micro ch 6
NADP+
NAD phosphate
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
NAD+
fermentation
provides a solution to the problem of cells that cannot respire, but it results in only the partial oxidation of glucose
transition step
removes CO2, generates reducing power, and joins the resulting acetyl group to a compound called coenzyme A, forming acetyl-CoA
Etner-Doudoroff pathway
some bacteria have this pathway instead of or in addition to glycolysis
cofactor
some enzymes act with the assistance of a non-protein component called this
reactants
starting compounds
potential energy
stored energy
oxidative phosphorylation
synthesis of ATP using the energy of a proton motive force created by harvesting chemical energy
photophosphorylation
synthesis of ATP using the energy of a proton motive force created by harvesting radiant energy
substrate-level phosphorylation
synthesis of ATP using the energy released in an exergonic (energy-releasing) chemical reaction
reducing power
the cell's reserve of H atoms, these are used to reduce metabolic intermediates and thereby drive subsequent steps in cellluar synthesis. can also be used to generate ATP. it is created in many dehydrogenation reactions that occur in catabolic pathway
affinity
the chemical attraction
terminal electron acceptor
the compound at the end of an electron chain. In aerobic respiration, it is oxygen. By accepting electrons from the electron transport chain, the oxygen is reduced to water
feedback inhibition
the end product of a given biosynthetic pathway generally acts as an allosteric inhibitor of the first enzyme of that pathway
free energy
the energy available to do work; the energy that can be released when a chemical bond is broken
adenosine triphosphate
the energy currency of a cell, serving as the ready and immediate donor of free energy
adenosine triphosphate
the energy currency of cells. Hydrolysis of its unstable phosphate bonds can be used to power endergonic (energy-consuming) reactions
activation energy
the energy it takes to initiate a chemical reaction
end product
the final product of a reaction
proton motive force
the form of energy that results form the electrochemical gradient established as protons are expelled from the cell
competitive inhibition
the inhibitor binds to the active site of the enzyme, obstructing access of the substrate to that site
reduced
the molecule that gains electrons becomes this
oxidized
the molecule that loses electrons becomes this
glycolysis
the most common pathway that initiates the breakdown of sugars
metabolism
the sum total of chemical reactions used for biosynthetic and energy-harvesting processes
high-energy phosphate bonds
there is a relatively high amount of free energy released when the bonds between the phosphate groups are hydrolyzed, so they are called this
investment or preparatory phase
this consumes energy because two different steps transfer a high-energy phosphate group to the 6-carbon sugar
tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle), Krebs cycle, or citric acid cycle
this initiates a series of oxidations that result in the release of two molecules of CO2. For every acetyl-CoA that enters this, the cyclic pathway turns once. It must turn twice to complete the oxidation of one molecule of glucose
pay-off phase
this oxidizes and rearranges the 3-carbon molecules to form pyruvate, generating 1 NADH and 2 ATP
central metabolic pathways
three key metabolic pathways that are used to gradually oxidize glucose, the preferred energy source of many cells, completely to CO2
anaerobic respiration
uses a molecule other than O2 as a terminal electron acceptor
substrate-level phosphorylation
uses the chemical energy released in an exergonic reaction to add Pi to ADP
respiration
uses the reducing power accumulated in glycolysis, the transition step, and the TCA cycle to generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylation
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for phosphoenolpyruvate
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for pyruvate
pentose phosphate cycle
catabolic pathway for ribose 5-phosphate
TCA cycle
catabolic pathway for α-ketoglutarate
terminal electron acceptor
chemical such as O2 that is ultimately reduced as a consequence of fermentation or respiration
flavin adenine dinucleotide
FAD
Buchner
a German chemist, who showed that crushed yeast cells could convert yeast cells could convert sugar to ethanol and CO2
enzyme
a protein that functions as a catalyst, speeding up a biological reaction
hydrogenation
a reduction reaction in which an electron and an accompanying proton are added
active or catalytic site
a relatively small crevice on the surface of the enzyme
allosteric site
a separate site for binding
metabolic pathway
a series of sequential chemical reactions that metabolic processes often occur as
electron carrier
a specific molecule where electrons are temporarily transferred to after they are removed from the energy source
enzyme-substrate complex
a temporary intermediate resulting from the induced fit
pentose phosphate pathway
also breaks down in glucose, but its primary role in metabolism is the production of components used in biosynthesis, including reducing power in the form of NADPH and precursor metabolites
