Bioenergetics and Carbohydrate Metabolism PDF
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Uploaded by RetractableNephrite6474
İstanbul Üniversitesi
Caner Geyik, PhD
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This document presents lecture notes on bioenergetics and carbohydrate metabolism. It covers topics such as ATP production, glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and the pentose phosphate pathway, illustrated with diagrams and formulas. The material is appropriate for a university-level biology course.
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Bioenergetics and Carbohydrate Metabolism Caner Geyik, PhD [email protected] Learning Objectives Describe bioenergetics Discuss energetics in metabolic reactions List the ATP production ways List the pathways of glucose inside the cell Describe glyc...
Bioenergetics and Carbohydrate Metabolism Caner Geyik, PhD [email protected] Learning Objectives Describe bioenergetics Discuss energetics in metabolic reactions List the ATP production ways List the pathways of glucose inside the cell Describe glycolysis and gluconeogenesis Explain the pentose phosphate pathway Describe glycogenolysis and glycogenesis Explain citrate cycle and electron transport chain Bioenergetics Bioenergetics : Transfer and utilization of energy in biologic systems Bioenergetics predicts if a process is possible, whereas kinetics measures the reaction rate Molecule 1 Molecule 2 Bioenergetics ΔG = - 20 kcal/mol Energy difference (ΔG): (Final E) – (Initial E) ΔG negative Spontaneous Exergonic Bioenergetics ΔG = 20 kcal/mol Energy difference (ΔG): (Final E) – (Initial E) ΔG positive Nonspontaneous Endergonic Bioenergetics Bioenergetics ΔG01 ΔG02 Net ΔG0 = ΔG01 + ΔG02 + ΔG03 Glucose + ATP → Glucose 6-phosphate + ADP ΔG01 = -4000 cal/mol Glucose 6-phosphate → Fructose 6-phosphate ΔG02 = +400 cal/mol --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Glucose + ATP → Fructose 6-phosphate + ADP ΔG0 = -3600 cal/mol Bioenergetics ATP: Adenosine triphosphate ATP + H2O → ADP + Pİ ΔG0 = -7,3 kcal/mol ATP + H2O → AMP + PPİ ΔG0 = -10,9 kcal/mol ATP production 1) Substrate-level phosphorylation ATP production 2) Oxidative phosphorylation NADH, FADH2: Electron carriers in ATP synthesis Carbohydrate Metabolism Glycogen Glucose 6- Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Phosphate Gluconeogenesis Pentose Phosphate Pathway Ribose 5- Phosphate Glycolysis Energy production ATP (substrate level) NADH (Electron carrier for oxidative ATP production) Provides intermediates for other metabolic pathways Amino acids, lipids, and other carbohydrates can be synthesized from intermediate molecules There are three rate-limiting, regulation steps Single arrows: Regulations Glycolysis Two Stages Investment: Consumes energy, molecules are prepared Harvest: Yields energy by substrate level phosphorylation (ATP), and electron carrier molecules (NADH) - 2 ATP + 4 ATP = 2ATP Hormonal Regulation of Glycolysis Glycolysis – NAD+ Regeneration Fermentation (Lactate or Ethanol) 2 NAD+ 2 NADH O2 absent NADH NAD+ Glucose Pyruvate TCA and ETC O2 present TCA Cycle and Oxidative Phosphorylation TCA Cycle Citrate Cycle Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) Tricarboxylic acid (TCA) Cycle Krebs Cycle Common Name: Citric acid IUPAC Name: 2-Hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid TCA Cycle Glycolysis in cytoplasm TCA in mitochondria Pyruvate should be transported to mitochondria (regulation by compartmentalization) Irreversible synthesis of Acetyl-CoA from pyruvate is a link between glycolysis and TCA cycle TCA Cycle (Acetyl-CoA) Main function of TCA cycle is to harvest the high energy electrons from carbon (Citrate) fuels Electrons are captured as NADH and FADH2 for production of ATP Moreover, precursors needed