aerobic cellular respiration process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also...

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Aerobic Cellular Respiration • Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen –obligate aerobes • The energy that is extracted is used to synthesize ATP • ATP is used to supply energy directly to cells to drive chemical reactions

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Page 1: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Aerobic Cellular Respiration

• Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen –obligate aerobes

• The energy that is extracted is used to synthesize ATP• ATP is used to supply energy directly to cells to drive

chemical reactions

Page 4: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Aerobic Cellular Respiration• Divided into 4 stages

1. Glycolysis2. Pyruvate oxidation3. Citric acid cycle4. Electron transport chain and

oxidative phosphorylation• Each Stage involves the

transfer of FREE ENERGY• ATP is produced in two

different ways– Substrate-level phosphorylation– Oxidative phosphorylation

Page 5: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Aerobic Respiration• Location of each

Stage• Glycolysis– Cytosol

• Pyruvate Oxidation– Mitochondrial matrix

• Citric Acid Cycle– Mitochondrial matrix

• Electron Transport – Inner mitochondrial

membrane

Page 6: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Glycolysis• Primitive

– Process found in almost all organisms– Both prokaryotes and eukaryotes

• Does not require O₂• Involves

– Soluble enzymes (10 sequential enzyme-catalyzed

reactions) – Oxidation of a 6-carbon sugar glucose

• Produces– 2 molecules of pyruvate (3-

carbon molecule)– 4 ATP and 2 NADH

• Two Phases in which this occurs – Initial energy investment phase – Energy payoff phase

This process is for the conversion of only ONE glucose molecule!!!

Page 7: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Glycolysis Overview

Page 8: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Glycolysis Overview • Initial energy investment

phase– 2 ATP are consumed

• Energy payoff phase– 4 ATP produced– 2 NADH molecules are

synthesized

Overall NET reaction; Glucose + 2 ADP + 2 Pi + 2 NAD⁺ → 2

pyruvate + 2 ATP + 2 NADH + 2H⁺• 62 kJ of energy is stored by the

synthesis of 2 ATP molecules • Rest of the free energy is stored in

the 2 pyruvate molecules

Page 9: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Substrate-Level Phosphorylation• Phosphate groups

are attached to ADP from a substrate forming ATP (enzyme catalyzed reaction)

• ALL ATP molecules are produced this way in Glycolysis

Page 10: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Pyruvate• Pyruvate can take 2 paths

from this point:1. Aerobic Respiration

(with oxygen) – Pyruvate moves into

mitochondria and ATP is made via Krebs Cycle and Electron Transport Chain

2. Anaerobic Respiration (without oxygen)– Pyruvate stays in

cytoplasm and is converted into lactic acid -Lactic Acid Fermentation

Page 11: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Pyruvate Oxididation • Remember glycolysis occurs in the cytosol of the cell • The Citric Acid Cycle (next step) occurs in the mitochondrial

matrix• Pyruvate must pass through the inner and outer membrane

of the mitochondrion

Page 12: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Pyruvate Oxidation• Outer membrane– Pyruvate diffuses across the outer membrane through large pores of

mitochondrion• Inner membrane– Pyruvate-specific membrane carrier is required

• Inside Matrix– Pyruvate is converted into an acetyl group– Acetyl group is bonded to coenzyme A– Produces an acetyl-CoA complex

Page 13: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Pyruvate OxidationConversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoAInvolves 2 Reactions• Catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase • Decarboxylation reaction

– Carboxyl group (-COO⁻) of pyruvate is removed – Produces

• CO₂

• Dehydrogenation reaction– 2 electrons and a proton are transferred – Produces

• NADH • H⁺ in solution

Net reaction2 pyruvate + 2 NAD⁺ + 2 CoA → 2 acetyl-CoA + 2 NADH + 2 H⁺ + 2 CO₂

Page 14: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Pyruvate Oxidation• Acetyl

group reacts with the sulfur atom of coenzyme A

• Acetyl-CoA is the molecule that will start the Citric Acid Cycle

Page 15: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Citric Acid Cycle• Discovered by– Sir Hans Krebs

(1900-1981)– Consists of 8

enzyme catalyzed reaction

– ALL ATP are produced by substrate-level phosphorylation

Page 16: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Citric Acid Cycle Overview • 2 molecules of

pyruvate are converted to Acetyl-CoA

• Citric Acid Cycle goes through two turns for every single glucose molecule that is oxidized

1 Turn• Acetyl-CoA + 3 NAD⁺ +

FAD + ADP + Pi → 2 CO₂ + 3 NADH + 3 H⁺ + FADH₂ + ATP + CoA

• ATP is synthesized by substrate level phosphorylation coupled by GTP

Page 17: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Citric Acid Cycle Overview

Page 19: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Oxidation of ONE Glucose Molecule

Total # of NET Molecules Produced

NADH FADH₂ CO₂ ATP

Glycolysis 2 0 0 2

Pyruvate Oxidation

2 0 2 0

Citric Acid Cycle

6 2 4 2

Page 20: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Electron Transport Chain (Chemiosmosis)• Process that extracts potential energy that is stored in NADH and

