Chapter 6 Metabolism: Fueling Cell Growth
Fundamental Tasks for Growth
Method of ______to invest in
Biosynthetic processes
Transporting nutrients / other molecules
Continual ______of new cell components
Cell walls, membranes, ribosomes, nucleic acids, other
Replacing worn or damaged components
Accumulating enough components so that cell can divide (growth = increase in cell number)
Principles of Metabolism
______is coupled to ______
Energy from breakdown of molecules is invested into buildup of new molecules
______reactions are coupled to ______reactions
Energy
______energy – stored energy
Stored due to position (rock on a hill, water behind a dam)
Stored due to chemical bonds
______energy – energy of motion
Potential energy ______to kinetic
But some is lost as ______
(random energy = entropy)
Kinetic energy ______to potential
Again, some is lost as ______
Lost energy must be replaced
Methods of Acquiring Energy
Phototrophs
Harvest energy in ______
Power synthesis of organic molecules
e.g. glucose
Chemoorganotrophs
Harvest energy from ______molecules
Depend on ______to synthesize high energy organic molecules
Free Energy
______energy released when bonds are broken
Does not include heat
______reactions
If more free energy in reactants
______reactions
If more free energy in products
Multiple ______allows slow release of free energy
Less is lost as heat
“Metabolic pathways”
Metabolic ______
Ordered sequence of steps resulting in an end-product
Starts with reactants
Continues with series of ______
May be in dissociated form (e.g. pyruvate)
May be in undissociated form (e.g. pyruvic acid)
Ends with ______
Pathway may be ______, ______, or ______
Key Components of Metabolic Pathways
Enzymes
ATP
Energy sources
Redox reactions
Electron carriers
Precursor metabolites
Enzymes
Enzymes ______on substrates
Turn substrates into products
Facilitate reactions – “______”
Do not participate directly in reaction
Without enzymes, some catabolic reactions would go very slowly
Enzymes speed up reaction
Enzymes lower the ______of ______
Even exergonic reactions
ATP Couples Energy Production with Energy Investment
______donates energy to reactions
Cycles to ______
ADP accepts energy
Cycles to ATP
ADP + Pi
Cell constantly recycles ATP
Phosphorylation
Ways to add Pi to ADP
______-level phosphorylation
______/ proton motive force
______phosphorylationUsing redox reactions
______phosphorylation
Photoautotrophs only
Sources of energy for phosphorylation
All require ______reactions
Transfer 1 or more electrons from one substance to another
Prokaryotes very versatile
e.g. Glucose
e.g. Ammonia
Redox Reactions
When substance is ______
Loses an electron
When substance is ______
Gains an electron
Where electrons go, protons ______
Lose e- & H+ = lose H atom = oxidation = dehydrogenation
Gain e- & H+ = gain H atom = reduction = hydrogenation
If e- removed to e- carrier
H+ may go, too
H+ may go into aqueous solution
Often ignore the H+ when writing biological reactions, but it’s there!
e- Carriers that Diffuse Easily
NAD+ reduces to ______
FAD+ reduces to ______
NADP+ reduces to NADPH
(reduced = becomes less positive)
Reduced form has ______
NADH & FADH2 reduce other carriers
Drives proton motive force
Proton motive force drives ATP production
NADPH reduces molecules in ______
Precursor Metabolites
______in catabolic reactions
Link catabolic reactions to ______reactions
Some are broken down further
Some are siphoned off for anabolic rxns.
