CHAP 5-7
Adenine Triphosphate
*ATP* Energy carrying molecule
Chemiosmosis
*Aerobic Respiration* Prokaryotic cells: Plasma membrane. Eukaryotic cells: Mitochondrial membrane This is the proton pump.
Electron Transport Chain
*Aerobic Respiration* Carrier molecules Release of energy by Chemiosmoiss Oxidative Phosphorylation= ATP H2O is produced as well. O2 is the final electron acceptor 38 TOTAL ATP
Krebs Cycle; Citric Acid cycle
*Aerobic Respiration* Pyruvic acid (from glycolysis) is modified to form Acetyl-CoA. NADH and FADH2 (reduced coenzymes) products of krebs cycle. Energy is transferred to ATP in ETC
Hypotonic
*lysis* More solutes inside the cell (low) More water outside (high) Water moves into cell.
Hypertonic
*plasmolysis* More Solutes outside of the cell.(L) More water inside cell. (High ) Water moves outside. Water moves from high to low
Requirments for ATP production
1. Energy sources (electron donors) 2. Electron carriers 3. Final electron acceptors The donation of electrons occurs visa oxidation reduction reactions.
Respiration: Stages of carbohydrate catabolism
1. Glycolysis 2. Krebs cycle 3. Electron transport chain
Of Biofilms 1. Cooperation 2. Circulation 3. Exchange genetic information 4. Shelter bacteria from harmful environmental factors OVER ALL IMPACT
1. heterogeneous populaiton, each with different metabolic pathways 2. Share nutrients, exchange toxic wastes 3. Conjugation Desiccation, UV rays, antibiotics, host immune systems Cause 70% of all infections
Aerobic Respiration Equiv's NADH oxidized via ETC= ___ ATP FADH2 = _____ ATP The final electron acceptor in ETC is what?
3 Molecules of ATP 2 Molecules of ATP Oxygen O2
Acidophiles
> Acidic Environments > Buffer must be added > pump protons out of intercellular space to keep cytoplasm at neural PH
Substrate- level Phosphorylation
ADP to ATP Addition of PO4- P+ADP= ATP Catabolism
Photophosphorylation
ADP to ATP by light energy: light trapping photosythetic cells. Chlorophyll (light Energy) though ETC= ATP. *Chemiosmosis*
Light-independent (dark) reactions
ATP and NADPH are used to reduce CO2 to sugar via the calvin-Benson cycle. *Stage Two of photosynthesis*
Noncompetitive inhibitors
Allosteric site bond Changes the shape of enzyme Block substrate Prevents cell form making more of a substance that it no longer needs.
Differential media
Allow distinguishing of colonies of indifferent microbes on the same plate
Noncomptitive inhibitors: regulates production
Amino acids Vitamins purine and pyrimides
Quorum sensing
BIOFILMS Density-dependent microbial communication The number of family members Gram-negative organisms
Denaturation
Breakage of nonequivalent bonds in structure, resulting in loss of tertiary structure and thus catalytic ability
Catabolism
Breaks down complex molecules. *Exergonic reaction*: releases energy by oxidation of molecules.
Chemical requirements for growth
Carbon Nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorous Trace elements Oxygen Organic growth factors
Lipid catabolism
Catabolism of FATS *Lipase:* Extracellular enzyme that breaks down lipids into glycerol & fatty acid components. Glycerol enters glycolysis and the Krebs cycle Oxidation of glycerol & fatty acids= KREBS
Fermentation: Carbohydrate catabolism
Catabolism: 1. Cellular respiration 2. Fermentation
Ribozymes
Catalysis of biochemical reactions is not limited to protein enzymes. *RNA that function as a catalysts*
Metabolic reactions organized into pathways and cycles by what?
Catalyzed by enzymes and ribozymes
Where does photosynthesis take place in Eukaryotic Cells?
Chloroplasts
Psychrophiles
Cold-loving Deep ocean, certain polar regions *0'c optimal 15'c*
Biofilms
Complex, dynamic slime-enclosed microbial communities. Function as a biological system or multicellular organism. Grow on surfaces Involved in 70% of infections
Chemical Requirements: Nitrogen
Component of proteins, DNA, RNA, and ATP.
Reducing media
Contain chemicals (sodium thioglycolate) that combine O2 to deplete it.
Function of Enzymes
Control of enzyme synthesis Control of enzyme activity # total vs active enzymes Factors influencing activity: Temp, pH, Substrate concentration, inhibitors
During what reaction does ATP store energy?
During the endergonic reaction
Krebs cycle
Oxygen needed Mitochondria >Substrate-level phosphorylation= 4 ATP. > NAD+ & FAD= CO2 *Product:* 6 NADH, 2 ATP, FADH2=2, and CO2.
Entner-Doudoroff pathway
Produces 2 NADPH and 1 ATP/Glucose. *additional glycolysis pathway*
Protein Catabolism
Proteases & peptidases: protein into amino acids. Enter as intermediates of the Krebs cycle
Aponenzyme
Protein portion *protein portion inactive*
Isomerase
Rearrangement of atoms with a molecule
Metabolic pathways of Energy production
Redox reactions catalyzed by specific enzymes. 1. Electron transfer form compound to compound 2. Controlled extraction of energy from organic compounds for storage in the chemical form of ATP.
Metabolism
Refers to the sum of all chemical reactions within a living organism. Provides energy and creates substances necessary to sustain life.
