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Chapter 8 Intro to Metabolism
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Energy of Life Living cell is a chemical factory - sugars converted to amino acids then linked together to form proteins - proteins broken down to amino acids and converted to sugars upon digestion - Cellular respiration drives cellular economy by extracting energy for various processes such as transport, even converting stored energy to light (bioluminescence) - all metabolic activities carried out by the cell are precisely coordinated and controlled
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Organisms’ Metabolism Metabolism manages the material and energy resources of the cell Metabolic pathways- begins with a specific molecule, which is altered in a series of defined steps, and results in a certain end product. *each step is catalyzed by a specific enzyme
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Metabolism Catabolic pathways – degradative processes that break down complex molecules into simpler compounds - release energy to drive other processes Ex: Cellular respiration Anabolic pathways – biosynthetic pathways that consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler ones Ex: polymer macromolecule amino acid protein Bioenergetics – study of how organisms manage their energy resources
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Forms of Energy Energy – capacity to cause change - does work, transports or moves matter against opposing forces Ex: gravity & friction -ability to rearrange collection of matter
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Forms of Energy Kinetic energy – energy of motion Heat or thermal energy - kinetic energy associated with random movement of molecules or atoms Potential energy – energy stored or possessed by location or structure (resting) Chemical energy – potential energy stored up for release in a chemical reaction (catabolizing glucose)
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Laws of Energy Transformation Thermodynamics – study of energy transformations that occur in a collection of matter - system is the matter under study -surroundings: everything outside the system - closed system isolates from the surroundings Ex: coffee in a thermos - open system exchanges energy and matter between itself and its surroundings Ex: organisms absorb energy and release metabolic wastes
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Laws of Thermodynamics First Law of Thermodynamics (principle of conservation of energy) – energy of the universe is constant - energy is transferred and transformed, but not created or destroyed Ex:- electricity - light to chemical in photosynthesis - potential to kinetic to potential
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Laws of Thermodynamics Second Law of Thermodynamics – energy transfer or transformation increases entropy of the universe *During normal energy transfers, some energy is lost as heat – increases randomness of molecules Entropy – measure of disorder or randomness - heat is the random movement of molecules, and every chemical Rx creates heat as a byproduct - every energy transfer increases entropy of the universe
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Spontaneous vs. Nonspontaneous Spontaneous reaction – will occur without input of outside energy and will increase entropy of the universe Ex: rusting car or fireworks Nonspontaneous reaction – requires input of outside energy but increases entropy Ex: water pumped against the force of gravity
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Section 8.2 Free Energy
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Free Energy Free energy – measures the portion of a systems energy that can perform work when temp. and pressure are uniform throughout the system To measure a change in free energy : -change in G dictates whether a reaction is spontaneous or not *negative G means its spontaneous and the system is losing free energy *positive G means its nonspontaneous and the system is gaining energy
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Stability and Equilibrium Organisms prefer to have a lower amount of free energy because it shows stability in the system - work to a point of equilibrium that is spontaneous and able to do work - pushing away from equilibrium will increase free energy but will be nonspontaneous - systems never spontaneous move away from equilibrium
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Metabolism Exergonic Rx – proceeds with a net release of free energy (energy outward) - loss means a negative G - spontaneous reaction with great amount of work done Endergonic Rx – proceeds with the absorption of free energy - reaction stores energy - positive G meaning nonspontaneous Rx *if a chemical process is exergonic in one direction then the reverse process is usually endergonic Ex: cellular respiration & photosynthesis Sunlight is source for endergonic reactions
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Equilibrium Closed systems eventually reach equilibrium and can not do work Organisms (open systems) are always working toward but never reach equilibrium, as they constantly absorb and release molecules *cells that reach metabolic equilibrium are dead!
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