Mitochondria Cellular Respiration

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ATP

Overview of cellular respiration


4 metabolic stages
Anaerobic respiration
1. Glycolysis
respiration without O
2

in cytosol
Aerobic respiration
respiration using O
2
in mitochondria
2. Pyruvate oxidation
3. Krebs cycle
4. Electron transport chain
C
6
H
12
O
6
6O
2
ATP

6H
2
O 6CO
2

+ + +
(+ heat)
What is Cellular Respiration?
Step-by-step breakdown
of high-energy glucose
molecules to release
energy
Takes place day and
night in all living cells
Occurs in stages,
controlled by enzymes



1. Glycolysis (splitting of sugar) a.
cytosol, just outside of
mitochondria.
2. Grooming Phase a. migration
from cytosol to matrix.
3. Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle) a.
mitochondrial matrix
4. Electron Transport Chain (ETC)
and Oxidative Phosphorylation
a. Also called Chemiosmosis
b. inner mitochondrial
membrane.

Breakdown of
Cellular Respiration
ATP Energy Currency of Cells
An ATP molecule contains potential energy, much like a
compressed spring. When a phosphate group is pulled away
during a chemical reaction, energy is released.
This cycle is the fundamental
mode of energy exchange in
biological systems.
ATP-ADP Cycle
ATP-ADP Cycle
ATP is constantly
recycled in your cells. A
working muscle cell
recycles all of its ATP
molecules about once
each minute. That's 10
million ATP molecules
spent and regenerated
per second!
Different types of Cellular Respiration
Aerobic respiration
Occurs in the presence of
oxygen
When chemically breaking
down glucose completely,
this process releases large
amounts energy
- Releasing carbon dioxide and
water as waste products.



Anaerobic respiration
-Occurs if there is a lack of
oxygen available for aerobic
respiration
-Only Glycolysis occurs
-Glucose is incompletely
broken down
-In this type of respiration a
lot less energy is -produced
and most of it is lost as heat.

Glycolysis
Breaking down glucose
glyco lysis (splitting sugar)



ancient pathway which harvests energy
where energy transfer first evolved
transfer energy from organic molecules to ATP
still is starting point for all cellular respiration
but its inefficient
generate only 2 ATP for every 1 glucose
occurs in cytosol
glucose pyruvate
2x 6C 3C
In the
cytosol?
Why does
that make
evolutionary
sense?
Evolutionary perspective
Prokaryotes
first cells had no organelles
Anaerobic atmosphere
life on Earth first evolved without free oxygen (O
2
) in
atmosphere
energy had to be captured from organic molecules in
absence of O
2
Prokaryotes that evolved glycolysis are ancestors of all
modern life
ALL cells still utilize glycolysis
You mean
were related?
Do I have to invite
them over for
the holidays?
10 reactions
convert
glucose (6C) to
2 pyruvate (3C)
produces:
4 ATP & 2 NADH
consumes:
2 ATP
net:
2 ATP & 2 NADH
glucose
C-C-C-C-C-C
fructose-1,6bP
P-C-C-C-C-C-C-P
DHAP
P-C-C-C
G3P
C-C-C-P
pyruvate
C-C-C
Overview
DHAP = dihydroxyacetone phosphate
G3P = glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
ATP
2
ADP
2
ATP
4
ADP
4
NAD
+

2
2
2P
i

enzyme
enzyme
enzyme enzyme
enzyme
enzyme
enzyme
enzyme
2P
i

2H
P
i

3
6
4,5
ADP
NAD
+

Glucose
hexokinase
phosphoglucose
isomerase
phosphofructokinase
Glyceraldehyde 3
-phosphate (G3P)
Dihydroxyacetone
phosphate
Glucose 6-phosphate
Fructose 6-phosphate
Fructose 1,6-bisphosphate
isomerase
glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate
dehydrogenase
aldolase
1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate
(BPG)
1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate
(BPG)
1
2
ATP
ADP
ATP
NADH
NAD
+

NADH
P
i

CH
2

C O
CH
2
OH
P O
CH
2
O P
O
CHOH
C
CH
2

O P
O
CHOH
CH
2
O P
O
CH
2
O P
O
P
O
CH
2

H
CH
2
OH
O
CH
2
P
O
O
CH
2
OH
P
O
1st half of glycolysis (5 reactions)
Glucose priming
get glucose ready to
split
phosphorylate
glucose
molecular
rearrangement
split destabilized
glucose
2nd half of glycolysis (5 reactions)
Payola!
Finally some
ATP!

