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Chapter 6 Energy Flow in the Life of a Cell Chapter 6 Energy Flow in the Life of a Cell
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Chapter 6 Outline 6.1 What Is Energy? 6.2 How Does Energy Flow in Chemical Reactions? 6.3 How Is Cellular Energy Carried Between Coupled Reactions? 6.4 How Do Cells Control Their Metabolic Reactions?
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6.1 What Is Energy? Energy is the ____________________ Work is a force acting on an object that causes the object to _________ _________________ is the energy that powers life –The objects that move are __________, which reposition during chemical reactions
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The Laws of Thermodynamics The two fundamental types of energy –Kinetic energy is the energy of __________ e.g. light, heat, electricity, moving objects –Potential energy is _____________ energy e.g. chemical energy in bonds, electrical charge in a battery, a rock at the top of a hill
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The Laws of Thermodynamics The laws of thermodynamics describe the availability and usefulness of energy –________________________________ (first law of thermodynamics) –The total amount of energy within a given system remains __________ unless energy is added or removed from the system
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The Laws of Thermodynamics Availability and usefulness of energy: –The amount of useful energy __________ when energy is converted from one form to another (second law of thermodynamics) –Entropy (disorder) ______________
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Energy of Sunlight Living Things Use the Energy of Sunlight to Create the _____________ Conditions Characteristic of Life __________________ organisms use external solar energy to maintain orderly structure ____________________ organisms use stored chemical energy in other living things to counter increasing entropy
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Section 6.2 Outline 6.2 How Does Energy Flow in Chemical Reactions? –The Nature of Chemical Reactions –Exergonic Reactions ___________ Energy –Endergonic Reactions ___________ an Input of Energy –Coupled Reactions _______Exergonic and Endergonic Reactions
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Chemical Reactions Chemical reactions are processes that ____________________________ between atoms Chemical reactions convert _________ to products Reactants Products
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Chemical Reactions Reactions can be categorized as exergonic or endergonic based on energy gain or loss
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Exergonic Reactions Exergonic reactions __________ energy Reactants contain _______ energy than products in exergonic reactions
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Exergonic Reactions Exergonic reaction example: the burning of glucose
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Exergonic Reactions All chemical reactions require an initial energy input (____________________) to get started –Molecules need to be moving with sufficient collision speed –The electrons of an atom repel other atoms and inhibit bond formation
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Endergonic Reactions Endergonic reactions are _______________ ___________________________ of energy Products contain _______ energy than reactants in endergonic reactions
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Endergonic Reactions Endergonic reaction example: photosynthesis
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Coupled Reactions ______________ reactions drive _____________ reactions –The product of an energy-yielding reaction fuels an energy-requiring reaction in a _________________
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Coupled Reactions The exergonic and endergonic parts of coupled reactions often occur at different places within the cell ___________________________ are used to transfer the energy within cells
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Section 6.3 Outline 6.3 How Is Cellular Energy Carried Between Coupled Reactions? –Energy Carrier Molecules –______ Is the Principal Energy Carrier in Cells –____________________ Also Transport Energy Within Cells
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Energy Carrier Molecules Food energy cannot be used _______ to power energy-requiring reactions (e.g. muscle contraction) Energy carrier molecules act as ______________ to carry energy between __________ and _____________ reactions Energy carrier molecules are only used within cells because they are ________
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ATP ______________________ (ATP) is the most common energy carrying molecule ATP is composed of an adenosine molecule and ______ phosphates
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ATP Energy is stored in the high-energy bond extending to the _________________ Heat is given off when ATP breaks into _____ (adenosine diphosphate) and ___ (phosphate)
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ATP The energy released when ATP is broken down into ADP + P is transferred to ______________ reactions through coupling
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Electron Carriers Energy can be transferred to __________ in glucose metabolism and photosynthesis Electron _________ transport high- energy electrons Two common electron carriers 1.Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide ______ 2.Flavin adenine dinucleotide _______
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Section 6.4 Outline 6.4 How Do Cells Control Their Metabolic Reactions? –Overview of Metabolism –At Body Temperatures, Spontaneous Reactions Proceed Too ________to Sustain Life –Catalysts __________ Activation Energy –Enzymes Are Biological ______________ –Cells Regulate Metabolism by __________ Enzymes –Poisons, Drugs, and Environmental Conditions Influence ___________________
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Overview of Metabolism The sum of all the chemical reactions inside a cell is its __________________ Many cellular reactions are linked through metabolic _______________
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Overview of Metabolism Metabolic pathways proceed smoothly for three reasons: 1.Endergonic reactions are _______ with exergonic reactions 2.Energy-carrier molecules capture energy and ____________ between endergonic and exergonic reactions 3.Chemical reactions are regulated through protein _______________
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Spontaneous Reactions At body temperatures, spontaneous reactions proceed too _________ to sustain life Reaction speed is generally determined by the activation energy required –Reactions with low activation energies proceed _________ at body temperature –Reactions with high activation energies (e.g. sugar breakdown) move very _______ at body temperature, even if exergonic overall
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Spontaneous Reactions Enzyme molecules are employed to ___________(speed up) chemical reactions in cells Catalysts ________________ of a chemical reaction without themselves being used up
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Catalysts Reduce Activation Energy Catalytic converters in cars facilitate the conversion of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide Octane + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy + carbon monoxide (poisonous) Catalyst in catalytic converter speeds carbon monoxide conversion Carbon monoxide + oxygen carbon dioxide + energy
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Catalysts Reduce Activation Energy Catalysts speed up spontaneous reactions by ____________________________
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Enzymes Are Biological Catalysts Enzymes __________________________ molecules in the process of lowering activation energy Enzymes (proteins) differ from non-biological catalysts because: 1.Enzymes are very ___________ for the molecules they catalyze 2.Enzyme activity is often ____________________ by their reactants or products Some enzymes require helper ___________ molecules to function (e.g. certain B vitamins)
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Enzyme Structure Enzymes have a pocket called an _________ Reactants (_________) bind to the active site –Distinctive shape of active site is complementary and specific to the substrate –Active site amino acids bind to the substrate and distort bonds to facilitate a reaction
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Enzyme Structure Three steps of enzyme catalysis 1.Substrates enter the _________ in a specific orientation 2.Upon binding, the substrates and enzyme _____________ to promote a reaction 3.Products of the reaction ________ the active site, leaving the enzyme ready for another catalysis
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Cells Regulate Metabolism A given enzyme usually catalyzes a single step in a chain of metabolic reactions Metabolic pathways are controlled in several ways 1.Control of _____________________ regulates availability 2.Some enzymes are inactive when synthesized and must be _____________ __________________
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Cells Regulate Metabolism Metabolic pathways are controlled in several ways (continued) 3.Small organic molecules can bind to enzymes and ___________________ activity (allosteric regulation)
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Cells Regulate Metabolism Metabolic pathways are controlled in several ways (continued) 4.Adequate amounts of formed product inhibit enzyme activity ___________________
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Drugs and Poisons Drugs and poisons often inhibit enzymes by ____________ with the natural substrate for the active site This process is known as _______________________ Some inhibitors bind permanently to the enzyme
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Environmental Conditions Three-dimensional structure of an enzyme is sensitive to ______________________ ______________________________ Most enzymes function optimally only within a very narrow range of these conditions
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Environmental Conditions Enzyme structure is _________ and function is destroyed when pH is _________ _____________ Salts in an enzyme’s environment can also destroy function by altering ___________
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Environmental Conditions Temperature also affects enzyme activity –Low temperatures ______________ molecular movement –High temperatures cause ___________ to be altered, destroying function
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