Charging the cellular batteries Flashcards
1
Q
Why is ATP a useful energy carrier?
A
- ATP and ADP+Pi has a high equilibrium constant
- [ATP] is maintained at ~3fold [ADP]
- this displaces the reaction in favour of of ADP+Pi –> ATP, so ATP is easily replenished
2
Q
Hydrolysis of ATP is thermodynamically unstable but It is kinetically stable.
What does this mean?
A
It will spontaneously hydrolyse but it will do so slowly.
- So ATP is good at storing energy
3
Q
Gibbs free energy released by ATP is less than other phosphate compounds.
What are the implications of this?
A
- more negative phosphorylated compounds can be used to couple ADP+Pi to make ATP
4
Q
What happens during glycolysis?
A
- formation of doubly-phosphorylated hexose.
(Glucose –> Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate) - Split into two trios sugars
(by aldolase) - Generating a doubly-phosphorylated triose sugar.
(not thermodynamically favourable so electrons are transferred to NADH before begin phosphorylated) - Substrate level phosphorylation
(phosphates are transferred to ADP making 4 ATP)
Overall net gain:
- 2 ATP
- 2 pyruvate (C-3)
- 2 NADH
5
Q
Describe the transfer of electrons in the ETC during oxidative phosphorylation
A
- electrons bind to F-S cluster and haem within complexes
- electrons are transferred from complex to complexes using Cytochrome C (from complex III to IV) or Ubiquinone, NAD+ or FAD+
- As you go down the ETC electron carriers that are used have a more +ve reducing potential
- this is both more thermodynamically favourable and releases free energy