FADH₂– These molecules were formed during glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, and

citric acid cycle– Redox reactions – transfer of electrons

• This energy is used to synthesize additional ATP (A lot more) via oxidative phosphorylation

Page 21: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

The Electron Transport Chain• Occurs on the inner mitochondrial membrane• Facilitates the transfer of electrons from NADH and

FADH₂ to O₂

Page 22: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

The Electron Transport Chain• Composed of • 4 Complexes

– Complex I, NADH dehydrogenase – Complex II, succinate

dehydrogenase– Complex III, cytochrome complex– Complex IV, cytochrome oxidase

• 2 Electron shuttles– Ubiquinone (UQ)

• Hydrophobic molecule – shuttles electrons from complex I and II to complex III

– Cytochrome C (cyt c)• Shuttles electrons from complex III

to complex IV

Page 23: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

The Driving Force Behind Electron Transport • Complexes I, III, IV• Each has a cofactor• Each cofactor has

increasing electronegativity

• Alternate between reduced and oxidized states

• Electrons move towards more electronegative molecules (downstream)

• Final electron acceptor – OXYGEN (most electronegative)

• Pulls electrons from complex IV

Page 24: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

How a Single Oxygen Atom Works (O) • Final electron acceptor

– Removes two electrons from complex IV

– Reacts with 2 H⁺ to produce H₂O

• BUT WE BREATH IN O₂ NOT A SINGLE O

• So for every O₂ molecule – Pulls a total of 4 electrons

through the electron transport chain

– 2 H₂O molecules are produced

• Pulling 4 electrons from complex IV triggers a chain reaction between other complexes!!

Page 25: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

What happens in this chain of reactions?

• Starts with O₂• Pulls electrons

through the chain of complexes

• NADH is least electronegative but contains most free energy

• O₂ has highest electronegativity but contains least amount of free energy

Page 26: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Proton Gradient• Electron Transport from

NADH or FADH₂ to O₂ does not produce any ATP!!

• What does?• Proton Gradient

– Transport of H⁺ ions across the inner mitochondrial membrane from the matrix into the inter-membrane space

• Creates• Proton-Motive Force

– Chemical gradient (difference in concentrations)

– Electro potential gradient is created (because of the positive charge on Hydrogen atom)

Page 27: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Proton Gradient

Page 28: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Chemiosmosis• The ability of

cells to use the proton-motive force to do work

• Synthesizes ATP using electrochemical gradient

• Uses ATP synthase enzyme– ATP is

synthesized using oxidative phosphorylation

34 ATP are Produced!

Page 29: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Oxidative Phosphorylation• Relies on ATP

synthase– Forms a channel

which H⁺ ions can pass freely

– H⁺ ions cause the synthase to rotate harnessing potential energy to synthesize ATP

Page 30: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

NADH from Glycolysis• NADH produced during glycolysis is in cytosol – Transported into mitochondria via two shuttle

systems• Malate-aspartate shuttle• Glycerol-phosphate shuttle

Page 31: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

NADH and FADH₂• For every NADH that is oxidized

– About 3 ATP are synthesized– 10 NADH x 3 ATP = 30 ATP – NADH is derived from vitamin niacin

• For every FADH₂– About 2 ATP are synthesized– 2 FADH₂ x 2 ATP = 4 ATP– FADH₂ is derived from vitamin riboflavin (B₂)

• Total of 34 ATP synthesized by electron transport chain

• NADH and FADH₂ are involved in REDOX reactions

• Considered Cosubstrates

Page 32: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Efficiency of Cellular

Respiration

Page 33: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Efficiency of Cellular Respiration• 38 ATP produced • Hydrolysis of ATP yields 31kJ/mol• 31 kJ/mol x 38 ATP = 1178 kJ/mol• Oxidation of Glucose contains 2870 kJ/mol of

energy

Only 41% of the energy in oxidation of glucose in converted into ATPThe rest is lost as thermal energy

%41%100)/2870(

)/1178(x

molkJ

molkJ

Page 34: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Cells that need a constant supply of ATP• Brain cells, muscle cells

– Need burst of ATP during periods of activity

• Creatine phosphate pathway– Immediate source of energy – Creatine phosphate splits (high energy)– Donated directly to ADP to re-form ATP– Stored within cell (3 to 5 times more

than ATP)– Provides enough energy for minute

walk or short distance sprint

creatine + ATP → creatine phosphate + ADP

creatine phosphate → creatine + ATP

Page 35: Aerobic Cellular Respiration Process that extracts energy from food (mainly glucose, but also proteins and lipids) in the presence of oxygen – obligate

Cellular Respiration • Regulated – Feedback inhibition

• Enzyme used – Phosphofructokinase

• Inhibited by– High levels of ATP– High levels of citrate

• Activated by– High levels of ADP– High levels of AMP

• Glucose– Stored as glycogen