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Chapter 8 - Metabolism Mechanisms for Obtaining and Using Energy from the Environment
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Metabolism The Sum of all Energy Transformations Within a Cell
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Metabolic Reactions are Made Possible by Enzymes
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Enzymes Proteins Which Act as Catalysts to Allow Biochemical Reactions to take place under Conditions Where they Ordinarily Would Not
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Enzymes are Specific for the Reactions they Catalyze and the Substrates they Act Upon
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Enzymes Have Multiple Levels of Structure and May Require Cofactors and Coenzymes
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Induced-Fit Model of Enzyme Function Substrate(s) fit into active site Bonds are strained Reactive portions of molecule(s) are brought together Bond transfers occur Products are released
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Enzyme-Substrate Interactions
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Enzyme Cofactors Mineral ions frequently required for correct enzyme shape Vitamins may be needed to carry electrons during the enzymatic reaction No cofactors = No enzyme activity
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Enzyme Types Constitutive enzymes are always present, such as those involved in glucose metabolism Induced enzymes are made only when their substrates are available (β- galactosidase, alcohol dehydrogenase)
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Two Important Types of Enzymatic Reactions Condensation and Hydrolysis Reactions
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Transfer Reactions Oxidation and Reduction: enzymes move electrons from one substrate to another; this process salvages electrons and their energy Aminotransferases move NH 2 groups Phosphotransferases move PO 4 Methyltransferases move CH 3 Decarboxylases release CO 2
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A Few Notable Enzymes from Pathogens Coagulase – S. aureus Streptokinase – S. pyogenes Elastase and Collagenase – P. aeruginosa Lipase – C. perfringens
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Enzymes are Sensitive to their Environment Wrong temperature, pH, ionic strength = no activity
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Metabolic Pathways Reflect Batteries of Enzymes Working Together
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Cell Energy Flow Energy = ability to cause a change in the condition of matter
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Cell Energetics Cells carry out both types of chemical reactions: Exergonic – liberates energy Endergonic – consumes energy
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Most Biological Energy Reactions Involve Oxidation and Reduction Oxidation = loss of electrons (and H) Reduction = gain of electrons (and H) In cellular respiration, glucose is oxidized to CO 2, and Oxygen is reduced to water
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Objective of Respiratory Pathways Extract the Energy Contained in the Chemical bonds of Glucose and Use it to Make ATP
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ATP – Adenosine Triphosphate A nucleotide containing the base adenine, the sugar ribose and three phosphate groups A very high amount of energy is stored in the terminal two PO 4 groups The phosphate bond energy can be used to drive many types of anabolism
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ATP
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Three Ways ATP can be Made Substrate-level phosphorylation directly transfers energy from glucose breakdown products Oxidative phosphorylation uses transport of electrons to build an H + gradient that efficiently drives ATP synthesis Photophosphorylation uses light energy to drive ATP synthesis
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Metabolic Strategies In many cases, nutrient utilization is based on three possible catabolic pathways that convert glucose to CO 2 and release energy Aerobic respiration – glycolysis, the TCA cycle, and electron transport to O 2 Anaerobic respiration – glycolysis, the TCA cycle, and electron transport to a receptor other than O 2 Fermentation – glycolysis, organic compounds are the final electron acceptors without transport chain
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The Aerobic Respiratory Pathway – Glycolysis, the Krebs Cycle and Electron Transport
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Glycolysis Breaks glucose into two 3-carbon fragments Requires no oxygen Occurs in cytoplasm Fast but inefficient Produces 2 ATP, 2 NADH and 2 pyruvate molecules
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Krebs Cycle Oxidizes the pyruvates from glycolysis to CO 2 Transfers electrons to NAD + and FAD to drive chemiosmotic phosphorylation Requires a membrane and electron transport proteins Produces 2 ATP directly and 34 by driving electron transport
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Electron Transport System
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Fermentation Incomplete oxidation of glucose or other carbohydrates in the absence of oxygen Uses organic compounds as terminal electron acceptors Yields a small amount of ATP Production of ethyl alcohol by yeasts acting on glucose Formation of acid, gas and other products by the action of various bacteria on pyruvic acid
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Fermentation
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Products of Fermentation
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