is removed, the amino acid remnant is fed into the Krebs cycle.
8.7 Perspective
on the Molecular Unity of Life
A. Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are
intimately connected.
B. Life is not some mysterious force, but a
series of chemical reactions under highly integrated control.