Psychrotrophs
Refrigerator temp. 0'c Optimal 20-30'C
Fermentation (anaerobic respiration)
Releases energy form the oxidation of organic molecules. Pyruvate to Lactic acids or *alcohols* No oxygen required. No Krebs or ETC
Obligate aerobes Facultative anaerobes Obligate anaerobes Aerotolerant anaerobes Microaerophiles
Require Oxygen life can use oxygen unable to use tolerate but no use require oxygen, low concentration lower than air
Lipid Biosynthesis
Role: Structural components of biological membranes.
Selective and differential media
Selective component
Chemical Requirements: Carbon
Structural backbone of organic molecules
Enzyme-substrate complex
Substrate attaches to enzyme active site. Then produces a new product.
Selective Media
Suppress unwanted microbes and encourage desired microbes. Contain inhibitors to suppress growth
Physical requirements for growth
Temperature pH Osmotic pressure
Factors that influence enzymatic activity
Temperature, pH, substrate concentration.
Amino acid and protein biosynthesis: use in what cycle?
The Krebs cycle is one important source of the precursors for Amino Acid synthesis. Use of amine group.
The removal of electrons occurs via what reaction? In ATP production
oxidation redaction reactions
Amphibiolic pathways
pathways that function both anabolism and catabolism. common intermediates and shared enzymes
Collision Theory
relates to factors that influence chemical reactions when atoms, ions, and molecules collide.
Extreme or borgate halophiles
require high osmotic pressure (high salt) 30%
Catalysts
speed up chemical reactions without being permanently altered (neither consumed nor changed)
Transferase
transfer functional groups
Phototrophs
Use light energy as primary energy source Oxygenic: water reduces carbon dioxide Anoxygenic : does not produce O2
Chemical Requirements: Phosphorus
Used in DNA, RNA, and ATP
Chemical Requirements: Sulfur
Used in amino acids, and vitamins. Most bacteria decompose protein for the sulfur source
Oxygen toxicity
Used in phagolysome of phagocytes
Anabolism
Uses energy and building blocks to build complex molecules. *Endergonic reaction* Uses energy to synthesize macromolecules that make up the cell.
Holoenzyme
apoenxyme plus cofactor *whole enzyme active*
Enzymes
biological catalysts
Organic Growth Factors
essential organic compound that must be obtained form the environment Vitamins: Coenzymes Amino Acids: protein synthesis Purine and Pyrimidines: Nucleic acid synth.
Chemically defined media
exact chemical composition= autotrophic bacteria
Competitive inhibitors
fill the active site. Blocks the substrate. No substrate= slow to no reaction.
Anaerobic Respiration
inorganic molecule (no C) other than O2 functions as final acceptor.
Inoculum
introduction of microbes into a medium
Ligase
joining of molecules; usually uses ATp
Turnover number
maximum number of substrate molecules an enzyme converts to a product per second
Capnophiles
microbes that require high CO2 conditions candle Jar
Mesophiles
moderate-Temp- loving Most common MO *25'C to 40'C but 37' c (Host temp)*
Isotonic
no net moment of H2O
Culture Media
nutrients prepared for microbial growth
Chemotrophs
organic or inorganic compounds as their primary energy source
Components of a complete active enzyme
coenzyme + cofactor attached to Apoenzyme.
Agar
complex polysaccharide isolated from marine algae
Trace Elements
Mineral elements Cofactors essential for The function of enzymes Usually naturally present in H2O
Allosteric inhibition
Noncompetitive inhibitor
Cofactor
Nonprotien component Can disassociate to transfer chemical groups (vitamins) Electron carriers *nonprotein portion activator*
Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
Electron exchange Reduction: Gain E Oxidation: Loss E *Redox: Important in catabolism*
Oxidative phosphorylation
Electron transport chain (System) Reduction & oxidation. Produce ATP E from organic compound to ETC.
Why are redox reactions so important in energy conversion?
Electrons move from electron donor (loses energy) to electron acceptor (gains energy)
Photoautotrophy
Energy Source: Light Carbon Source: CO2
Photohetrotroph
Energy Source: Light Carbon Source: Organic Compounds
Chemoheterotroph
Energy source: Chemical Carbon Source: Organic compounds
Chemoautotroph
Energy source: Inorganic chemicals Carbon Source: Co2
-ase
Enzyme
Hydrolase
Enzyme for Hydrolysis
oxidoredctase
Enzyme for oxidaton-reduciton reactions
Complex media
Extracts digests of yeast, meat, or plants; chemical composition varies batch to batch- heterotrophs.
Hyper-thermopiles
Extreme thermophiles *80'c and Above*. Sulfur important in their metabolic activity
Aerobic Respiration
Final electron acceptor Krebs cycle & ETC Oxygen needed.
Reaction Rate
Frequency of collisions containing enough energy to bring about a chemical reaction
Glycolysis
Glucose breakdown No oxygen needed Cytoplasm Total: 2 ATP 2 NADH 2 pyruvate= *Acetyl CoA * 1st carbohydrate catabolism pathway*
Thermophiles
Heat-loving Endospores: heat resistant Hot springs, hydrothermal vents. *50'c to 60'c*
Photosynthesis
Light energy form sun into chemical energy. Light-fueled synthesis of carbohydrate from CO2.
Light-dependent reactions
Light energy into chemical energy. ATP= photophosphorylation NADPH= electrons donated for biosynthesis.
Chemical Requirements
Macroelements Trace elements organic growth factors SCHNOP
Culture
Microbes growing in or on a culture medium.