1 / 36

Electron transport and chemiosmosis

Cellular Respiration: Stage 4. Electron transport and chemiosmosis. Review: Stages of Cellular Respiration (per 1 Glucose). Glycolysis : occurs in cytosol . Glucose  2 Pyruvate 2 ATP 2 NADH Pyruvate Oxidation: occurs in matrix 2 Pyruvate  2 acetyl- CoA 2 NADH

chanel
Download Presentation

Electron transport and chemiosmosis

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. Cellular Respiration: Stage 4 Electron transport and chemiosmosis

  2. Review: Stages of Cellular Respiration (per 1 Glucose) • Glycolysis: occurs in cytosol. • Glucose  2 Pyruvate • 2 ATP • 2 NADH • Pyruvate Oxidation: occurs in matrix • 2 Pyruvate  2 acetyl-CoA • 2 NADH • Krebs Cycle: occurs in matrix • 2 acetyl-CoA  2 oxaloacetate (cycle) • 6 NADH • 2 FADH2 • 2 ATP

  3. Stage 4: Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis • NADH and FADH2 eventually transfer their hydrogen atom electrons to series of compounds in the ETC. • Components of the ETC arranged in order of increasing electronegativity • Weakest attractor of electrons at beginning of chain • Strongest at the end.

  4. How it works... • Each component is alternatively reduced and oxidized • Reduced: gains two electrons from component before it in the chain • Oxidized: by losing two electrons to component after it in the chain. • Like a baton being handed from runner to runner in a relay race.

  5. As Electrons shuttle through the ETC... • Going from less stable to more stable • Therefore, energy is _____________. • This energy is used to move H+ ions from the matrix into intermembrane space. • Three proton pumps do this • NADH dehydrogenase • Cytochrome b-c1 complex • Cytochromeoxidase complex

  6. At end of ETC... • Electrons very stable, therefore, extremely electronegative substance needed • _______________ strips two electrons from the final protein complex in the chain • Two protons added from matrix to form water. • Oxygen is the FINAL ELECTRON ACCEPTOR in the ETC. • Oxygen is very ___________________.

  7. Components of the ETC • NADH dehydrogenase (Pump) • Ubiquinone (Q) (Mobile Electron Carrier) • Cytochrome b-clcomplex (Pump) • Cytochrome c (Mobile Electron Carrier) • Cytochromeoxidasecomplex (Pump)

  8. NADH gives up its two electrons to NADH dehydrogenase. As electrons move through protein, they lose energy. This energy is used to pump H+ from matrix  intermembrane space.

  9. Q shuttles electrons to Cytochrome b-c1 complex • Electrons move through C b-c1 complex. Again, electrons _______ energy, powering the protein to pump H+ ions from the _________ to the ______________ space. • C shuttles electrons from C b1-c complex to cytochromeoxidase.

  10. Electrons reach final protein complex in the chain • CytochromeOxidaseComplex • Again, H+ is pumped into the intermembrane space. • Contains the enzyme cytochromeoxidase: catalyzes the reaction between the electrons, protons, and molecular oxygen to form _________. • Needed because Oxygen is electronegative enough to pull stabilized electrons through protein.

  11. Yeah...so? • Electrons from NADH and FADH2 donated to electron transport. • As electrons move through the chain of proteins, they lose energy. • Energy from each 2e- used to pump one H+ ion from matrix to intermembrane space of mitochondrion. • So, H+ is being moved OUT of the matrix. Results of this? ____________________________

  12. Electrochemical Potential Energy • Type of energy stored by a battery • Caused by accumulation of charged objects • The energy becomes stored in the electrochemical gradient and will be used to power ATP synthesis in the next part of the process... ____________________________________ EACH H+ in the intermembrane space eventually produces ONE ATP.

  13. NADH vs. FADH2 (Formed in the matrix) • NADH passes electrons on to toNADH dehydrogenase • Therefore, oxidation of each NADH molecule will help pump ________protons into the intermembrane space. • EACH NADH WILL POWER THE FORMATION OF ____ ATP. • FADH2 passes electrons on to Q. • Therefore, oxidation of each FADH2 molecule will help pump _______ protons. • EACH FADH2 WILL POWER THE FORMATION OF ____ ATP.

  14. CytosolicNADH • Cytosolic NADH is produced by ___________. • May diffuse through outer membrane into intermembrane space. • Intermembrane is impermeable to NADH • Glycerol-phosphate shuttle: transfers electrons from cytosolic NADH to FAD (within matrix) to produce FADH2. • FADH2 transfers electrons to Q  ____ ATP. How many ATP will one cytosolic NADH eventually produce? _______________

  15. YazeedEssa Guilty… by Michael Small | March 5, 2010 at 02:29 pm YazeedEssa, an Ohio Doctor, Has Been Found Guilty of Murdering His Wife with Cyanide Poison YazeedEssa was convicted of murder on Friday, March 5th. The Ohio doctor was found guilty of lacing his wife's calcium pills with cyanide so that he could be with his mistress. Essa fled to Lebanon after his wife's death, but gave up an extradition fight and returned to Ohio to face trial. YazeedEssa Guilty: Doctor Murdered Wife with Cyanide | NowPublic News Coveragehttp://www.nowpublic.com/world/yazeed-essa-guilty-doctor-murdered-wife-cyanide-2587107.html#ixzz1FGGtO1QF

  16. Cyanide • Cyanide inhibits cytochromeoxidase activity • This prevents _____________ from acting as the final electron acceptor • Shuts down the ETC, H+ pumps, and consequently, ATP production. • Coma  death • Not poisonous to all organisms! • MIT-13 (anaerobic bacteria) live on cyanide. Used in the same way as aerobes use oxygen.

  17. Importance of Cristae • Allows multiple copies of the ETC to be located throughout inner membrane. • Increased ______________________ for reactions to occur.

  18. ... and finally... CHEMIOSMOSIS and OXIDATIVE ATP SYNTHESIS(but some terms first) TERMINOLOGY • Electrochemical Gradient: concentration gradient created by pumping ions into a space surrounded by a membrane that is impermeable to ions. • Proton-motive force (PMF): a force that moves protons through an ATPase complex on account of the electrochemical gradient of proteins across a biological membrane.

  19. ETC forms an Electrochemical Gradient • Electrochemical gradient formed by ETC • Electrical component: higher positive charge in the _________________ space than the ________. • Chemical component: higher concentration of protons in the ____________space than the _____________. • Inner membrane impermeable to H+ ions. • Intermembrane space becomes H+ reservoir. • (H+ reservoir = proton reservoir) • Potential difference (voltage) across inner mitochondrial membrane.

  20. Electrochemical Gradient drives Chemiosomosis • Chemiosmosis: energy that drives synthesis of ATP comes from the “osmosis” of protons. • ____ forced to diffuse through protein channels associated with ATP synthase (ATPase). • Electrochemical gradient loses potential energy which is converted to chemical potential energy: ATP! • This energy drives the synthesis of ADP + Pi  ATP

  21. Electrochemical Gradient and the Formation of ATP

  22. Fate of ATP • ATP molecules transported through both mitochondrial _______________ by ____________ diffusion into the ____________ where they are used to drive ___________ processes such as movement, active transport, and synthesis reactions.

  23. Relationship between ETC and Chemiosmosis? (review...) • Electron transport chain obtains electrons from hydrogen atoms from _________ and ____________ molecules. • At each sequential step in the ETC, electrons _________ energy by becoming more _____________. • Energy is harnessed by pumping _________ into the _____ reservoir. • ________________ gradient is formed, which forces _______ to diffuse back into the mitochondrial matrix via a __________ complex.

  24. Conditions Necessary for ETC and Chemiosmosis This is a continuous process • H+ reservoir must be maintained  requires ____________ movement of __________ through the ETC  dependant on availability of ______________ to act as the final electron acceptor. • Hence, why we have lungs and fish have gills: _______________________. • Continuous source of electrons  electrons are transferred via _______ and _______  coenzymes are formed during the first ____ stages of cellular respiration  in the first three stages of cellular respiration, __________ is catabolized  need of glucose means a need of _________. • Hence, why heterotrophs must continually ____ and photoautotrophs must continually ___________________.

  25. Importance of Oxygen (in aerobes) • No chemical is electronegative enough to oxidize the last protein in the chain, except for oxygen. • If no oxygen  no substance to act as final electon acceptor  last protein can not be ‘freed up,’  ETC shuts down  FADH2 and NADH can no longer be oxidized  no NAD+ or FAD to recycle back into steps 1, 2 and 3.

  26. Homework: look this diagram over and study it until you understand the idea.

  27. The Exergonic Flow of Electrons in Aerobic Respiration What’s happening to the ‘lost’ energy?

  28. THE ENERGETICS OF OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION

  29. Overall – CELLULAR RESPIRATION!

  30. Seatwork/Homework • Read page 109 – 110 • Make notes and a diagram on the theoretical coenzyme and ATP yield. This is for YOU to study from! Answer the following questions: • The theoretical yield of ATP is 36. Give two reasons why the actual yield may differ from this. • What is the estimated number of ATP molecules formed for each glucose molecule? • Read the section on “Efficiency of Energy Conversion...” Answer the following questions: • 1) How is the efficiency of aerobic respiration calculated? • 2) How does the efficiency of aerobic respiration differ from glycolysis?

  31. Seatwork/Homework Read the section “Metabolic Rate.” Make notes and answer the following questions: • What is metabolic rate? • What is BMR? For humans, how much energy does the BMR account for ? • What are some factors that effect the BMR? • What is a Benzinger calorimeter? Briefly, how does it work? (skip the calculation)

  32. Seatwork/Homework Read the section on “Controlling Aerobic Respiration.” Answer the following questions: • What is phosphofructokinase? How does it regulate aerobic respiration? (in terms of ADP, ATP, and citrate). • How do NADH levels regulate respiration?

More Related