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Energy in Living Organisms: From Sun to ATP

Explore the concept of energy and its various forms in biology, including bioenergetics, photosynthesis, cellular respiration, and ATP synthesis. Learn about the laws of thermodynamics and the role of ATP as the energy currency in living cells.

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Energy in Living Organisms: From Sun to ATP

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  1. Biology 111Ch 6

  2. Energy Definitions • Ultimately ALL energy comes from the sun

  3. Bioenergetics • The study of how living organisms use energy to perform activities of life

  4. Radiant to chemical Chemical to heat Wind to electrical Solar to heat Energy – ability to do work (change or move something) – can be converted from one form to another

  5. Energy moves from molecule to molecule through electrons

  6. Calorie – amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius

  7. Kilocalorie – unit for measuring energy in food and output of organisms – must raise 1000 g of water 1 degree C. 1kilo cal = 1000 calories

  8. Photosynthesis – energy requiring stage of energy acquisition

  9. Cellular Respiration – energy releasing stage

  10. Organisms receive energy from the sun, the earth and other living things • Direct from sun, indirect from other organisms • Photons – packets of light energy • Absorbed by electrons (temporarily)

  11. Sun’s annual output- 3.8 sextillion megawatts of electricity • Earth gets 2 billionths of this • Most doesn’t reach living organisms • 1/3 reflected back into space • ½ absorbed by planet (converted to heat and returned to space • 19% used to power wind and weather and drives photosynthesis • Of this, .05% - 1.5% is incorporated into plant material • 1/10th of this makes it way into bodies of animals that eat plants - How many Mw is this?

  12. Most species depend on autotrophes for energy

  13. A few species get energy from geothermal sources Bacteria at vents provide hydrogen sulfide – called Chemoautotrophes Aerial view of Yellowstone hot springs

  14. Energy at rest is potential Energy.Energy in motion is kinetic energy.

  15. Potential – STORED in chemical bondsKinetic- chemical bonds BREAK – energy released – moves objects (atoms)

  16. Laws of Thermodynamics – regulate energy conversion for life and non-life • Open system- exchanges energy with surroundings • Closed system – no exchange outside the system Opened or Closed??

  17. 1st Law: Energy is neither created nor destroyed, but changes form • Energy in Universe is constant • Living systems continually change • Amount of energy an organisms used cannot exceed the amount of energy it takes in through chemical bonds in nutrients

  18. All energy transformations increase entropy • Entropy – tendency toward randomness • Energy transformations are inefficient – reactions result in increased entropy and loss of energy as heat • All energy can convert to heat, but not vice-versa • Energy proceeds in one direction • Spontaneous – processes that occur without an energy input

  19. Cell energetics from 2nd Law: Inefficient reactions lead to metabolism and produce heat • Most cells extract about half of the energy in nutrients • Organisms remain organized because they are NOT a closed system • Coupled reactions – one reaction occurs at the expense of another • Organisms can increase in complexity as long as something else decreases in complexity by greater amounts • The sun always decreases in energy.

  20. Metabolism – chemical reactions that change or transform energy in cells Fatty Acid Metabolism Metabolic pathways – step by step sequences of metabolism – ex: photosynthesis and cellular respiration

  21. Anabolism– constructs large molecules from small – USES energyCatabolism - Large molecules into small – RELEASES energy

  22. FORMING bonds takes energy- BREAKING bonds releases energy • Bond energy – amount of energy stored in the electrons of a chemical bond (

  23. Free Energy – amount of energy potentially available to form new bonds • Energy of activation – start up energy (kindling temp for fire)

  24. Endergonic and Exergonic • Endergonic- products contain more energy than the reactants • Ex: glucose + fructose = sucrose (Anabolism is endergonic • Exergonic reaction- products contain less energy than the reactants • Ex Glucose  Carbon dioxide + water (catabolism is exergonic) • Hyperlink on picture

  25. Reactions halt when equilibrium is met • Chemical equilibrium – when reactions go back and forth at the same rate • Energy not gained or lost

  26. In living systems, electrons move through oxidation/reduction (Redox) chains • Oxidation – loss of electrons from a molecule • Usually oxygen takes a molecules electrons • Ex. Oxidation of glucose • Reduction – gain of electrons ( therefore energy) • Usually are anabolic and require energy • Redox – linked reactions – ex. Electron transport chains – the more reduced they are the more energy they contain.

  27. ATP- Energy Currency in the Cell • Adenosine Triphosphate- stored useable energy – made in the mitochondria during cellular respiration.

  28. Loss of phosphate group = energy release.Provides almost twice as much energy as necessary to energize mot biological reactions (extra energy is given as heat

  29. Cells couple ATP formation and breakdown to other reactions • Cells use ATP 2 ways • To energize a molecule • To change the shape of a molecule • Both transfer phosphate to another molecule – process called phosphorylation • Phosphate is released after reaction occurs • 7 kilocalories are released in splitting 1 mole (1023 molecules) of ATP

  30. Cofactors – non protein helpers enable some reactions to proceedThey are often trace minerals (Mg2+)

  31. Coenzymes – carry protons or electrons (NAD+) • May be a nucleotide like ATP • Depends on it’s ability to • donate or receive an electron • (not phosphorylation) • Vitamins are source • Examples: NAD+ and others

  32. Enzymes: Life’s CatalystsActivation energy may come from environmentEnzymes speed biochemical reactions Enzymes decrease the energy of activation Enzymes sensitive to denaturation

  33. Cells control metabolic pathways • Negative feedback- when too much product is made, cells need to turn process off. Final product binds to an enzyme – turns process off (aka feedback inhibition) • Competitive inhibition – product binds to enzyme active site (competition for site) • Noncompetititive inhibition – product binds to a a site other than active site – changes shape of enzyme

  34. Positive Feedback

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