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Energy Supply and Cellular Respiration: How Organisms Extract and Utilize Energy

This chapter explores how organisms obtain and utilize energy from glucose through processes like glycolysis and cellular respiration. It also explains the importance of ATP and the role of oxidative phosphorylation in ATP production.

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Energy Supply and Cellular Respiration: How Organisms Extract and Utilize Energy

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  1. Chapter 6 How Do Organisms Supply Themselves With Energy?

  2. Key Questions • How do organisms supply themselves with energy? • How do organisms extract energy from glucose? • How is the energy in glucose used to make ATP?

  3. How Do Organisms Supply Themselves With Energy? • All organisms need energy • Ultimate source of energy on the Earth is the sun • Autotrophs make their own food; • examples: plants, some bacteria • Heterotrophs obtain chemical energy from other organisms • Examples?

  4. Energy Currency • Adenosine Triphosphate or ATP • Cellular respiration produces ATP • Aerobic versus anaerobic

  5. Cellular Respiration

  6. Steps of Cellular Respiration • Step 1: glycolysis • Step 2: acetyl-CoA formation • Step 3: citric acid cycle • Step 4: electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation • Overall equation: glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + ATP

  7. Cellular Respiration — Chemical Formula • C6H12O6 + 6O2 Glucose Oxygen • 6CO2 +6H2O + ATP Carbon Water Energy Dioxide

  8. What Is Oxidation? • Oxidizing agent or electron acceptoraccepts an electron • Reducing agent or electron donor donates an electron • Oxidation and reduction always go hand in hand • Examples of acceptors: O2, NAD+, FAD

  9. Step 1: GlycolysisOccurs in Cytoplasm • Part 1: 6 carbons are split into 3-carbon molecules and are phosphorylated; uses ATP • Part 2: Phosphates and electrons are removed; electrons added to NAD+ to make NADH; produces 2 ATP

  10. Step 1: Glycolysis Cont. • Part 3: • More electrons and phosphates are removed from the 3-carbon molecules; • phosphates are added to ADP to make ATP

  11. Glycolysis Overview • Breaks glucose into 2 molecules of pyruvate, generating 2 molecules of ATP and 2 molecules of NADH • Aerobic or anaerobic? • The pyruvate enters a cell’s _______. • When compounds are reduced, they ___ electrons. • When compounds are oxidized, they ___ electrons. • Which molecules/coenzymes from Glycolysis accept electrons?

  12. Step 2: Acetyl CoAOccurs in ______ • Oxygen needed for this reaction; aerobic • Pyruvate loses a carbon and 2 oxygens in the form of CO2 • Enzymes link coenzyme A to the acetate • CoA synthesizes fatty acids.

  13. Step 3: Citric Acid CycleOverview • High energy electrons are captured in the form of NADH and FAD • Occurs in the matrix of the mitochondria • With each turn of the cycle, citrate loses a total of 8 electrons to electron acceptors such as NAD+

  14. Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle • 3 parts • Part 1: 6-carbon citrate and isocitrate formation • Part 2: conversion of isocitrate into a 4-carbon compound • Part 3: production of another molecule of OAA, which starts the cycle over again

  15. Citric Acid Cycle The acetyl group is oxidized and energy is captured as ___, ___, & ____.

  16. What If There Is No Oxygen? • After glycolysis, if there is no oxygen, fermentation will occur • Cells must regenerate more NAD+ from NADH • Yeast — form ethanol (terminal reaction produces CO2 ) • Animals — form lactic acid (ouch)

  17. Biochemical Pathway Intersections Figure 6-7 • Catabolism — breakdown of complex molecules such as food; produces energy, involves oxidation • Anabolism — synthesis of complex molecules; uses energy

  18. How Do Other Food Molecules Enter Metabolism? • Fat, carbohydrates and proteins enter the cellular respiration pathway at different points • The most likely point is at acetyl CoA

  19. Electron Transport Chain

  20. Step 4: Electron Transport & Oxidative Phosphorylation • The pathway of electrons from one carrier to another is called ____ ____ _____; • Each electron carrier passes its electrons to the next carrier (bucket brigade) • Most of the electrons to the electron transport chain are received from what cycle? • A reduced carrier becomes oxidized when it gives up its electrons (forms ATP from ADP) • Oxygen accepts electrons

  21. How Do Cells Harvest Energy? • Proton gradient — flow of electrons through the electron transport chain creates this gradient (ATP is made from this gradient) • Chemiosmosis — harnessing of the energy stored in the chemical gradient; some machinery in the membrane must do this process

  22. Generating a Proton Gradient • Mitochondria — inner and outer membrane • Intermembrane space — space between 2 membranes • Matrix — space w/n the inner membrane; makes up about 2/3 of the volume; ETC is embedded in this inner membrane

  23. Pumping Protons • pH & cytochromes assist w/ transport of electrons. • Gradient is produced when…..

  24. ATP Synthase • Proton complex • Protons flow through these channels back into the matrix • Works like a turbine • Uses energy to make ATP

  25. Fragments of Inner Membrane

  26. Think About This One! • Why might you lose weight (a lot of weight) if your mitochondria suddenly lost the ability to couple electron transport to the production of ATP?

  27. Key Concepts • Cellular respiration converts the chemical energy of food molecules into the chemical energy of ATP • Most cells can use glycolysis to obtain energy • ATP production from cellular respiration depends on oxidative phosphorylation

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