Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows...

14
ter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring) reactions using energy captured from exergonic (energy releasing) reactions --- electrons can’t flow in a vacuum, oxidation reactions must always be coupled to reduction reactions --- phosphate bonds are efficient ways to transport energy they carry a relatively large amount of energy and are stable enough to move around the cell but not too stable to be easily br --- ion impermeable membranes can be used to establish charge separation (electrochemical potential) as a way to store energy and to convert electrochemical energy into chemical energy

Transcript of Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows...

Page 1: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Chapter 8 Metabolism

Essential Concepts--- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows

living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring) reactionsusing energy captured from exergonic (energy releasing) reactions

--- electrons can’t flow in a vacuum, oxidation reactionsmust always be coupled to reduction reactions

--- phosphate bonds are efficient ways to transport energy,they carry a relatively large amount of energy and are stableenough to move around the cell but not too stable to be easily broken

--- ion impermeable membranes can be used to establish charge separation (electrochemical potential) as a way to store

energy and to convert electrochemical energy into chemical energy

Page 2: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Different Ways to the Same End:

Strategies for producing ATP:

Substrate-level Phosphorylation: Use a high energy phosphatecontaining molecule to transfer phosphate to ADP--- usually involves addition of free (inorganic) phosphate to a molecule and then rearrangement to increase the energy of the phosphate group

Photophosphorylation: Use energy captured from light to pump

protons and create a charge separation

Respiration: Us energy captured from the oxidation of reducedcompounds (organic or inorganic) pump protons and create a charge separation.

Page 3: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Charge separation across a ion impermeable membrane

Page 4: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

A Respiratory Chain

Glucose Pyruvate + 2 NADH

Electron transport

Charge separation (pmf)

ATP generation or other processes (flagellar rotation)

transport

Other oxidation reactions (produce more NADH)

ORBiosynthetic reactions

Produce NAD+

Glycolysis

Other NADH producingreactions

Page 5: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Chemiosmotic Theory

Peter Mitchell’s idea that energy could be stored in atransmembrane ion gradient went very much against accepted theory of the time

two components:

pH – pH differential across the membrane -- usually about 1.0 pH unit

-- charge potential across the membrane (-160 mV)

pmf - proton motive force (-240 mV for E. coli)

- proton activity (-32 kJ/mol)

Uncouplers -

Page 6: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

An aerobic electron transport chain

Page 7: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

ATP Synthase

Page 8: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Recycling is Good!

--- At the heart of most respiratory chains is the concept that you mustreplace the oxidizing/ reducing equivalents that you use in the pathway.

--- So electron transport actually has two functions:

1.) reduce NADH to NAD+ to replenish NAD+ pool

2.) produce ATP via proton pumping and charge separation

Page 9: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

NAD+ + 2H+ + 2e- NADH -0.32 V

Page 10: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Redox Reactions:

Occur in half reactions (either an oxidation or a reduction)

H2 2H+ + 2e- -0.42 V (requires energy)(reduction)

Which is great, but . . . electrons can’t be in solution alone

So we combine the oxidation with an oxidation reaction

½ O2 + 2H+ + 2e- H2O +0.82 V (produces energy) (oxidation)

Page 11: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Total energy (Eh)= Eo (oxidized) – Eo (reduced)

(Eh)= 0.82 V – ( - 0.42 V) = 1.24 V

Net energy = 1.24 V

Using G = (-nF)( Eh)

G = (-2)(-96.48 kJ/V)(1.24 V)

G = +239 kJ

This is essentially aerobic respiration, how so?

Page 12: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Big Gulps:

In the previous reactions O2 is the terminal electron acceptorand 239 kJ is the maximum energy that can be extracted from this system.

However, living systems cannot take H2 and ½ O2 directly to H2O in one step, too much energy is released. Living systems have a solution to this problem:

1.) Break the redox system down into multiple smaller steps, each of which release a manageable amount of energy

2.) Use mobile electron carriers to link these smaller reactions

These unified systems likely evolved from simpler, less contiguous sets of reactions.

Page 13: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)

Alternate Electron Acceptors

--- oxygen generates one of the largest gaps between electron donor and acceptor, and so is the most favorable terminal

electron acceptor for respiratory chains.

--- however, many bacteria can grow in the absence of oxygen, andoxygen was not originally present on Earth

Some other electron acceptors and their energy yields:

N03- + 2e- + 2H+ N02

-+ H20 0.42 V

total voltage = 0.42 V – (- 0.32 V) = 0.74 V

G = 142.8 kJ

Fe3+ + e- Fe2+ 0.77 V

G = 105.1 kJ

Page 14: Chapter 8 Metabolism Essential Concepts --- chemical energy is necessary to life in that it allows living organisms to drive endergonic (energy requiring)