370 likes | 446 Views
Aerobic Respiration & Energy Production. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie 1 1. Mitochondria. Mitochondria are football-shaped organelles that are roughly the size of a bacterial cell. They are bound by an outer mitochondrial membrane and an inner mitochondrial membrane.
E N D
Aerobic Respiration & Energy Production Dr. Michael P. Gillespie11
Mitochondria • Mitochondria are football-shaped organelles that are roughly the size of a bacterial cell. • They are bound by an outer mitochondrial membrane and an inner mitochondrial membrane. • The space between these membranes is the intermembrane space and the space inside the inner membrane is the matrix space. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Mitochondria Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Mitochondria • The mitochondria has it’s own genetic information and is able to make some of its own proteins. • Mitochondria grow and multiply in a way that is very similar to simple bacteria. • Mitochondria are most likely the descendants of bacteria that were captured by eukaryotic cells millions of years ago. Approximately 1.5 X 109 years ago. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Outer Mitochondrial Membrane • The outer mitochondrial membrane has small pores through which small molecules can pass. • The molecules that are oxidized for the production of ATP are small enough to easily enter the mitochondrial membrane. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Inner Mitochondrial Membrane • The inner membrane is highly folded to create a large surface area. • The folded membranes are known as cristae. • The inner membrane is almost completely impermeable. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Inner Mitochondrial Membrane • Transport proteins bring specific food molecules into the matrix space. • The protein electron carriers of the electron transport system are embedded within the inner membrane. • ATP synthase is embedded in the membrane. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Origin Of Mitochondria • Mitochondria are roughly the size of bacteria. • Mitochondria have their own genetic information (DNA). • They make their own ribosomes that are very similar to those of bacteria. • The DNA and ribosomes allow the mitochondria to synthesize their own proteins. • Mitochondria are self-replicating. They grow in size and divide to produce new mitochondria. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Glucose Utilization • Under anaerobic conditions, glucose is broken down into two pyruvate molecules. • Very little of the stored potential energy in glucose is released from this limited degradation of glucose. • Under aerobic conditions the cells can use oxygen and completely oxidize glucose to CO2 in a metabolic pathway called the citric acid cycle. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Citric Acid Cycle • Often referred to as the Krebs cycle in honor of Sir Hans Krebs who elucidated the steps of this cyclic pathway. • Also called the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle because several of the early intermediates in the pathway have three carboxyl groups. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Pyruvate Conversion To Acetyle CoA • When pyruvate enters the mitochondria, it must be converted to a two-carbon acetyl group. • The acetyl group must be activated to enter into Krebs cycle. • It is activated when it is bonded to coenzyme A. • Acetyle CoA is the “activated” form of the acetyl group. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Pyruvate Conversion To Acetyle CoA • Four coenzymes from four different vitamins are necessary for this reaction to occur. • Thiamine pyrophosphate from thiamine (Vitamin B1) • FAD derived from riboflavin (Vitamin B2) • NAD+ derived from niacin • Coenzyme A derived from pantothenic acid Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Aerobic Respiration • Aerobic respiration is the oxygen-requiring breakdown of food molecules and production of ATP. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Compartments of Mitochondria • Different steps of aerobic respiration occur in different compartments of the mitochondria. • The enzymes for the citric acid cycle are found in the mitochondrial matrix. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Compartments of Mitochondria • Electrons from NADH and FADH2 are passed through the electron transport system located in the inner mitochondrial membrane. • This transfer of electrons causes protons to be pumped out of the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane compartment (resulting in a high energy H+ reservoir. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Compartments of Mitochondria • The high energy H+ reservoir is used to make ATP. The enzyme ATP synthase facilitates this step. • The protons flow back into the mitochondrial matrix through a pore in the ATP synthase complex and ATP is generated. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
The Citric Acid Cycle • The citric acid cycle is the final stage of the breakdown of carbohydrates, fats, and amino acids. • The following steps will follow the acetyl group of an acetyle CoA as it passes through the citric acid cycle. • Pyruvate was converted to acetyl CoA when it entered the mitochodria, thus preparing it for entry into Krebs cycle. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Krebs Cycle Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 1 • 4-Carbon Oxaloacetate combines with Acetyle CoA to yield 5-carbon Citrate and Coenzyme A. • Citrate Synthase catalyzes this reaction. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 2 • Citrate is isomerized to Isocitrate. • Aconitase catalyzes this reaction in two steps. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 3 • Isocitrate is oxidated to α-ketoglutarate. • CO2 is released. • NAD+ is reduced to NADH. • Isocitrate dehydrogenase catalyzes this reaction. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 4 • 5-carbon α-ketoglutarate is converted to 4-carbon Succinyl CoA. • A carboxylate group is lost in the form of CO2. • NAD+ is reduced to NADH. • The enzyme α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase catalyzes this reaction. • Coenzyme A assists. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 5 • Succinyl CoA is converted to Succinate. • An inorganic phosphate is added to GDP to create GTP. • The enzyme Succinyl CoA synthase catalyzes this reaction. • Coenzyme A is restored. • Dinucleotide diphosphokinase transfers a phosphoryl group from GTP to ADP to make ATP. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 6 • Succinate is converted into Fumarate. • FAD is reduced to FADH2. • Succinate dehydrogenase catalyzes this reaction. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 7 • Fumarate is converted into Malate. • The enzyme Fumarase catalyzes this reaction. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Reaction 8 • Malate is converted back into Oxaloacetate. • The citric acid cycle began with this product so we have come full circle. • NAD+ is reduced to NADH. • Malate dehydrogenase catalyzes this reaction. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Point to Remember • Recall that for every glucose molecule that was degraded in glycolysis, two molecules of pyruvate were created. • Therefore, two turns of the TCA cycle happen for every molecule of glucose. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Important Products From The TCA Cycle • Per turn of the TCA cycle • 1 ATP • 3 NADH • 1 FADH2 • Per glucose molecule • 2 ATP • 6 NADH • 2 FADH2 Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Important Products From The TCA Cycle Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Krebs Cycle Products Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Krebs Mnemonic Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Oxidative Phosphorylation • Electrons carried by NADH can be used to produce three ATP molecules. • Electrons carried by FADH2 can be used to produce two ATP molecules. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Oxidative Phosphorylation • Electron transport systems are embedded within the mitochondrial inner membrane. • These electron carriers pass electrons from one carrier in the membrane to the next. • Protons (H+) can be pumped from the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space at three sites in the electron transport system. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
Oxidative Phosphorylation • At each site, enough H+ are pumped into the H+ reservoir to produce one ATP molecule. • A multiprotein complex called ATP synthase catalyzes the phosphorylation of ADP to produce ATP. • There is a channel in the ATP synthase through which H+ pass. The energy of the flow of H+ is harvested to make ATP. Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
ATP Yield From Aerobic Respiration • 2 ATP / glucose from glycolysis • 34 ATP / glucose from aerobic respiration • 26 ATP / glucose Dr. Michael P. Gillespie
ATP Yield From Aerobic Respiration • Glycolysis • Substrate level phosphorylation – 2 ATP • 2 NADH X 2 ATP / cytoplasmic NADH – 4 ATP • Conversion of 2 pyruvate molecules to 2 acetyl CoA molecules • 2 NADH X 3 ATP / NADH – 6 ATP • Citric Acid Cycle (2 Turns) • 2 GTP X 1 ATP / GTP – 2 ATP • 6 NADH X 3 ATP / NADH – 18 ATP • 2 FADH2 X 2 ATP / FADH2 – 4 ATP • 36 ATP Total Dr. Michael P. Gillespie