NADH production
G3P donates H
oxidize sugar
reduce NAD
+

NAD
+
NADH
ATP production
G3P pyruvate
PEP sugar donates P
ADP ATP
7
8
H
2
O
9
10
ADP
ATP
3-Phosphoglycerate
(3PG)
3-Phosphoglycerate
(3PG)
2-Phosphoglycerate
(2PG)
2-Phosphoglycerate
(2PG)
Phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP)
Phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP)
Pyruvate Pyruvate
phosphoglycerate
kinase
phosphoglyceromutase
enolase
pyruvate kinase
ADP
ATP
ADP
ATP
ADP
ATP
H
2
O
CH
2
OH
CH
3
CH
2
O
-
O
C
P H
CHOH
O
-
O
-
O
-
C
C
C
C
C
C
P
P
O
O
O
O
O
O
CH
2
NAD
+

NADH
NAD
+

NADH
Energy Harvest
G3P
C-C-C-P
P
i
P
i

6
Substrate-level Phosphorylation
P is transferred
from PEP to ADP
kinase enzyme
ADP ATP
I get it!
The PO
4
came
directly from
the substrate!
H
2
O
9
10
Phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP)
Phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP)
Pyruvate Pyruvate
enolase
pyruvate kinase
ADP
ATP
ADP
ATP
H
2
O
CH
3
O
-
O
C
O
-
C
C
C
P
O
O
O
CH
2
In the last steps of glycolysis, where did the P
come from to make ATP?
the sugar substrate (PEP)
ATP
Substrate-Level Phosphorylation
ATP is formed when an enzyme transfers a
phosphate group from a substrate to ADP.
Enzyme
Substrate
O
-

C=O
C-O-
CH
2
P
P P
Adenosine
ADP
(PEP)
Example:
PEP to PYR
P P P
ATP
O
-

C=O
C=O
CH
2
Product
(Pyruvate)
Adenosine
Energy accounting of glycolysis
Net gain = 2 ATP
some energy investment (-2 ATP)
small energy return (+4 ATP)
1 6C sugar 2 3C sugars
2 ATP 2 ADP
4 ADP
glucose pyruvate
2x 6C 3C
All that work!
And thats all
I get?
ATP
4
Is that all there is?
Not a lot of energy
for 1 billon years
+
this is how life on Earth
survived
no O
2
= slow growth, slow reproduction
only harvest 3.5% of energy stored in glucose
more carbons to strip off = more energy to harvest
Hard way
to make
a living!
O
2

O
2

O
2

O
2

O
2

glucose pyruvate
6C 2x 3C
Glycolysis
Splits a glucose
molecule into
2 - 3 Carbon
molecules called
PYRUVATE.
products: 2 ATP, NADH and pyruvate
Glycolysis
glucose + 2ADP + 2P
i
+ 2 NAD
+
2 pyruvate + 2ATP + 2NADH
We cant stop there!
Going to run out of NAD
+

without regenerating NAD+,
energy production would stop!
another molecule must accept
H from NADH
recycle
NADH
P
i
NAD
+

G3P
1,3-BPG 1,3-BPG
NADH
NAD
+

NADH
P
i

DHAP
NADH
pyruvate
acetyl-CoA
lactate
ethanol
NAD
+

NAD
+

NADH
NAD
+

NADH
CO
2

acetaldehyde
H
2
O
Krebs
cycle
O
2

(lactic acid)
with oxygen
aerobic respiration
without oxygen
anaerobic respiration
fermentation
How is NADH recycled to NAD
+
?
Another molecule
must accept H from
NADH
recycle
NADH
which path you
use depends on
who you are
Fermentation (anaerobic)
Bacteria, yeast
1C 3C 2C
pyruvate ethanol + CO
2
Animals, some fungi
pyruvate lactic acid
3C 3C
beer, wine, bread
cheese, anaerobic exercise (no O
2
)
NADH NAD
+

NADH NAD
+

to glycolysis
to glycolysis
Alcohol Fermentation
1C
3C
2C
pyruvate ethanol + CO
2
NADH NAD
+

Count the
carbons!
Dead end process
at ~12% ethanol,
kills yeast
cant reverse the
reaction
bacteria yeast
Reversible process
once O
2
is available,
lactate is converted
back to pyruvate by
the liver
Lactic Acid Fermentation
pyruvate lactic acid
3C 3C
NADH NAD
+


Count the
carbons!
O
2

animals
Pyruvate is a branching point
Pyruvate
O
2

O
2

mitochondria
Krebs cycle
aerobic respiration
fermentation
anaerobic
respiration
Without Oxygen
No O
2
Alcoholic
Fermentation
Lactic Acid
Fermentation
Whats the
point?
The point
is to make
ATP!
ATP
H
+