e.g. pyruvate
Oxidized further
Convert to alanine
Use of Precursor Metabolites by E. coli
Central Metabolic Pathways
3 key pathways to gradually oxidize glucose
______
“Embden-Meyerhoff pathway”
“Glycolytic pathway”
______pathway
______cycle
“Tricarboxylic acid cycle”
“Krebs cycle”
“Citric Acid cycle”
Central Metabolic Pathways
Glycolysis
Most ______to initiate sugar breakdown
End products are ATP & NADH & pyruvate
______into Krebs TCA cycle
Pentose Phosphate pathway
Alternative pathway to make pyruvate
Operates in conjunction with glycolysis
______feeds into TCA cycle
Usually feeds into biosynthesis pathways
[Entner-Douderoff pathway]
Add’l alternative to glycolysis
Some bacteria
Less ATP
Fate of Pyruvate
______to TCA cycle from glycolysis, Entner-Douderoff, or Pentose Phosphate
Pyruvate Acetate + CO2
3C 2C + C
______CoA enters ______cycle
2 pyruvates for each glucose that started
Respiration
Uses reducing power of ______and ______produced in glycolysis and transition step
Powers ______phosphorylation
Electrons from NADH and FADH2 enter e- transport
______pumped to other side of membrane
Produces proton ______
Drives proton motive force
Terminal e- acceptor ______O2 or other
Catabolic Processes of Chemoorganoheterotrophs
______respiration – ______ATP
______respiration – ______ATP
______– ______ATP
Energy Yields
Energy yields theoretical, as ______may be siphoned off to biosynthesis
Calculated approximately with a theoretical ______
______-level phosphorylation slow
Little ATP produced
______phosphorylation fast
Much ATP produced
Energy Yields in Glycolysis
Glucose (6C) + 2 NAD+ + 2 ADP + 2 Pi
2 pyruvate (3C) + 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 ATP (net gain)
Also produces precursor molecules (used by E. coli)
Yields from Glycolysis
Energy expended --- ______ATP per glucose
Energy harvested --- ______ATP
Net gain ------______ATP
Reducing power ----- ______NADH
______metabolites (reduce energy yield) --- ______(based on E. coli) plus pyruvate
ATP produced by ------______level ______
Yields from Pentose Phosphate Pathway
Energy yield ---- ______amts ATP
Reducing power ---- ______amts NADH
Precursor metabolites --- ______plus pyruvate
Most of the products of the Pentose Phosphate Pathway are used as precursors in biosynthesis
ATP produced by ------______level ______
Yields of the Transition Step and TCA Cycle
Transition step (yield per glucose)
Reducing power --- ______NADH
Precursor metabolites --- ______Acetyl CoA
TCA Cycle (yield per glucose)
Energy yield --- ______ATP
GTP in step 5 converts to ATP
Reducing power --- ______NADH + ______FADH2
Precursor metabolites --- ______(based on E. coli)
ATP produced by ______level ______
Electron Carriers in the Plasma Membrane
Electron carriers embedded in the ______
Where in eukaryotes?
Electron transport goes from ______energy to ______energy carriers
Some carry H+, too
Some push H+ to other side of membrane
FADH2 ______chain ______than NADH
Less ______results from FADH2
Terminal e- acceptor ______½ O2
If anaerobic, then ______½ O2
Oxidative Phosphorylation
Chemiosmotic ______(proton motive force) drives ATP synthesis
H+ flow back across membrane through ion ______in ______
Called “______” even if O2 not terminal e- acceptor
Still oxidizing!
