1 / 30

Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics

Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics. Types of Chemical transformations within the cells Organisms Transform Energy Laws of Thermodynamics Free Energy Endergonic and Exergonic Reactions. General Types of Chemical Transformation. Oxidation-Reduction. Reduced: Molecule/atom gains electrons.

jewell
Download Presentation

Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics

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. Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics • Types of Chemical transformations within the cells • Organisms Transform Energy • Laws of Thermodynamics • Free Energy • Endergonic and Exergonic Reactions

  2. General Types of Chemical Transformation

  3. Oxidation-Reduction • Reduced: • Molecule/atom gains electrons. • Reducing agent: • Molecule/atom that donates electrons. • Oxidized: • Molecule/atom loses electrons. • Oxidizing agent: • Molecule/atom that accepts electrons. • Oxidation and Reduction are always coupled reactions.

  4. Oxidation-Reduction • May involve the transfer of H+ rather than free electrons. • Molecules that serve important roles in the transfer of hydrogen are NAD and FAD. • Coenzymes that function as hydrogen carriers.

  5. Organisms Transform Energy • Thermodynamics: Study of energy transformations. • Energy: Capacity to do work. • Kinetic energy: Energy in the process of doing work(energy of motion). For example: • Heat (thermal energy) is kinetic energy expressed in random movement of molecules. • Light energy from the sun is kinetic energy which powers photosynthesis.

  6. Organisms Transform Energy • Potential energy: Energy that matter possesses because of its location or structure (energy of position). For example: • In the earth's gravitational field, an object on a hill or water behind a dam have potential energy. • Chemical energy is potential energy stored in molecules because of the structural arrangement of the nuclei and electrons in its atoms.

  7. Laws of Thermodynamics • First Law: (Conservation of energy) • Energy can be transferred or transformed but neither created nor destroyed. (energy of the universe is constant). • Second Law: • Every energy transfer or transformation increases the disorder (entropy) of the universe.

  8. 1st & 2nd Laws of Thermodynamics “Every energy transfer or transformation increases the disorder (entropy) of the universe.” Note especially the waste heat “Energy can be transferred or transformed but neither created nor destroyed.”

  9. Organisms are Energy Transducers • Organisms take in energy & transduce it to new forms (1st law) • As energy transducers, organisms are less than 100% efficient (2nd law) • Organisms employ this energy to: • Grow • Protect • Repair • Reproduce • Compete with other Organisms • In the process, organisms generate waste chemicals & heat • Organisms create local regions of order at the expense of the total energy found in the Universe!!! We are Energy Parasites!

  10. Laws of Thermodynamics • First Law of Thermodynamics: • Energy can be neither created nor destroyed • Therefore, energy “generated” in any system is energy that has been transformed from one state to another (e.g., chemically stored energy transformed to heat) • Second Law of Thermodynamics: • Efficiencies of energy transformation never equal 100% • Therefore, all processes lose energy, typically as heat, and are not reversible unless the system is open & the lost energy is resupplied from the environment • Conversion to heat is the ultimate fate of chemical energy

  11. Entropy: Quantitative measure of disorder that is proportional to randomness (designated by the letter S). • Closed system: Collection of matter under study which is isolated from its surroundings. • Open system: System in which energy can be transferred between the system and its surroundings. • The entropy of a system may decrease, but the entropy of the system plus its surroundings must always increase. Highly ordered living organisms do not violate the second law because they are open systems. For example, animals: • Maintain highly ordered structure at the expense of increased entropy of their surroundings. • Take in complex high-energy molecules as food and extract chemical energy to create and maintain order. • Return to the surroundings simpler low energy molecules (CO2 and H2O) and heat.

  12. Energy can be transformed, but part of it is dissipated as heat which is largely unavailable to do work. Heat energy can perform work if there is a heat gradient resulting in heat flow from warmer to cooler. • e.g. Only 25% of the chemical energy stored in the fuel tank of an automobile is transformed into the motion of the car; the remaining 75% is lost as heat which dissipates rapidly through the surroundings.

  13. Organisms live at the expense of free energy • Spontaneous process = Change that can occurs without outside help. • A spontaneous change can be harnessed in order to perform work. • e.g. The downhill flow of water can be used to turn a turbine. • When a spontaneous process occurs in a system, the stabilityof that system increases. • Unstable system tends to change in such a way that it becomes more stable. • e.g. A system of charged particles is less stable when opposite charges are apart than when they are together. • A spontaneous process, when occurs, increases the disorder (entropy) of the universe.