dehydrogenation
an oxidation reaction in which an electron and an accompanying proton are removed is called this
protein (the amino acids cysteine, glycine, and serine)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of 3-phosphoglycerate
lipids (fatty acids)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of Acetyl-CoA
lipids (glycerol component)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of dihydroxyacetone phosphate
protein (the amino acids phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tyrosine)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of erythrose 4-phosphate
peptidoglycan
anabolism or biosynthetic role of fructose 6-phosphate
lipopolysaccharide
anabolism or biosynthetic role of glucose 6-phosphate
protein (the amino acids aspartate, asparagine, isoleucine, lysine, methionine, and threonine
anabolism or biosynthetic role of oxaloacetate
protein (the amino acids phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tyrosine)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of phosphoenolpyruvate
proteins (the amino acids alanine, leucine, and valine)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of pyruvate
nucleic acids and proteins (the amino acid histidine)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of ribose 5-phosphate
protein (the amino acids arginine, glutamate, glutamine, and proline)
anabolism or biosynthetic role of α-ketoglutarate
biosynthesis
another name for anabolism
Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway
another name for glycolysis
precursor metabolites
are metabolic intermediates produced at specific steps in catabolic pathways that can be used in anabolic pathways
allosteric enzymes
can be controlled, have a binding site that is separate from their active site
adenosine diphosphate
can be viewed as an acceptor of free energy
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for 3-phosphoglycerate
transition step
catabolic pathway for Acetyl-CoA
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for dihydroxyacetone phosphate
pentose phosphate cycle
catabolic pathway for erythrose 4-phosphate
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for fructose 6-phosphate
glycolysis
catabolic pathway for glucose 6-phosphate
TCA cycle
catabolic pathway for oxaloacetate
aerobic respiration
electrons are ultimately passed to molecular oxygen , the terminal electron acceptor, producing water
kinetic energy
energy of motion
electron donor
energy source
enzyme
facilitates each step of a metabolic pathway
products
final compounds
proton motive force
form of energy generated as an electron transport chain moves protons across a membrane, creating a chemiosmotic gradient
biofuels
fuels made from a renewable biological source such as plants and organic waste products
photophosphorylation
generate ATP utilizing radiant energy of the sun to drive the formation of a proton motive force
Electron transport chain
group of membrane-embedded electron carriers that pass electrons from one to another, and, in the process, move protons across the membrane to create a proton motive force
oxidative phosphorylation
harvest the energy of proton motive force to add Pi to ADP
photosynthetic organisms
harvest the energy of sunlight, using it to power the synthesis of organic compounds such as glucose
exergonic
if a reaction releases energy, it is said to be this
endergonic
if a reaction requires an input of energy, it is said to be this
energy
is defined as the capacity to do work
precursor metabolites
metabolic intermediates that can either be used to make the subunits of macromolecules, or be oxidized to generate ATP
fermentation
metabolic process that stops short of oxidizing glucose or other organic compounds completely, using an organic intermediate such as pyruvate or a derivative as a terminal electron acceptor
induced fit
mutual interaction of substrate and enzyme
chemoorganotrophs
obtain energy by degrading organic compounds such as glucose, releasing the energy of their chemical bonds
non-competitive inhibition
occurs when the inhibitor and the substrate act at different sites on the enzyme
oxidation-reduction reactions or redox reactions
one or more electrons are transferred from one substance to another
coenzymes
organic cofactors that act as loosely bound carriers of molecules or electrons
respire
organisms that use respiration are said to do this
amphibolic pathways
pathways that are catabolic, but the precursor metabolites and reducing power they generate can also be diverted for use in biosynthesis
respiration
process that involves transfer of electrons stripped from a chemical energy source to an electron transport chain, generating a proton motive force that is then used to synthesize ATP
catabolism
processes that harvest energy released during the breakdown of compounds such as glucose, using it to synthesize ATP
anabolism
processes that utilize energy stored in ATP to synthesize and assemble the subunits (building blocks) of macromolecules that make up the cell; biosynthesis
intermediates
products that are gradually converted into the final product