Very ______amounts of ATP made
Variation in ______allows differential testing
Oxidase test detects cytochrome c
Theoretical Energy Yields from Oxidative Phosphorylation
All theoretical
Not precise conversion
Siphoning off of precursor metabolites reduces yield from theoretical max
Based on reducing power from other steps
Assume ______ATP / NADH
Assume ______ATP / FADH2
Reducing power from:
Glycolysis
______NADH ______ATP
Transition step
______NADH ______ATP
TCA cycle
______NADH ______ATP
______FADH2 ______ATP
______ATP total
Maximum for oxidative phosphorylation
Maximum Theoretical Energy Yields for Aerobic Respiration = ______ATP
Substrate level phosphorylation – ______ATP
Glycolysis ______ATP
TCA cycle ______ATP
Oxidative phosphorylation – ______ATP
Reducing power from glycolysis ______ATP
Reducing power from transition step ______ATP
Reducing power in TCA cycle ______ATP
Anaerobic Pathways
Two types
______
______
Both use glycolysis & pentose phosphate pathway
Differ in ______e- ______
Differ in what happens to ______
Anaerobic respiration
Terminal e- acceptor not O2 and not organic
______reducers (NO3-) or ______reducers (SO42-)
Pyruvate oxidized to ______
Fermentation
______ terminal e- acceptor
Anaerobic Respiration
______(NO3-) reduced to nitrite (NO2-)
Or to nitrous oxide (N2O)
Or to nitrogen gas (N2)
______(SO42-) reduced to hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
______efficient than aerobic respiration
Fermentation
Fermentation pathways used by
______(e.g. E. coli)
______species
Lactic acid bacteria ferment only – never respire
Obligate fermenters that are not harmed by O2
______that ferment
Harmed by O2
ATP comes only from ______
Other steps recycle NADH from NAD+
______or derivative used as e- ______
End Products of Fermentation
______Acid
Pyruvate is terminal e- acceptor
e.g. Lactic acid bacteria
Streptococcus Lactobacillus spp.
Yogurt, pickles, cheeses, cured sausages
Acid tooth decay
Food spoilage
______
CO2 removed EtOH + CO2
e.g. Saccharomyces spp. (yeast)
Wine, beer, bread
______Acid
e.g. Clostridium spp.
______Acid
CO2 removed modification propionate
–Propionibacterium spp
Swiss cheese
2, 3 – ______
Differentiates members of Enterobacteriaceae
e.g. Klebsiella spp., Enterobacter spp.
Voges-Proskauer test detects acetoin
Mixed ______
Various pathways branched
Methyl red test differentiates E. coli from other Enterobacteriaceae
Catabolism of Other Compounds
Compounds other than glucose
Broken down by hydrolytic enzymes
May then enter cycles at various points
______
Lipases break down to precursor metabolites
Enter various pathways
______
Proteases break peptide bonds
Deaminases remove amino group
Precursor metabolites enter various pathways
______
Amylase breaks down amylose
Cellulase breaks down cellulose
e.g. fungi
e.g. bacteria in rumen of many herbivores & termites
β-galactosidase breaks down lactose glucose & fructose
Glucose enters glycolysis directly
Other monosaccharides modified first
Categories of Organisms by Energy and Carbon Sources
Chemolithotrophs
Use ______source of energy
______– hydrogen sulfide
______– ammonia
Products of anaerobic respiration ______
Fix ______into organic molecules from CO2
= Chemolithoautotrophs
Photoautotrophs
Use photosynthesis to
Harvest energy from ______
Fix ______into organic molecules
6 CO2 + 12 H2XC6H12O6 + 12 X + 6 H2O
______depends on source of electrons
Two stages
Light ______– ______
Light ______(“dark”) – carbon ______
Photophosphorylation
Light energy harvested in ______complexes
Many ______absorb light
Pass ______to reaction-center chlorophyll
Excited electrons pass along electron transport chain in membrane e- carriers
______
Generates proton motive force and ______
______
Generates ______power
NADPH generates reducing power for e- transport
Electron Sources in Photosynthesis
Source of ______determines if ______is produced
______photosynthesis
Plants, algae, cyanobacteria
______is source of electrons
O2 is generated
______photosynthesis
Green and purple bacteria
______, ______gas is source of electrons (not water)
_____ O2 is generated
Carbon Fixation
Conversion of ______to organic form
______– requires input of much energy (______)
Several cycles
Calvin cycle most common
Uses ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase
“______”
______abundant / important enzyme on earth
3 turns of the cycle
one glyceraldehyde–3–phosphate (______, a 3-carbon sugar)
6 turns of the cycle
one molecule of 6-______sugar (e.g. fructose 6-phosphate)
Consume 18 ATP & 12 NADPH + H+
Calvin Cycle
______Pathways
Using ______Molecules
Variation in ability to utilize substrates
Variation in ability to synthesize intermediates
Basis of selective media
Basis of differential media