to synthesize various biomolecules can be obtained from TCA cycle (Biosynthetic role) Oxidative Phosphorylation and ETC Electron Transport Chain Yellow Part Electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 are captured by the system With these electrons, oxygen is reduced to water During this process, ETC- complexes pump H+ to outer membrane Pink Part Positive charge out of the membrane starts a flow into the matrix. ATP is synthetized by the energy of this flow. Youtube ETC https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQmTKxI4Wn4&t=62s ATP Synthesis (Oxidative) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXpzp4RDGJI ETC – Overall Picture NADH enters from Complex I , FADH2 enters from Complex II 1 NADH pumps 3 protons ~2,5 ATP 1 FADH2 pumps 2 protons ~1,5 ATP Energy Gained from 1 mol Glucose (Oxidative State) 1 mol 2 mol +2 NADH 2 mol Glucose Glycolysis Pyruvate PDH Acetyl-CoA +2 ATP +2 NADH Cytoplasm +2 ATP +6 NADH +2 FADH2 Mitochondria Transfer of Cytoplasmic NADH to Mitochondria Malate Aspartate Shuttle NADH can’t enter After a series of reactions NADH is formed inside the mitochondria 1 NADH → 1 NADH Transfer of Cytoplasmic NADH to Mitochondria Glycerol 3-phosphate Shuttle NADH can’t enter After a series of reactions FADH2 is formed inside the mitochondria 1 NADH → 1 FADH2 Energy Gained from 1 mol Glucose (Oxidative State) 1 mol 2 mol +2 NADH 2 mol Glucose Glycolysis Pyruvate PDH Acetyl-CoA +2 ATP +2 NADH Cytoplasm +2 ATP +6 NADH +2 FADH2 TOTAL : 36 or 38 ATP 4 ATP (2 from glycolysis, 2 from TCA) 2 FADH2 (from TCA) = 4 ATP 8 NADH (2 from PDH, 6 from TCA) = 24 ATP Mitochondria 2NADH (glycolysis) = 4 or 6 ATP (depending on shuttle) Carbohydrate Metabolism Glycogen Glucose 6- Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Phosphate Gluconeogenesis Pentose Phosphate Pathway Ribose 5- Phosphate Gluconeogenesis Hexokinase Glucose 6-phosphate Phosphofructokinase- Fructose 1,6- 1 (PFK-1) bisphosphatase PEP carboxykinase Pyruvate kinase Pyruvate carboxylase Carbohydrate Metabolism Glycogen Glucose 6- Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Phosphate Gluconeogenesis Pentose Phosphate Pathway Ribose 5- Phosphate Glycogen Blood glucose can be obtained from three primary sources: Diet Gluconeogenesis Glycogen degradation Dietary intake of glucose is sporadic, not always a reliable source of blood glucose Gluconeogenesis, can provide sustained synthesis of glucose, but it is slow in responding to a falling blood glucose level Therefore, the body has developed mechanisms for storing a supply of glucose in a rapidly mobilized form, namely, glycogen. Glycogen Homopolysaccharide (-D-glucose) Branched-chain Chain (Linear) part -(1,4) Branch part -(1,6) A protein at the center (glycogenin) Glycogen Skeletal Muscle For itself Rapid demand for ATP 2% of total weight Local and fast resource Liver For itself and all body Regulates blood glucose levels 10% of total weight Glycogen Metabolism Glycogen Synthesis Glucose 1-P, needs to be activated by UDP before integration to glycogen UDP- Glucose Degradation Glucose 1-P molecules are cleaved Glucose from the end of the chains 1-Phosphate 1 mol free glucose is obtained from the branching site Glucose Glucose 6-Phosphate Carbohydrate Metabolism Glycogen Glucose 6- Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Phosphate Gluconeogenesis Pentose Phosphate Pathway Ribose 5- Phosphate Pentose Phosphate Pathway Main Products Oxidative Ribose 5-phosphate Reactions (Irreversible) NADPH Non-oxidative Reactions (Reversible) Pentose Phosphate Pathway Oxidative Reactions Glucose 6-P →Ribulose 5-P + CO2 + 2 NADPH Pentose Phosphate Pathway Non-oxidative Reactions Ribose 5-P: Nucleotide and Nucleic acid synthesis Glycolysis intermediates Pentose Phosphate Pathway Nucleic acid synthesis Ribulose 5-P