Chapter 7 (How Cells Harvest Energy)

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Zarthius  on September 29, 2010

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biology 110

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Chapter 7 (How Cells Harvest Energy)

Autotrophs
Organisms that harvest abiotic energy and store it in organic molecules
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Autotrophs Organisms that harvest abiotic energy and store it in organic molecules
Heterotrophs Organisms that harvest energy in organic compounds that the autotrophs produce, using them as food. (Depend on autotrophs)
Cellular respiration All cells harvest energy by breaking bonds and shifting electrons from one molecule to another. (The process by which energy is harvested - the oxidation of organic compounds to extract energy from chemical bonds)
Photoautotrophs Autotrophs that harvest abiotic chemicals.
Chemoautotrophs Autotrophs that harvest abiotic chemicals.
Dehydrogenations Electrons lost are accompanied by protons so that what is really lost is a hydrogen atom, not just an electron.
Nicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide (NAD+) An electron acceptor in redox reactions, accepts electrons and a proton to form NADH.
Aerobic respiration Cellular respiration in which the final acceptor of electrons is oxygen.
Anaerobic respiration Cellular respiration in which the final acceptor of electrons is an inorganic molecule other than oxygen.
Fermentation Cellular respiration in which the final acceptor of electrons is an organic molecule. It is the process that recycles NAD+, the electron acceptor that allows glycolysis to proceed.
Equation of cellular respiration C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (heat and ATP)
Electron transport chain Electron carriers located in the mitochondrial inner membrane.
Substrate-level phosphorylation ATP is formed by transferring a phosphate group directly to ADP from a phosphate-bearing intermediate, or substrate. E.g.: glycolysis
Oxidative phosphorylation ATP is synthesized by the enzyme ATP synthase, using energy from a proton (H+) gradient. ATP then uses energy from the proton gradient to catalyze the reaction:
ADP+ Pi ---> ATP
GlycolysisFirst step of aerobic respiration in which glucose (6C) is broken into pyruvate (two 3C molecules) in a ten step process.
1.) The first half of glycolysis consists of five sequential reactions that convert one molecule of glucose into two molecules of the 3C compound glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P).
Step A: Glucose priming:
Step B: Cleavage and rearrangement:
2.) The second half of glycolysis consists of five more reactions which convert G3P into pyruvate in an energy-yielding process that generates ATP.
Step C:Oxidation
Step D:ATP generation
The Oxidation of Pyruvate to produce Acetyl-CoA Second step of cellular respiration in which Pyruvate (3C) is oxidized to remove a carbon, producing acetyl-CoA (2C), CO2 and NADH. Acetyl-CoA can be converted to: fat (long term energy storage) or ATP (short term energy storage)
The Krebs Cycle The third step of cellularA series of nine reactions that occur in the mitochondria.
2 majour steps
A: Priming: Acetyl-CoA (2C) + oxaloacetate (4C) -> citric acid (6C)
B: Energy extraction: Citrate rearrangement and decarboxylation and regeneration of oxaloacetate
Electron transport chain A series of membrane-associated proteins which harvest energy from electron carriers.
Chemiosmosis The process in which ATP synthase uses the energy of the gradient to catalyze the synthesis of ATP and Pi.
Deamination Process in which proteins are broken down in their constituents and the amino groups are removed from the the amino acids to forms molecules that participate in gycolysis and the Krebs cycle.
B-oxidation Series of reactions in which the last 2 carbons in a fatty acid combine with CoA to form acetyl-CoA, which enters the Krebs cycle. It keeps entering until all of its carbons have been burned.

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