1 / 47

B ioc he mi st ry Bioenergetics: How the body converts food to energy

B ioc he mi st ry Bioenergetics: How the body converts food to energy. Bioenergetics. Metabolism : The sum of all Chemical Reactions involved in maintaining the dynamic state of the cell Catabolism - breaking down of molecules to supply energy Anabolism - synthesis of molecules

zena-smith
Download Presentation

B ioc he mi st ry Bioenergetics: How the body converts food to energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BiochemistryBioenergetics:How the body convertsfood to energy

  2. Bioenergetics • Metabolism: The sum of all Chemical Reactions involved in maintaining the dynamic state of the cell • Catabolism - breaking down of molecules to supply energy • Anabolism - synthesis of molecules • Biochemical Pathway - a series of consecutive chemical reactions

  3. Common Catabolic Pathway Conversion of FOOD to ATP: • FOODproduces C4 and C2 fragments • C4 and C2 fragments enter Citric Acid Cycle • CO2, NADH, FADH2, are produced • Electron Transport produces ATP

  4. C4 inner membrane C2 C4 C2 CO2 CO2 C2 CO2 Citric Acid Cycle outer membrane ATP NADH FADH2 e- transport e- transport O2 O2 ATP ATP ATP ATP H2O

  5. Cells and Mitochondria Components of a typical cell: • nucleus - replication of cell begins here • lysosomes - remove damaged cellular components • Golgi bodies - package and transport proteins • organelles - specialized structures with specific function • mitochondria - common catabolic pathway

  6. Cells and Mitochondria

  7. Cells and Mitochondria

  8. Mitochondria • Mitochondria • Two membranes • Common Catabolic Pathway • Enzymes located in folds or “Crista” • Transport thru the inner membrane occurs with the help of Protein Gates

  9. Mitochondrion

  10. Common Catabolic Pathway 2 Parts: • Citric Acid Cycle • or Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle • or TCA cycle • or Kreb’s Cycle • Oxidative Phosphorylation • or Electron Transport • or Respiratory Chain 1 2

  11. Compounds - ADP • Adenosine diphosphate (ADP)

  12. triphosphate Compounds - ATP • AMP, ADP, ATP High energy phosphate anhydride bonds

  13. Compounds - ATP • ATP • We make about 88 lbs. of ATP a day!!! • Used for: • muscle contraction • nerve signal conduction • biosynthesis

  14. Fig. 26.6, p.651

  15. NAD+ FAD Compounds - Redox • NAD+ and FAD • Oxidizing agents • Actually coenzymes • Contain an ADP core (part of R or R’)

  16. to ET Compounds - Redox • NAD+ is converted to NADH Oxidized form Reduced form

  17. to ET Compounds - Redox • FAD is converted to FADH2 Oxidized form Reduced form

  18. Compounds • The Acetylcarrying group - Acetyl coenzyme A • Carrying handle is Pantothenic Acid and Mercaptoethylamine

  19. Coenzyme A

  20. Coenzyme A 2C 3C 4C

  21. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  22. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXmw3fR8fh0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvoZ21P4JK8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1DjTM1qnPM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgXnH087JIk

  23. C2 C4 C6 CO2 C5 C4 CO2 Citric Acid Cycle • Acetyl CoA contains a 2 carbon fragment that is carried into the Citric Acid Cycle • Also called the: • Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle • TCA Cycle • Kreb’s Cycle • Acetyl group is split out as CO2

  24. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 1 • oxaloacetate will show up in last step • acetyl CoA is the THIO ESTER of acetic acid (CoA is Co Enzyme A)

  25. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 1B • citrate or citric acid produced • citrate has 6 C (How many acid groups?)

  26. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  27. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 2 • dehydration to cis-Aconitate • hydration to isocitrate • enzymes required for each Rx

  28. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  29. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 3 • oxidation and decarboxylation • CO2 is from the ???

  30. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  31. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 4 • Where did the CO2 come from???

  32. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  33. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 5 • GTP is Guanosine triphosphate (as good as ATP!)

  34. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  35. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 6 • Oxidation with FAD • Fumaric Acid is trans-Fumaric Acid • Barbiturate is an inhibitor of Succinate dehydrogenase

  36. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  37. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 7 • hydration reaction • fumarase is enzyme

  38. Citric Acid Cycle • Step 8 • oxidation using NAD+ • product is oxaloacetate!

  39. Fig. 26.8, p.652

  40. 4 H+ + 4 e- + O2 2 H2O Electron (and H+) Transport • End products of the Citric Acid Cycle Reduced (or spent) Coenzymes • NADH • FADH2 • Carry H+ and e- and yield energy when combining with oxygen:

  41. Electron (and H+) Transport • Many Enzymes are involved in ET • Enzymes are imbedded in inner membrane of the mitochondria • Enzymes are in a particular sequence • each accepts electrons • increasing affinity for electrons • Final acceptor of electrons is molecular O2 to make water O2

  42. Fig. 26.10, p.656

  43. Electron Transport chain - youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbJ0nbzt5Kw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Idy2XAlZIVA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A32CvcfA_K0&feature=PlayList&p=F09BC040A0B953F8&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=10 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1engJR_XWVU

  44. O2 2 H+ 2 H+ 2 H+ Lipid bilayer b Flavo- protein Q enzyme FeS protein a3 a c c1 ATPase b cytochromes NADH NAD+ FADH2 FAD overall3 ATP produced overall2 ATP produced 2 H+ + 2 e- + 1/2 O2 H2O Electron (and H+) Transport • Many Enzymes are involved in Oxidative Phosphorylation O2- ATP

  45. The Energy Yield from a C2 • Each NADH produces 3 ATP • Each FADH2 produces 2 ATP (Each pair of H+produces 1 ATP) • For each C2 unit (acetyl CoA) we produce... • 1 GTP directly (same as 1 ATP) from step 5 TCA • 3 NADH in ET (3 x 3 = 9 ATP) Indirect • 1 FADH2 in ET (1 x 2 = 2 ATP) Indirect For a total of ..................... 12 ATP (and some waste CO2) Indirect (from ET) $

  46. Conversion of ATP How does the body utilize this Chemical Energy? • Conversion to Other Forms • biosynthesis • Electrical Energy • ion gradients (K+, Na+) • Mechanical Energy • muscle contraction • Heat Energy • maintain 37 oC or 98.6 oF

  47. contraction Muscle Contraction Chemical Energy converted to Mechanical Energy: • Thick (myosin) and thin (actin) filaments • Hydrolysis of ATP causes the interaction of the filaments (muscle contraction)

More Related