  14. Free Energy: A Criterion For Spontaneous Change Not all of a system's energy is available to do work. The amount of energy that is available to do work is described by the concept of free energy. Free energy (G) is related to the system's total energy (H) and its entropy (S) in the following way: G = H – TS where: G = free energy (energy available to do work) H = enthalpy or total energy T = absolute temperature in °K (K= °C + 273) S = entropy

  15. Free energy (G) = Portion of a system's energy available to do work when temperature is uniform throughout the system. •  It is the difference between the total energy (enthalpy) and the energy not available for doing work (TS). •  It is a measure of a system’s instability: its tendency to change to a more stable state. •  Systems that are rich in energy (high energy and low entropy) are unstable, and tend to change spontaneously to a more stable state. • e.g. Separated charges, and compressed springs. •  In any spontaneous process, the free energy of a system decreases:

  16. Endergonic and Exergonic Reactions Reactions can be classified based upon their free energy changes: • Endergonic : • Reactions require an input of energy to make reaction “go.” • Products must contain more free energy than reactants. • Exergonic: • Reactions convert molecules with more free energy to molecules with less. • Release energy in the form of heat. • Heat is measured in calories.

  17. If a chemical process is exergonic, the reverse process must be endergonic. • For example: Cellular respiration • C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O • ∆G = –686 kcal/mol • For each mole (180 g) of glucose oxidized in the exergonic process of cellular respiration 686 kcal (kilocalorie) are released (∆G = – 686 kcal/mol ) • To produce a mole of glucose, the endergonic process of photosynthesis requires energy input of 686 kcal (∆G = or +686 kcal/mol).

  18. Cellular respiration Photosynthesis C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O

  19. Metabolic Disequilibrium: • Since many metabolic reactions are reversible, they have the potential to reach equilibrium: • At equilibrium, ∆G = 0, so the system can do no work. • Metabolic disequilibrium is a necessity of life; a cell at equilibrium is dead.

  20. In the cell, these potentially reversible reactions are pulled forward away from equilibrium, because the products of some reactions become reactants for the next reaction in the metabolic pathway. • For example, during cellular respiration a steady supply of high-energy reactants such as glucose and removal of low energy products such as CO2and H2O, maintain the disequilibrium necessary for respiration to proceed.

  21. ATP powers cellular work by coupling exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions • A cell does three main kinds of work: • Mechanical work, beating of cilia, contraction of muscle cells, and movement of chromosomes • Transport work, pumping substances across membranes against the direction of spontaneous movement • Chemical work, driving endergonic reactions such as the synthesis of polymers from monomers. • In most cases, the immediate source of energy that powers cellular work is ATP.

  22. The Structure and Hydrolysis of ATP • ATP (adenosine triphosphate): Nucleotide with unstable phosphate bonds that the cell hydrolyzed for energy to drive endergonic reactions. • ATP consists of : • Adenine, a nitrogenous base. • Ribose, a five-carbon sugar. • Chain of three phosphate groups

  23. When the terminal phosphate bond is hydrolyzed, an inorganic phosphate group [(P)i] is removed producing ADP (adenosine diphosphate): •  ATP + H2O ADP + (P)i • Under standard conditions in the laboratory, this exergonic reaction releases 7.3 kcal of energy per mole of ATP hydrolyzed: ∆G = – 7.3 kcal/mol • In a living cell, this reaction releases –13 kcal/mol, about 77% more than under standard conditions.

  24. Coupled Reactions: ATP • Cells must maintain highly organized, low-entropy state at the expense of free energy. • Cells cannot use heat for energy. • Energy released in exergonic reactions used to drive endergonic reactions. • Require energy released in exergonic reactions (ATP) to be directly transferred to chemical-bond energy in the products of endergonic reactions.

  25. Formation of ATP • Formation of ATP requires the input of a large amount of energy. • Energy must be conserved, the bond produced by joining Pi to ADP must contain a part of this energy. • This energy released when ATP converted to ADP and Pi. • ATP is the universal energy carrier of the cell.

More Related