H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+
H
+

H
+

And how do we
do that?
ATP
But Have we done that yet?
ADP
P +
ATP synthase
set up a H
+
gradient
allow H
+
to flow
through ATP synthase
powers bonding
of P
i
to ADP

ADP + P
i
ATP
NO!
Theres still more
to my story!
Any Questions?
Metabolism in the
mitochondrial matrix
Oooooh!
Form fits
function!
pyruvate acetyl CoA + CO
2
Oxidation of pyruvate
NAD
3C 2C 1C
[
2x
]
Pyruvate enters mitochondria





3 step oxidation process
releases 1 CO
2
(count the carbons!)
reduces 2 NAD 2 NADH (moves e
-
)
produces acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA enters Krebs cycle
Where
does the
CO
2
go?
Exhale!
Pyruvate oxidized to Acetyl CoA
Yield = 2C sugar + NADH + CO
2
reduction

oxidation

Coenzyme A

Pyruvate

Acetyl CoA

C-C-C
C-C
CO
2

NAD
+

2 x [ ]
Krebs cycle
aka Citric Acid Cycle
in mitochondrial matrix
8 step pathway
each catalyzed by specific enzyme
step-wise catabolism of 6C citrate molecule
Evolved later than glycolysis
does that make evolutionary sense?
bacteria 3.5 billion years ago (glycolysis)
free O
2
2.7 billion years ago (photosynthesis)
eukaryotes 1.5 billion years ago (aerobic
respiration = organelles mitochondria)
1937 | 1953
Hans Krebs
1900-1981
4C
6C
4C
4C
4C
2C
6C
5C
4C
CO
2

CO
2

citrate

acetyl CoA

Count the carbons!

3C
pyruvate

x 2
oxidation
of sugars
This happens
twice for each
glucose
molecule
4C
6C
4C
4C
4C
2C
6C
5C
4C
CO
2

CO
2

citrate

acetyl CoA

Count the electron carriers!

3C
pyruvate

reduction
of electron
carriers
This happens
twice for each
glucose
molecule
x2
CO
2

NADH
NADH
NADH
NADH
FADH
2

ATP
So we fully
oxidized
glucose
C
6
H
12
O
6

CO
2

& ended up
with 4 ATP!
Whassup?

Whats the
point?
Krebs cycle
produces large
quantities of
electron carriers
NADH
FADH
2

go to Electron
Transport Chain
Electron Carriers = Hydrogen Carriers

Whats so
important about
electron carriers?
H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+
H
+

H
+

ATP
ADP
+ P
i

Energy accounting of Krebs cycle
Net gain = 2 ATP
= 8 NADH + 2 FADH
2

1 ADP 1 ATP
ATP
2x
4 NAD + 1 FAD 4 NADH + 1 FADH
2

pyruvate CO
2
3C 3x 1C
Value of Krebs cycle?
If the yield is only 2 ATP then how was
the Krebs cycle an adaptation?
value of NADH & FADH
2

electron carriers & H carriers
reduced molecules move electrons
reduced molecules move H
+
ions
to be used in the Electron Transport Chain
like $$
in the
bank
ATP accounting so far
Glycolysis 2 ATP
Krebs cycle 2 ATP
Life takes a lot of energy to run, need to
extract more energy than 4 ATP!
Whats the
point?
A working muscle recycles over
10 million ATPs per second
Theres got to be a better way!
There is a better way!
Electron Transport Chain
series of molecules built into inner
mitochondrial membrane
along cristae
transport proteins & enzymes
transport of electrons down ETC linked to
pumping of H
+
to create H
+
gradient
yields ~34 ATP from 1 glucose!
only in presence of O
2
(aerobic respiration)
O
2

That
sounds more
like it!
Electron Transport Chain
Intermembrane space
Mitochondrial matrix
Q
C
NADH
dehydrogenase
cytochrome
bc complex
cytochrome c
oxidase complex
Inner
mitochondrial
membrane
G3P
Glycolysis
Krebs cycle
8 NADH
2 FADH
2

Remember the Electron Carriers?
4 NADH
Time to
break open
the bank!
glucose
Electron Transport Chain
intermembrane
space
mitochondrial
matrix
inner
mitochondrial
membrane
NAD
+

Q
C
NADH
H
2
O
H
+

e


2H
+
+ O
2


H
+

H
+

e


FADH
2

1
2
NADH
dehydrogenase
cytochrome
bc complex
cytochrome c
oxidase complex
FAD
e


H
H e- + H
+

NADH NAD
+
+ H
H
p
e
Building proton gradient!
What powers the proton (H
+
) pumps?
H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+
H
+

