K + NO 3 - Ca +2 SO 4 -2 Which ion requires the most energy to move across the membrane, assuming the same concentration gradient for all four? Biological.

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K+

NO3-

Ca+2

SO4-2

Which ion requires the mostenergy to move acrossthe membrane, assuming thesame concentration gradientfor all four?

Biological membranes are electrically polarized, like a battery.

3. G for ion transport

G = zF Em

z is charge on the ion (unitless): K+ = +1, NO3

- = -1, Ca+2 = +2, SO4-2 = -2

other molecules have not net charge

F is Faraday’s constant = 9.65 x 104 J vol-1 mol-1

Em is membrane potential, volts

NO3-

Example: uptake of NO3- against -0.15 volt potentialG = zF Em

G = (-1)x9.65x104 J Volt-1 mol-1 x (-0.15Volt) = 1.45 x 104 J mol-1

= 14.5 kJ mol-1

4. Movement along electrical and concentration gradients

G = zF Em + 2.3 RT log(C2/C1)

note rearrangment as Em = -2.3 RT/zF log(C2/C1)

R = 8.314 J mol-1 K-1

z is charge of soluteF is Faraday’s constant = 9.65 x 104 J vol-1 mol-1 Em is membrane potential, volts

Enzyme kinetics

What are enzymes?

What kinds of molecules are they made of?

What do they do to reaction rates?

How do they work?

What conditions affect the rate of enzyme-catalyzed reactions?

What’s the world’s most abundant enzyme?

reaction rate, V(moles of productper second)

Substrate concentration, S(moles/liter)

Vmax

V

S (substrate concentration)

Vmax

1/2 Vmax

Km

Vmax x S Km + S

V =

Michaelis-Menten equation

Enzyme specificity is not perfect,other molecules can compete for the active site.

“competitive inhibition”

Enzyme structure can be modified by other molecules,reducing enzyme activity.

“non competitive inhibition”

Competitive inhibitor increases Km and does not affect Vmax, but a higher [S] is required to reach Vmax.

Mechanisms1. Competitive inhibitor binds at same active site as

substrate, making less enzyme available to catalyze E+S reaction.

2. Competitive inhibitor binds at another site on enzyme, causing a conformational change in active site that reduces affinity for the primary substrate. “allosteric inhibitor”.

Substrate concentration

With competitiveinhibitor

No inhibitor

“Rubisco”

ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase

RuBP + CO2 -----> 3PGA

Rubisco

The most important enzyme in the world?

Conditions affecting enzyme activity.

1. pHEnzymes have an optimum pH at which activity is maximum,with sharp declines in activity at lower and higher pH.

pH affects enzyme activity by altering ionization state of active site or byaffecting the 3-D conformation of the active site.

2. TemperatureEnzyme activity has temp. optimum; sharp declines at lower and higher temp..

Reaction rates initially increase with temperature

Enzyme activity decreases at temperatures high enough to cause“denaturation; unfolding of protein structure and loss of proper conformation for catalysis.

Water and plant cells (chapter 3)

I. Background on water in plants

II. The properties of water

III. Understanding the direction of water movement: Water potential

I. Water

• Plant cells are mostly water; 80 - 95% of the mass of growing cells, (less in wood and seeds)

• Living cells must maintain a positive water pressure, or “turgor” to growand function properly.

• Plants lose large quantities of water in transpiration, the evaporation from the interior of leaves through the stomata.

Terrestrial primary productivity is strongly dependent on water availability.

Soil particles can bind water tightly, making it difficult for plant roots to absorb it. How does creosote bush survive?

Mangroves are rooted in sea waterAre they water stressed? of S

Water passes easily through biological membranes, particularly through aquaporins - low resistance pores.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Stomata

II. The properties of water Polar molecule that forms hydrogen bonds. Polar molecule that forms hydrogen bonds.

1) good solvent1) good solvent2) cohesive properties - attraction to like molecules2) cohesive properties - attraction to like molecules3) adhesive properties - attraction to unlike molecules3) adhesive properties - attraction to unlike molecules

Cohesion of water molecules gives water high tensile strength - it can withstand high tension

(negative pressure) without shearing apart.

Water in the xylem is under negative pressure (more on this in Chapter 4)

Properties of water, continued•Cohesion is the attraction of like molecules (H2O here) that gives water its tensile strength.

•Adhesion is the attraction of unlike molecules. Water adheres to cell walls, soil particles, glass tubes, etc. Adhesion explains capillarity & surface tension.

Water’s thermal properties

•High specific heat = 4.18 kJ kg-1 0C-1 Why don’t saguaros overheat?

•High latent heat of vaporization44 kJ mol-1 or 2.44 kJ g-1

Leaves are like swamp coolers!

What’s a sling psychrometer?

III. What factors determine the direction of water movement (through the soil, between cells, from roots to leaves, from leaves into air)?

How can we describe these factors in a consistent way?

We’ll use the concept of water potential.

“Potential” indicates the energetic state.

What factors determine the direction of water movement?

1. Gravity

2. Pressure

3. Concentration

GravityWater flows downward if it can.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

Height, meters

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

but it flows upwardin trees.

How does this work?

How do we relate the energetic statusof water to height?

PressureWater moves from regions of higher to lower pressure

garden hosestrawthrough xylem of plants

Water moves from higher to lower pressure

Water pressures in plant cells can be positive (turgor), or negative, (tension).

Living cells ≥ 0 MPa to ≈ +3 MPa)Dead xylem cells ≤ 0 MPa, to as low as -12 MPa.

3) ConcentrationWater moves by diffusion from regions of higher to lower water concentration.

Solutes added to pure water dilute the water concentration.

Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectivelypermeable membrane from a region of higher to lower water concentration.

How does reverse osmosis purify water?

Solutes reduce the concentration of water. Think of the effect of solutes in terms of water concentration.

How can we bring together the influences of gravity, pressure, and solutes in understanding thestatus of water?

Is there a consistent set of units?

The concept of water potential, , brings together the influences of gravity, pressure, and concentration (solutes) in describing the energy state of water and the direction of water movement.

The water potential equation:

WWSSPPgg

WW = total water potential = total water potentialSS = solute potential = solute potential

P P = pressure potential = pressure potentialgg = gravitational potential = gravitational potential

All units will be pressure, pascals, Pa.MPa is megapascal, 106 Pa

We’ve been talking about the “energy state” of water, but now water potential in terms of pressure.

What’s the relationship?

Recall from before:

pressure x volume = energyPa x m3 = joules

pressure = energy/volume

The reference condition for water potential thinking:

Pure water (S= 0), at ground level (g = 0) and atmospheric pressure (P = 0) has a total water potential, W, of 0 MPa.

Water tends to move spontaneously from regions of higher to lower values of

Because all of the components of W have unitsof pressure (Pa), this is the same as saying water tends to move from regions of higher to lower total pressure.

W1

W2

10 --------> 2 MPa 0 --------> -2 MPa -1 --------> -4 MPa

-2 ---------> -1 MPa NO!

Water tends to move spontaneously from regions of higher to lower values of

Because all of the components of W have unitsof pressure (Pa), this is the same as saying water tends to move from regions of higher to lower total pressure.

W1

W2

10 --------> 2 MPa 0 --------> -2 MPa -1 --------> -4 MPa

-2 ---------> -1 MPa NO!

WWSSPPgg

How do we express S, P, & g in units of pressure?

S, the solute pressure or solute potential.

S = -RTCS

Where R is the gas constant, T is Kelvin temp.,and CS is the solute concentration.

R = 0.008314 MPa liters oK-1 mol-1

Cs = mol liter-1

Bottom line: adding solutes to water decreases the solute potential.

S = -RTCS

What is the solute (osmotic) potential of sea water?assume 25 oC or 298 oK

CS = 1.15 mole liter-1 of Na+ + Cl- + other ions

S = (-0.008314MPa liter oK-1 mol-1)(298oK)(1.15 mol liter-1)

S = -2.84 MPa

WWSSPPgg

The pressure potential P is just what we wouldmeasure with a pressure gauge.

WWSSPPgg

How do we calculate the gravitational potential?

g = gh

g = density x g x height

Dimensional analysis= density x g x height= kg m-3 x m s-2 x m

= N m-2

= pressure, Pa

Example: what is gravitational potential of water at 100 m in a tree?

g = 1000 kg m-3 x 9.8 m s-2 x 100m

= 9.8 x 105 Pa or 0.98 MPa

So, to hold water at that height, there must be a counteracting negative pressure of at least -0.98 MPa in the xylem

What do various values of W mean for plant function?

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