Section A: The Principles of Energy Harvest: Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy

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Lecture 9

CELLULAR RESPIRATION:
HARVESTING CHEMICAL ENERGY

Section A: The Principles of Energy Harvest

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Section A: The Principles of Energy Harvest

1. Cellular respiration and fermentation ‫ التخمر‬are catabolic,


ْ pathways
energy-yielding ‫هدم مُنتِج للطاقة‬

2. Cells recycle the ATP they use for work

3. Redox reactions ‫اإلختزال‬-‫ تفاعالت األكسدة‬release energy when


electrons move closer to electronegative atoms

4. Electrons “fall” ‫ تنتقل‬from organic molecules to oxygen


during cellular respiration

5. The “fall” of electrons during respiration is stepwise ‫ َمرْ َحلى‬,


via NAD+ and an Electron Transport Chain
2
‫مـراحـل الـتـنـفـــس‬
‫حويصالت‬
‫هوائية‬
‫‪ -1‬تـنـفـس خـارجـى‬

‫الــدم‬
‫‪ -3‬تـنـفـس خـلـوى‬
‫خاليا‬
‫‪ -2‬تـنـفـس داخـلــى‬ ‫الجـســ‬
‫‪3‬‬
‫م‬
1. Cellular respiration and fermentation are catabolic,
energy-yielding ‫ مُنتج للطاقة‬pathways
• Organic molecules store energy in their arrangement of atoms.
• Enzymes catalyze the systematic degradation of organic molecules that
are rich in energy to simpler waste products with less energy.
• Some of the released energy is used to do work and the rest is dissipated
as heat.
• Metabolic pathways that release the energy stored in complex organic
molecules are catabolic ‫هدمى‬.
• Fermentation is a type of catabolic process leads to the partial degradation
‫ التحلل الجزئى‬of sugars in the absence of oxygen.
• Cellular respiration is a more important catabolic process, uses oxygen as
a reactant to complete the breakdown of a variety of organic molecules.
• This process is:
• Organic compounds + O2 -> CO2 + H2O + Energy
• Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins can all be used as the fuel, but we will
start learning with glucose.
• C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (ATP + heat)
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Cellular Respiration

O2 H2O
Food
(Fuel of energy)
Respiration Energy
+
O2 CO2

Cellular Activities

Organic compounds + O2 Energy + CO2 + H2O


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2. Cells recycle the ATP they use for work
• ATP (Adenosine Tri-Phosphate) is the important
molecule in cellular energetics ‫عمليات إنتاج الطاقة‬.

– The attachment of three negatively-charged phosphate groups


(P) is an unstable ‫عير مستقر‬, energy-storing ‫ مخزن للطاقة‬arrangement.

– Loss of the end phosphate group release energ

• The price of most cellular work is the conversion of


ATP to ADP and phosphate (P).
• An animal cell regenerates ‫ تعيد إنتاج‬ATP from ADP by
adding P via the catabolism ‫ هدم‬of organic molecules.
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Adenosine Tri-Phosphate (ATP)
Adenosine

P P P
+ H2O
Triphosphate

Energy P P P

Adenosine Di-Phosphate
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Fig. 6.8, Page 94
The transfer of the terminal phosphate group from ATP to
another molecule is phosphorylation ‫فـَسْ ـفـَرة‬.

This changes the shape


of the receiving molecule
in order to work
(transport, mechanical,
or chemical).

When the phosphate


groups leaves the
molecule, the
molecule returns to
its original shape (stop).

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How dose ATP drive cellular work ?

P P P

Organelle

Motor P
Protein
Microtubule
Energy

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Fig. 9.2, Page 157
3. Redox reactions release energy when electrons move
closer to electronegative atoms

• Catabolic pathways relocate ‫ يبدل أماكن‬the electrons stored in food


molecules, releasing energy that is used to synthesize ‫ لتخليق‬ATP.
• Oxidation-reduction reactions (Redox reactions):
Are reactions that result in the transfer of one or more electrons
from one reactant to another
• Oxidation:
Redox reactions require
Is the loss ‫ فقـد‬of electrons.
• Reduction: both a donor and acceptor of e.
Is the addition ‫ إكتساب‬of electrons.

+
X e- + Y X + Y
Oxidation Reduction
(reducing agent) (oxidizing agent)
Na + Cl Na+ + Cl- Energy
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4. Electrons “fall” from organic molecules to oxygen
during cellular respiration

• In cellular respiration, glucose and other fuel molecules are oxidized, releasing
energy.

e-

C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + (ATP + Heat)


Reducing Oxidizing Energy = 686 kcal/mol
agent agent Energy

• Glucose is oxidized, oxygen is reduced, and electrons loose potential energy.


• H is the source of electrons that transfere to O.
• Thus, molecules that have an abundance of ‫ وفرة من‬hydrogen are excellent fuels
because their bonds are a source of electrons that “fall” closer to oxygen.
• Enzymes lower the barrier of activation energy, allowing these fuels to be
oxidized slowly.
• When H moves to O, it leaves bonds which degenerated to release energy.
• The resulting energy is used by the cell to synthesis ATP . 11
5. The “fall” of electrons ‫ اإلنحدار اإلليكترونى‬during respiration is
stepwise ‫مرحلى‬, by NAD+ and an electron transport chain
• Cellular respiration does not oxidize glucose in a single step that transfers
all the hydrogen in glucose to oxygen at one time.

• Rather, glucose and other fuels are broken down gradually ‫ تدريجيا‬in a series
of steps, each catalyzed by a specific enzyme.

• At key steps ‫فى الخطوات األساسية‬, hydrogen atoms move from glucose and
passed first to the coenzyme NAD+ (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide).

• Dehydrogenase enzymes strip two hydrogen atoms from the fuel (e.g.,
glucose), pass two electrons to NAD+ and release H+.
• This changes the oxidized form, NAD+, to the reduced form
NADH.

– NAD + functions as the oxidizing agent in many of the redox


steps during the catabolism of glucose.

Dehydrogenase
H-C-OH + NAD+ C=O + NADH + H+

As electrons “fall” from NADH to oxygen, their energy is used to synthesize


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ATP.
• Cellular respiration uses an electron transport chain ‫سلسلة نقل اإلليكترونات‬
to break ‫ يـُقـَسم‬the fall of electrons to O2 into several steps ‫عدة خطوات‬.

• The electron transport chain, consisting


of several molecules (primarily proteins),
is built into the inner membrane of a
mitochondrion.

• NADH takes electrons from food to the


“top” of the chain.
• At the “bottom”, oxygen captures the
electrons and H+ to form water.

• The free energy change from “top” to


“bottom” is -53 kcal/mole of NADH.
• Electrons are passed by increasingly
electronegative molecules in the chain
until they are caught by oxygen (the
most electronegative).
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Fig. 9.5, Page 159
Summary of electron “Fall” steps during respiration
- Falling of all H atoms from glucose to O is gradually not at once.

- It occurs in steps, each one is catalyzed by an enzyme.

- H atoms of glucose pass first to the co-enzyme NAD+ to form NADH

- Then from NADH to electron transport chain, and finally to O and


releases energy to form ATP.

Mitochondrion
NAD+ e e
Food H NADH Transport chain Oxygen

Energy
ATP ADP

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Page 158 & Fig. 9.5

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