The Physiology of the Cell
Energy/Laws of Thermodynamics
- Two states of energy
- kinetic-energy of motion
- potential-stored energy
- First law of thermodynamics
Energy cannot be created or destroyed.
- Second law of thermodynamics
A closed system moves towards increasing disorder
(entrophy). Bear
in mind that living organisms are open systems, not closed systems.
- free energy
- reactions in cells
- exergonic- release free energy (pg. 63 - diagram)
- endergonic-require addition of free energy (pg.
63 - diagram)
The role of enzymes
Enzymes are chemical substances that accelerate reaction rates.
The nature of enzymes
- cofactors-nonprotein groups that work with enzymes to
do their work
- coenzymes-organic cofactors
Action of enzymes
- substrate-the molecule whose action the enzyme
catalizes
- ES complex (fig. 5-3C)
Specificity of enzymes
Enzymes are highly specific. In other words, there must
be a precise molecular
fit between the enzyme and substrate. Also, one enzyme usually
catalizes only one reaction.
- catabolic reaction-degrades proteins into amino acids
- anabolic reaction-rebuilds amino acids into proteins
Chemical energy (ATP; fig. 5-5 & 5-6)
- coupled reaction-reaction that requires a combination of
an energy-requiring reaction with an energy-yielding reaction (fig.
5-7).
Cell respiration (fig. 5-9)
- electron transport
- redox reaction (fig. 5-8)
- aerobic vs anaerobic
metabolism
- glycolysis (fig. 5-10)
- DYI Glycolysis
- pyruvic acid = pyruvate
(fig. 5-15)
- acetyl Co A (fig. 5-11)
- Kreb cycle: (also called TCA and citric acid cycle)
degradation 2 carbon acetyl group of acetyl coenzyme A.
- electron transport chain; cytoplasm (mitochondria)
(mitochondria)
(oxidative phosphorylation (fig. 5-13)
- amount of ATP/glucose molecule
(tab. 5-1)
- anaerobic glycolysis (fig. 5-15)
- alcoholic fermentation
- oxygen debt
Lipid metabolism
How fatty acids are broken down? See fig. 5-16.
Protein metabolism
How amino acids are
metabolized? Amino acid metabolism is complex. See fig. 5-17.
Once you have completed the lesson, you should go to Assignment 5-1.
E-mail Sylvester Allred at
Syl.Allred@nau.edu
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Northern Arizona University
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED