an introduction to metabolism

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An Introduction to Metabolism Metabolism, energy and life Enzymes The control of metabolism

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An Introduction to Metabolism. Metabolism, energy and life Enzymes The control of metabolism. Metabolism. Metabolism- totality of an organism’s chemical reactions. Metabolism. Catabolic pathways - release energy by breaking down complex molecules to simpler compounds. Metabolism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An Introduction to Metabolism

An Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism, energy and lifeEnzymesThe control of metabolism

Page 2: An Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism

Metabolism- totality of an organism’s chemical reactions

Page 3: An Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism

Catabolic pathways- release energy by breaking down complex molecules to simpler compounds

Page 4: An Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism

Anabolic pathways- consume energy to build complex molecules from simpler compounds

Page 5: An Introduction to Metabolism

Energy

Energy- capacity to do work Kinetic energy- the energy of motion Potential energy- the capacity to do work,

energy stored as a result of its location or structure

Chemical energy- form of potential energy- stored in molecules as a result of the arrangement of the atoms

Page 6: An Introduction to Metabolism

Metabolism, energy, and life

Metabolism = anabolism + catabolism

Metabolic reactions are organized into pathways

Energy: kinetic and potential

Page 7: An Introduction to Metabolism

Thermodynamics

Thermodynamics- study of energy transformations

The First Law- the energy of the universe is constant

Energy can be transferred and transformed but it cannot be created or destroyed

“principle of conservation of energy”

Page 8: An Introduction to Metabolism

Thermodynamics

The Second Law- Every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy of the universe

Entropy- the measure of disorder

Page 9: An Introduction to Metabolism

Free Energy- the portion of a system that can perform work It is available for work Symbol is G

Page 10: An Introduction to Metabolism

Exergonic reaction- “energy outward”Proceeds with a net release of free energyOccurs spontaneouslyEndergonic reaction- “energy inward”

absorbs free energy from its surroundingsnonspontaneous

Energy Coupling- the use of an exergonic process to drive an endergonic one

Page 11: An Introduction to Metabolism

Cells are kept alive with a flow of energyThe products of a reaction become the

reactants of the next reaction.

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Rube Goldberg Machine

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Cellular Work

1. Mechanical work 2. Transport work 3. Chemical work

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ATP

Adenosine Triphosphate Adenine bonded to riboseRNA has one phosphate group attached to riboseATP has three phosphate groups attached to ribose

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ATP to ADP

Phosphate bonds- broken by hydrolysis Without 3rd Phosphate Group= Adenosine

Diphosphate (ADP) and inorganic phosphate

Page 17: An Introduction to Metabolism

ATP + H2O → ADP + Pi

Test tube: Change in G = -7.3 kcal/molCell: Change in G= -13 kcal/mol

Page 18: An Introduction to Metabolism

ATP to ADP

Is this reaction Exergonic or Endergonic? Exergonic- ADP is more stable than ATP,

energy is released with the loss of Pi

Negative G value

Page 19: An Introduction to Metabolism

Phosphorylation

Pi is not transferred into solution, given to another compound

Compound receiving the Pi is phosphorylated.

Page 20: An Introduction to Metabolism

ATP cycle

ATP + H2O → ADP + Pi

Change in G =-7.3 kcal/molADP + Pi → ATP + H2O

Change is G = 7.3 kcal/mol

Page 21: An Introduction to Metabolism

Enzymes

Catalyst- chemical agent that changes the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction

Enzyme- catalytic protein

Page 22: An Introduction to Metabolism

Activation Energy or “free energy of activation” – the energy required to break the bonds in the reactants

Symbol- EA

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Cellular issue with heat

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Induced fit hypothesis

Change in the shape of an enzyme’s active site, which is induced by the substrate.

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Enzyme-substrate complex

Substrate held by weak interactions- hydrogen and ionic bonds

R-groups of amino acid chain of the protein catalyze the substrate

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Lowering the EA

Active site • Stresses critical bonds that must be broken• Can provide a microenvironment

Ex: Acidic R groups form a pocket of low pH

• Brief bonding- covalent bonding between substrate and R groups

Page 33: An Introduction to Metabolism

Rate of reaction

Determined by the concentration of substrate and enzyme

Saturation point

Page 34: An Introduction to Metabolism

Temperature and pH

Optimal TemperatureOptimal pH

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Cofactors

Bind to active site permanently or loosely Inorganic Organic- coenzyme

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Inhibitors

Competitive inhibitors- block active site Noncompetitive inhibitors- bind to another

part of enzyme Types: poison, antibiotics

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When is it useful to inhibit enzymes?

Page 40: An Introduction to Metabolism

Allosteric regulation

Allosteric site- specific receptor site on enzyme away from active site

Can activate or inhibit

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Feedback inhibition

Most commonPathway switch off by its end product

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Cooperativity

Substrate induces enzyme to accept more substrates

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Multienzyme complex

Team of enzymes assembled together

Ex: Mitochondria in eukaryotic cells- enzymes for respiration are clustered together