Biochemistry Lecture 13. Only a Small Amount of Energy Available in Glucose is Captured in...

Preview:

Citation preview

Biochemistry

Lecture 13

Only a Small Amount of Energy Available in Glucose

is Captured in Glycolysis

2G’° = -146 kJ/mol

Glycolysis

Full oxidation (+ 6 O2)

G’° = -2,840 kJ/mol6 CO2 + 6 H2O

GLUCOSE

Cellular Respiration: the big picture

• process in which cells consume O2 and produce CO2

• provides more energy (ATP) from glucose than glycolysis

• also captures energy stored in lipids and amino acids

• evolutionary origin: developed about 2.5 billion years ago

• used by animals, plants, and many microorganisms

• occurs in three major stages:

- acetyl CoA production

- acetyl CoA oxidation

- electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation

Stage 1. Acetyl-CoA production

Stage 2. Acetyl-CoA Oxidation

Stage 3. Electron Transfer and oxidative

Phosphorylation

Where does this all happen?

Stage 1. Acetyl-CoA production

Pyruvate Decarboxylation

PDC

Sequence of Events in Pyruvate

Decarboxylation• Step 1: Decarboxylation of pyruvate to an aldehyde

• Step 2: Oxidation of aldehyde to a carboxylic acid

• Step 3: Formation of acetyl CoA

• Step 4: Reoxidation of the lipoamide cofactor

• Step 5: Regeneration of the oxidized FAD cofactor

Structure of FMN

Structure of CoA

Stage 2. Acetyl-CoA Oxidation

Sterospecificity

Step 3

Step 5.

Succinyl-CoA

Succinate

Succinyl-CoA Synthetase

Succinate dehydrogenase

*

*

Carbons are scrambled at succinate

*

1/2

1/2

Step 7.

Products from one turn of the cycle

Net Effect of the Citric Acid Cycle

Acetyl-CoA + 3NAD+ + FAD + GDP + Pi + 2 H2O

2CO2 +3NADH + FADH2 + GTP + CoA + 3H+

• carbons of acetyl groups in acetyl-CoA are

oxidized to CO2

• electrons from this process reduce NAD+ and FAD

• one GTP is formed per cycle, this can be

converted to ATP

• intermediates in the cycle are not depleted

Energy Yield

Recommended