Chapter 7 Flashcards
List and briefly describe the four metabolic pathways that are needed to break down glucose to CO2 and H2O
Glycolysis: Breakdown of glucose into 2 pyruvates; can occur with or without oxygen; three phases (energy investment, cleavage, energy liberation)
Breakdown of Pyruvate: pyruvate is transported into the mitochondrial matrix (eukaryotes); molecule of CO2 is removed from each pyruvate; remaining acetyl group attached to CoA to make acetyl CoA; yields 1 NADH for each pyruvate
Citric Acid Cycle: metabolic cycle; series of organic molecules regenerated in each cycle; acetyl is removed from acetyl CoA and attached to oxaloacetate to form citrate; oxaloacetate is regenerated to start the cycle again; energy initially present in glucose is transferred to electron carriers; ATP is generated via substrate level phosphorylation; series of steps released 2 CO2, 1 ATP, 3 NADH, and 1 FADH2
Oxidative Phosphorylation: Passes high energy electrons from 10 NADH and 2FADH2 down an energy gradient across inner mitochondrial membrane (ETC); series of redox reactions involving several proteins and enzymes embedded within inner mitochondrial membrane; Energy from electron carriers used to pump H+ ions into intermembrane space and establish H+ gradient; Oxygen is a terminal electron acceptor in ETC; Energy is from H+ gradient used to synthesize ATP through oxidative phosphorylation
Identify the inputs and outputs of each of the four metabolic pathways of cellular respiration and where in the cell they occur
Glycolysis: glucose, 2NAD+, 2ATP, and 2P are the inputs; 2 pyruvates, 4 ATP (2 net total), 2 NADH
Breakdown of Pyruvate: 2 pyruvates, 2 CoA, 2 NAD+ are inputs; 2 Acetyl-CoA, 2 NADH, and 2 CO2 are outputs
CAC: 2 Acetyl-CoA, 6 NAD+, 2 FAD, 2 ADP+P are the inputs; 4 CO2, 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, 2 ATP (or GTP) are the outputs
Oxidative Phosphorylation: ADP, 10 NADH, 2 FADH2, and O2 are the inputs; 32 ATP, NAD+, FAD+, and H2O are the outputs
Review the two ways ATP is made
Substrate-level phosphorylation: Involves an enzyme that transfers a phosphate group from a substrate to ADP
Oxidative phosphorylation: occurs in the mitochondria and uses energy from a proton gradient to drive ATP synthesis
Review oxidation reduction reactions
Oxidation reactions = one substance loses electrons
Reduction reactions = one substance gains electrons
These always occur together, so they are called redox reactions
Outline the three phases of glycolysis and identify the net products
Energy Investment: 2 ATP hydrolyzed to create fructose-1,6 bisphosphate; phosphates added to glucose to prevent it from leaving the cell and to destabilize the molecule
Cleavage: 6 carbon molecules broken down into 3 carbon molecules of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
Energy Liberation: 2 glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate molecules broken down broken down into 2 pyruvate molecules
produces 2 NADH and 4 ATP (net yield=2)
ATP produced via substrate level phosphorylation
Describe the products of pyruvate oxidation
pyruvate is converted to acetyl-CoA (removal of a carboxyl group from pyruvate, followed by oxidation and attachment to coenzyme A). One molecule of NADH is produced and one molecule of CO2 is released in the process
Acetyl-CoA enters the citric acid cycle, where it acts as a fuel for the next stage of cellular respiration
Explain the concept of a metabolic cycle
A series of chemical reactions in a cell that build and breakdown molecules for cellular processes. Anabolic and Catabolic reactions
(redox reactions - oxidation and reduction)
Describe the net products of the citric acid cycle
6 NADH
2 FADH2
4 CO2
2 ATP
Discuss the events of oxidative phosphorylation
Oxidative Phosphorylation: Passes high energy electrons from 10 NADH and 2FADH2 down an energy gradient across inner mitochondrial membrane (ETC); series of redox reactions involving several proteins and enzymes embedded within inner mitochondrial membrane; Energy from electron carriers used to pump H+ ions into intermembrane space and establish H+ gradient; Oxygen is a terminal electron acceptor in ETC; Energy is from H+ gradient used to synthesize ATP through oxidative phosphorylation
Describe how the electron transport chain produces an H+ electrochemical gradient
As an electron passes through the ETC, the energy it releases is used to pump protons (H+ ions) out of the mitochondrial matrix or stroma of the chloroplast forming an electrochemical gradient. The free energy released when the redox reactions of an ETC are coupled to the active transport of protons across a membrane creates a chemical gradient of H+ ions as well as a pH gradient. When the H+ ions flow back down their gradient, they pass through an enzyme called ATP synthase, driving the synthesis of ATP
Explain how ATP synthase utilizes the H+ electrochemical gradient to synthesize ATP
ATP synthase is a complex protein that acts as a tiny generator, turning by the force of the H+ diffusing through the enzyme, down their electrochemical gradient from where there are many mutually repelling H+ to where there are fewer H+
The enzymatic activity of ATP synthase synthesizes ATP from ADP
Glycolysis: Glucose
The main reactant in glycolysis that produces 2 pyruvate molecules
Glycolysis: Isomer
In the second step of glycolysis, an isomerase converts glucose-6-phoshate into one of its isomers, fructose-6-phosphate. An isomerase is an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of a molecule into one of its isomers. This change from phosphoglucose to phosphofructose allows the eventual split of the sugar into two three-carbon molecules
Glycolysis: Glyceraldehyde
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate gets oxidized and the high-energy electrons are extracted
Glycolysis: Pyruvate
the output glycolysis and input for the breakdown of pyruvate
Glycolysis: Kinase
The most important enzyme for regulation of glycolysis. It speeds up or slows down glycolysis in response to the energy needs of the cell
Glycolysis: Isomerase
Isomerase converts glucose-6-phosphate into one of its isomers, fructose-6-phosphate
Glycolysis: Dehydrogenase
This type of enzyme catalyzes the sixth step of glycolysis and breaks down glucose for energy and carbon molecules. Another dehydrogenase enzyme converts pyruvate into lactic acid, using a unit of NADH and releasing hydrogen to produce NAD+
Glycolysis: Cleavage
When 6 carbon molecules break into 2 3 carbon molecules of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
Glycolysis: Reduced
reduction refers to the gain of hydrogen by coenzymes FAD and NAD
Glycolysis: Oxidized
The overall process of glycolysis is an oxidation reaction (glucose loses electrons and becomes more oxidized
Glycolysis: ATP and Phosphate group
ATP: used to phosphorylate glucose and other intermediates, making them more reactive and preventing them from leaving the cell
Phosphate group: involved in the first step of the process, where glucose is phosphorylated by the enzyme hexokinase. A phosphate group is transferred from ATP to glucose, forming glucose-6-phosphate or G6P
Glycolysis: NAD+, NADH
NAD+: a coenzyme that accepts electrons from G3P; is reduced and forms NADH and H+
NADH: the reduced form of NAD+
Glycolysis: Preparatory, Cleavage
Preparatory: energy in glucose cannot be readily released unless energy from ATP is added first (2 ATP are added to the reaction, producing a glucose molecule with two phosphate groups. The phosphate groups make glucose less stable and ready for chemical breakdown)
Cleavage: 6 carbon molecules broken into two 3 carbon molecules of G3P
Glycolysis: Payoff Phase
The second phase of glycolysis where the energy invested in the first phase is repaid with interest. Two molecules of G3P are oxidized by transferring electrons to NAD+, forming NADH. The energy released from this redox reaction is used to attach phosphate groups to oxidized substrates, making products of high potential energy. These phosphate groups are then transferred to ADP, producing four molecules of ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation. The net energy yield from this phase is two NADH and two ATP per glucose molecule
Glycolysis: Cytosol
Glycolysis happens in the cytosol, while the rest of the steps occur in the mitochondrial matrix
Glycolysis: Substrate-level phosphorylation
The purpose of this is to produce ATP by transferring a phosphate group from ma phosphorylated substrate to ADP