Cellular respiration in the mitochondria is an exergonic multistep metabolic pathway.
exergonic means energy producing.
in cellular respiration organic molecules are oxidized and disassembled by a series of enzymes
energy is used to synthesize ATP (endergonic process)
endergonic means using energy
Oxygen is REQUIRED for maximum ATP production
glucose is an energy-rich moleulce with many C-C, C-H, C-O bonds.
energy is within the Carbon bonds
glycolysis occurs in cytosol and does not require oxygen.
intermediate stage
citric acid cycle
electron transport system (Stages 2, 3, & 4) occurs in mitochondria and requires oxygen.
C6H12O2 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O
broken bond energy attaches phosphorus to ADP
Direct it the least common
substrate level phosphorylation
indirect is the most common and energy is first release to coenzymes to form ATP
oxidative phosphorylation
glycolysis is a metablic process that occurs in cytosol not requiring oxygen where glucose is the intial substrate and pyruvate is the final product.
glycolysis produces 2 ATP and uses 4 ATP where the net production of ATP is 2.
during glycolysis 2 NADH is formed.
negative feedback regulates glycolysis where ATP acts as allosteric inhibitor to turn of PFK
increase ATP to inhibit PFK
pyruvate strictly depends on oxygen
high level of oxygen means pyruvate can enter mitochondria
low levels of oxygen means pyruvate is converted into lactate
intermediate stage is where pyruvate releases CO2, NADH+ produces NADH and changes coenzyme A into acetyl CoA.
Occur in mitochondria, double-membrane organelle (cristae), outer compartment, matrix.
cristae are inner membrane folds where molecules of electron transport system are embedded
outer compartment is that space between membranes
matrix is the innermost space that houses the multienzyme complex & citric acid cycle enzymes
step 1: Acetyl CoA combined with oxaloacetate to form citrate
steps 2 & 3: Isomer formed by removing water molecule, then reattaching elsewhere
steps 4 & 5: Transfer of hydrogen to NAD+Â to form NADH; CoAÂ attached
step 6: Removal of CoA and the formation of ATP
step 7: Dehydrogenase transfers hydrogens to form FADH2
step 8: water removed
step 9: Dehydrogenase transfers hydrogen to form NADH
regulation of citric acid cycles occurs at first stem enzyme citrate synthase.
high energy demands: Levels of NADH, ATP, and pathway intermediates low, Cycle activity increased
low energy demands: Levels of substances higher, Cycle activity decreases
cyclic metabolic pathway involves nine enzymes in the mitochondrial matrix:
Acetyl CoA is converted to two CO2Â molecules, CoA molecule released, and ATP, 3 NADH, and 1 FADH2Â formed during one cycle.
the electron transport system transfer electrons from NADH & FADH2. The energy is used to make ATP.
e- transport system structures
in inner membrane (cristae)
H+ pump
Proteins that transport H+ from matrix to outer membrane compartment
Maintains a H+ gradient between outer compartment and mitochondrial matrix
Electron carriers
Transport electrons between H+ pumps
e- transport system steps:
electrons transferred from coenzymes to oxygen
H+ gradient established
H+ gradient harnessed to form ATP
in oxidative phosphorylation oxygen is the final e- acceptor, ADP phosphorylation makes ATP, Distinguished from substrate-level phosphorylation:
substrate-level forms ATP from energy directly released from substrate
glycolysis & citric acid cycle
in ATP production the number of molecules generated depends on entry point of electrons into the transport chain. Generates 2 ATP molecules.
Electrons from NADH pass through 3 H+ pumps and generates 3 ATP molecules
Electrons from FADH2 enter at second pump.
ATP in glucose breakdown
stage/total | sustrate-level phosphorylation | oxidative phosphorylation |
---|---|---|
glycolysis | 2 ATP | 2NADH → 6ATP |
intermediate stage | -- | 2NADH → 6ATP |
citric acid cycle | 2 ATP | 6NADH → 18ATP |
2FADH2 → 4ATP | ||
total | 2ATP | 34ATP |
some ATP used during cellular respiration, so net ATP is 30 (may be slightly less due to enzymes)
cyanide is a nitrogen triple-bonded with carbon, binds with a specific electron carrier of the electron transport system that inhibits e- transport system and ATP production.
electrons are unable to reach oxygen
pyruvate fate with low oxygen
activity of electron transport chain decreases
Levels of NADH and FADH2Â accumulate, Decreased levels of NAD+Â and FAD.
cells become more dependent upon glycolysis
requires NAD+ to continue
glycolysis eventually shuts down
due to lack of NAD+
NAD+ must be regenerated for glycolysis to continue
NAD+ regeneration is when a hydrogen transferred from NADH to pyruvate, Pyruvate converted to lactate (lactic acid), Enables glycolysis to continue.
Only 2 ATP generated versus 30 with sufficient oxygen, Impacts individuals with decreased ability to deliver oxygen to cells (For example, those with respiratory or cardiovascular disease)
Fatty acids enzymatically change two carbons at a time to form acetyl CoA (beta oxidation), Acetyl CoA the enters pathway at citric acid cycle, Can only be oxidized aerobically.
can be changed to sugars
Amino acids have different pathway if protein is used for fuel, Point of entry depends upon specific type, Amine group is a waste product (Converted to urea, Excreted by kidneys)
anything ending with -ase is an enzyme
Glucose goes in, enzyme change the structure, break molecule apart into 2 G3P’s, NAD+ →NADH, 2ADP→ 2ATP, 2 pyruvate
G3P (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate)