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Energy in a Cell The Need for Energy. Cell Energy Autotrophs – make their own food  Photoautotrophs use light  Chemoautotrophs use chemicals.

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Presentation on theme: "Energy in a Cell The Need for Energy. Cell Energy Autotrophs – make their own food  Photoautotrophs use light  Chemoautotrophs use chemicals."— Presentation transcript:

1 Energy in a Cell The Need for Energy

2 Cell Energy Autotrophs – make their own food  Photoautotrophs use light  Chemoautotrophs use chemicals

3  Heterotrophs must get energy from consuming other organisms

4  All chemical bonds store energy, some more than others  There is a LOT of energy in a carbon to carbon bond (these are in organic molecules)  There is too much energy in a carbon-carbon bond for normal cell processes

5  So…mitochondria break down organic compounds, like sugars and fats, and convert the energy into ATP or adenosine triphosphate

6 ATP  Composed of:  Adenine – amino acid  Ribose – 5-carbon sugar  3 phosphate groups  The phosphate groups are charged particles

7 ATP  It requires a lot of energy to force the phosphate groups to bond because of their same charges  All that energy becomes available when the bonds are broken between the phosphates

8 ATP  When ATP has the last phosphate broken off to release the energy; it becomes ADP (adenosine diphosphate)

9 Photosynthesis Trapping the Sun’s Energy

10 The Photosynthesis Equation  Word equation:  Carbon dioxide + water light > glucose + oxygen  Chemical equation:  6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O light > C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6 O 2

11 Light and Pigments  Photosynthesis requires light-catching pigments  Chlorophyll  Accessory pigments include: xanthophyll and beta carotine

12 Reactions in the Chloroplast  Thylakoids – membrane sacs that contain clusters of pigment molecules called photosystems  Grana- stacks of thylakoids  Stroma – area outside the thylakoid

13  Light dependent reactions happen in the thylakoids (that’s where the light- catching pigments are)  Light independent reactions happen in the stroma

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16 NADPH  The process of capturing sunlight results in the formation of high energy electrons  These high energy electrons require special carrier molecules

17 NADPH NADP + is a carrier molecule. NADP + is a carrier molecule. - nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate - accepts a pair of high energy electrons along with a hydrogen ion: H +- accepts a pair of high energy electrons along with a hydrogen ion: H + - creates NADPH

18 Light Dependent Reactions  Require Light  Turn ADP and NADP + into high energy carriers ATP and NADPH

19 How does it work?  Light is first absorbed by Photosystem II  Absorbed light increases energy in electrons which are passed to electron transport chain

20  New electrons (to replace the ones the chlorophyll passed on) come from water

21  High energy electrons travel from Photosystem II to Photosystem I on the Electron Transport Chain  Electron Transport Chain drives H + across the membrane of the thylakoid

22  Photosystem I reenergizes high energy electrons and transfers them to NADP + which becomes NADPH after picking up H +

23  H + concentration is higher on one side of the thylakoid membrane than the other  Facilitated diffusion happens to correct charge imbalance  Drives ATP synthesis

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25 Light-independent Reactions: The Calvin Cycle  ATP and NADPH are not stable enough to store energy for long  The Calvin Cycle converts less stable, high energy molecules into high energy sugars (glucose)

26 How Does it Work?  6 carbon dioxide molecules combine with 6 5-carbon molecules  These molecules split, creating 12 3-carbon molecules

27  2 of the 3-carbon molecules are then converted to high energy form using the energy from ATP and NADPH  2 of these molecules are combined to form a 6-carbon sugar  Remaining 10 recombine into 5-carbon compounds and re- enter cycle

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30 Chap 9.2: Photosynthesis (summary)  Photosynthesis happens in 2 stages; light-dependant reactions, and light-independent reactions in the chloroplast.  Light-dependant reactions - energy is passed down the electron- transport chain to form ATP

31  Photolysis of water releases O 2 and restores electrons for electron transport chain. NADPH forms for use in light-independent rxs.  Light-independent reactions (Calvin Cycle) uses CO 2 to form sugar in the stroma of the chloroplast.

32 Cellular Respiration

33 Chapter 9.3: Big Ideas  Cellular Respiration happens in 3 stages:  glycolysis,  the citric acid cycle(Krebs cycle),  the electron transport chain.

34 Chapter 9.3: Big Ideas (cont)  Glycolysis- breaks down glucose to make pyruvic acid and ATP to start the respiration process.

35 Chapter 9.3: Big Ideas (cont)  Citric Acid cycle- breaks down Acetyl-CoA and forms ATP and CO2 in the Mitchondria  Electron Transport Chain- Produces ATP and H2O

36 Cellular Resp. Overview Process used by cells to release energy from foods using oxygenProcess used by cells to release energy from foods using oxygen oxygen + glucose  carbon dioxide + water + energyoxygen + glucose  carbon dioxide + water + energy

37 Cellular Resp. Overview (cont) 6 O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6  6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O + Energy6 O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6  6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O + Energy Involves glycolysis and the Krebs or Citric Acid CycleInvolves glycolysis and the Krebs or Citric Acid Cycle

38 Glycolysis  Basically: one glucose (6- carbon sugar) is split into 2 pyruvic acid (3-carbon molecules)  2 ATP are needed to start process, but 4 ATP are produced

39 Glycolysis (cont)  NAD + is another high energy electron pair acceptor  2 NADH are created by glycolysis; can be used to make ATP  No oxygen needed

40 The Krebs Cycle and Electron Transport  Aerobic part of cellular respiration  The Krebs cycle breaks pyruvic acid into carbon dioxide and water using oxygen

41 The Krebs Cycle a.k.a. Citric Acid Cycle  Pyruvic acid enters mitochondrion from the cytoplasm  1 carbon is broken off as carbon dioxide; 2-carbon compound is left

42  2-carbon compound binds with coenzyme A to form acetyl- coenzyme A (acetyl-coA)  Acetyl-coA attaches to a 4- carbon compound to form citric acid ( hence the name Citric Acid Cycle )

43  Through various intermediate stages; 2 more carbons are released as carbon dioxide  A 4-carbon compound is left; this will attach to the next acetyl-coA and the cycle starts over

44 Electron Transport  A series of molecules that uses high-energy electrons to convert ADP into ATP

45 Electron Transport  High energy electrons are passed along the electron transport chain; at the end, there is usually an enzyme that transfers the electrons to oxygen and hydrogen to form water

46  Every time a pair of electrons travels down the chain, their energy is used to send H + across the membrane.  This creates an area of high H + concentration and an area of low H + concentration

47  Facilitated diffusion occurs to try to bring H + concentrations to equilibrium  The carrier molecule is ATP synthase which make an ATP for every H + that goes across the membrane  1 pair of high energy electrons = 3 ATP

48 The Totals  Glycolysis = 2 ATP  Krebs/Electron Trans=34ATP  Total36 ATP

49 Fermentation  Anaerobic way to process food to get energy  Everything starts with Glycolysis

50 Alcoholic Fermentation  Pyruvic acid + NADH  alcohol + CO 2 + NAD +  Yeast works on an alcoholic fermentation system

51 Lactic Acid Fermentation  Pyruvic acid + NADH  lactic acid + NAD +  Muscle cells can build up lactic acid when they are forced to work without enough of an oxygen supply

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54 Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Photosynthesis Cellular Respiration Function Energy storage Energy release LocationChloroplastsMitochondria Reactants CO 2 and H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 and O 2 Products CO 2 and H 2 O Equation 6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O -> C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 6O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6 - > 6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O


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