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Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration Phosphofructokinase (active v. inactive form)
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Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Feb 23, 2016

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Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration. Phosphofructokinase (active v. inactive form). Big Questions. 1. How are the processes of cellular respiration controlled in the cell? 2. How do control mechanisms operate in the cell to respond to energy constraints of the environment?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Phosphofructokinase(active v. inactive form)

Page 2: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Big Questions

1. How are the processes of cellular respiration controlled in the cell?

2. How do control mechanisms operate in the cell to respond to energy constraints of the environment?

Page 3: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Cellular respiration

Page 4: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Beyond glucose: Other carbohydrates

• Glycolysis accepts a wide range of carbohydrates fuels

polysaccharides glucosehydrolysis

other 6C sugars glucosemodified

ex. starch, glycogen

ex. galactose, fructose

Page 5: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

NH

HC—OH||OH

|—C—

|R

Beyond glucose: Proteins

amino group = waste product

excreted as ammonia, urea,

or uric acid

NH

HC—OH||OH

|—C—

|R

waste glycolysisKrebs cycle

proteins amino acidshydrolysis

2C sugar = carbon skeleton = enters glycolysis or Krebs cycle at different stages

Page 6: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

fatty acids 2C acetyl acetyl Krebs groups coA cycle

Beyond glucose: Fats

3C glycerol

entersglycolysis

as G3P

enterKrebs cycle

as acetyl CoA

2C fatty acids

fats glycerol + fatty acidshydrolysis

glycerol (3C) G3P glycolysis

Page 7: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Carbohydrates vs. Fats

fat

carbohydrate

• Fat generates 2x ATP vs. carbohydrate– more C in gram of fat

• more energy releasing bonds– more O in gram of carbohydrate

• so it’s already partly oxidized• less energy to release

That’s whyit takes so much

to lose a pound a fat!

Page 8: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

• Coordination of chemical processes across whole organism– digestion

• catabolism when organism needs energy or needs raw materials

– synthesis• anabolism when organism

has enough energy & a supply of raw materials

– by regulating enzymes• feedback mechanisms• raw materials stimulate

production• products inhibit further

production

Metabolism

CO2

Page 9: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

• Digestion– digestion of carbohydrates,

fats & proteins• all catabolized through

same pathways• enter at different points

– cell extracts energy from every source

Metabolism

CO2

Cells areversatile &

selfish!

Page 10: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Metabolism

Krebs cycleintermediaries amino

acids

pyruvate glucose

acetyl CoA fatty acids

• Synthesis– enough energy?

build stuff!– cell uses points in glycolysis &

Krebs cycle as links to pathways for synthesis

• run pathways “backwards”– have extra fuel, build

fat!

Cells areversatile &

thrifty!

Page 11: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

coenzyme Aacetyl group

Acetyl coA

ATPFat

CO2

Protein

Lipid

NADHNAD+

Pyruvate

Glycolysis Glucose

Krebscycle

ETC

Glycolysis

Pyruvateoxidation

Central Role of Acetyl CoA• Acetyl CoA is central

to both energy production & biomolecule synthesis

• Depending on organism’s need– build ATP

• immediate use– build fat

• stored energy

Page 12: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

2006-2007

Control of Respiration

Feedback Control

Page 13: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Feedback Inhibition

• Regulation & coordination of production– final product is inhibitor of earlier step

• allosteric inhibitor of earlier enzyme– no unnecessary accumulation of product – production is self-limiting

A B C D E F G

allosteric inhibitor of enzyme 1

enzyme1

enzyme2

enzyme3

enzyme4

enzyme

5

enzyme6

X

Page 14: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Respond to cell’s needs

Why is this regulation important?Balancing act: availability of raw materials vs. energy demands vs. synthesis

• Key point of control– phosphofructokinase

• allosteric regulation of enzyme

– why here?“can’t turn back” step before splitting glucose

• AMP & ADP stimulate• ATP & citrate

Page 15: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

A Metabolic economy• Basic principles of supply & demand regulate metabolic

economy– balance the supply of raw materials with the products

produced – these molecules become feedback regulators

• they control enzymes at strategic points in glycolysis & Krebs cycle

– levels of AMP, ADP, ATP» regulation by final products & raw materials

– levels of intermediates compounds in pathways » regulation of earlier steps in pathways

– levels of other biomolecules in body» regulates rate of siphoning off to synthesis

pathways

Page 16: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

ATPFat

Protein

Lipid

Glucose

Krebscycle

ETC

Glycolysis

Pyruvateoxidation

Pyruvate

GlycolysisIt’s a Balancing Act

• Balancing synthesiswith availability of both energy & raw materials is essential for survival!– do it well & you

survive longer– you survive longer &

you have more offspring– you have more offspring &

you get to “take over the world”

Page 17: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Got the energy…Ask Questions!!

Page 18: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

Review Questions

Page 19: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

1. Glycolysis does not continue if:A. There is no oxygen presentB. NADH is not oxidizedC. FADH is not reducedD. There is excess glucoseE. There is excess CO2

Page 20: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

2. All of the following can serve as the starting material for respiration EXCEPT:

A. GlucoseB. Amino AcidsC. Tri-glyceridesD. StarchE. ATP

Page 21: Beyond Glucose & Control of Respiration

3. You are researching starvation. Which of the following do you hypothesize to be the most likely order of digestion of classes of macromolecules in starving animals?

A. Carbohydrates ->proteins ->lipidsB. Lipids ->carbohydrates ->proteinsC. Carbohydrates ->lipids ->proteinsD. Proteins ->lipids ->carbohydrates

Explain your reasoning.