H
+

ATP
NAD
+

Q
C
NADH
H
2
O
H
+

e


2H
+
+ O
2


H
+
H
+

e


FADH
2

1
2
NADH
dehydrogenase
cytochrome
bc complex
cytochrome c
oxidase complex
FAD
e


Stripping H from Electron Carriers
NADH passes electrons to ETC
H cleaved off NADH & FADH
2

electrons stripped from H atoms H
+
(protons)
electrons passed from one electron carrier to next in
mitochondrial membrane (ETC)
transport proteins in membrane pump H
+
(protons)
across inner membrane to intermembrane space
ADP
+ P
i

TA-DA!!
Moving electrons
do the work!
But what pulls the
electrons down the ETC?
electrons
flow downhill
to O
2

oxidative phosphorylation
O
2

Electrons flow downhill
Electrons move in steps from
carrier to carrier downhill to O
2

each carrier more electronegative
controlled oxidation
controlled release of energy
make ATP
instead of
fire!
H
+

ADP + P
i

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+

H
+
H
+

H
+

We did it!
ATP
Set up a H
+
gradient
Allow the protons
to flow through
ATP synthase
Synthesizes ATP

ADP + P
i
ATP
Are we
there yet?
proton-motive force
Structure of ATP synthase
Head section:it contain two parts, one is coupling factor1,it can
synthesize ATP.the other is F1 inhibitory protein,it can prevent
synthesization of ATP
Stalk section:it can regulate the passage of protons.
basal section:it can allows passage of proton, it allow proton to pass.

The diffusion of ions across a membrane
build up of proton gradient just so H+ could flow
through ATP synthase enzyme to build ATP
Chemiosmosis
Chemiosmosis
links the Electron
Transport Chain
to ATP synthesis
So thats
the point!
Peter Mitchell
Proposed chemiosmotic hypothesis
revolutionary idea at the time
1961 | 1978
1920-1992
proton motive force
taaaddaaa
ATP Synthase
H
+

H
+

O
2

+
Q
C
32
ATP
2
Pyruvate from
cytoplasm
Electron
transport
system
ATP
synthase
H
2
O
CO
2

Krebs
cycle
Intermembrane
space
Inner
mitochondrial
membrane
1. Electrons are harvested
and carried to the transport
system.
2. Electrons
provide energy
to pump protons
across the
membrane.
3. Oxygen joins
with protons to
form water.
2H
+

NADH
NADH
Acetyl-CoA
FADH
2

ATP
4. Protons diffuse back in
down their concentration
gradient, driving the
synthesis of ATP.
Mitochondrial
matrix
2
1
H
+

H
+

O
2

H
+

e
-

e
-

e
-

e
-

Cellular respiration
2 ATP ~2 ATP 2 ATP ~34 ATP
+ + +
GLYCOLYSIS
KREBS
CYCLE
Insert 1 Glucose
2 energy
tokens
(ATP)
2 energy
tokens
32 energy
tokens
ELECTRON
TRANSPORT
CHAIN
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
reactants
products
GLYCOLYSIS glucose
Oxygen Water
2 ATP
2 NADH
2 NADH
6 NADH
2 FADH
2

2 ATP
32 ATP
KREBS
CYCLE
ELECTRON
TRANSPORT
CHAIN
glucose derivatives
carbon dioxide
carbon
dioxide
Summary of cellular
respiration
Where did the glucose come
from?
Where did the O
2
come from?
Where did the CO
2
come from?
Where did the CO
2
go?
Where did the H
2
O come
from?
Where did the ATP come from?
What else is produced that is
not listed
in this equation?
Why do we breathe?
ETC backs up
nothing to pull electrons down chain
NADH & FADH
2
cant unload H
ATP production ceases
cells run out of energy
and you die!
Taking it beyond
What is the final
electron acceptor in
Electron Transport
Chain?
O
2

So what happens if O
2
unavailable?
NAD
+

Q
C
NADH
H
2
O
H
+

e


2H
+
+ O
2


H
+
H
+

e


FADH
2

1
2
NADH
dehydrogenase
cytochrome
bc complex
cytochrome c
oxidase complex
FAD
e


You cannot live on sugar [glucose] alone!
--your Mom
Proteins
Break into AAs
Deaminate
Alanine to pyruvate
Glutamate to
ketoglutarate
Aspartate to oxaloacetate
AAs join the Krebs cycle at
different points
FATS
Degrade into individual fatty acids &
glycerol
Oxidized in matrixenzymes attack
long fatty acid chains and remove 2C
chunks
Entire chain is converted into acetyl-
CoA
Called Beta oxidation
Glycerol is converted into pyruvate.

BIOSYNTHESIS
When there is an excess of intermediates they
can be used to build necessary molecules.
Lipids can be generated from excess acetyl CoA
Glycogen is generated from excess pyruvate
Amino acids are genertated from different
stages of the krebs cycle.

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