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Bioenergetics. Components of a typical cell Cellular Structures Cell membrane –semi-permeable –encloses internal components of cell –regulates flux of.

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Presentation on theme: "Bioenergetics. Components of a typical cell Cellular Structures Cell membrane –semi-permeable –encloses internal components of cell –regulates flux of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bioenergetics

2 Components of a typical cell

3 Cellular Structures Cell membrane –semi-permeable –encloses internal components of cell –regulates flux of metabolites and nutrients Nucleus –contains genetic material (DNA) –regulates protein production Cytoplasm –fluid portion of the cell which contains organelles, enzymes etc.

4 Mitochondria “power station” for the cell All “aerobic” respiration takes place within the mitochondria “anaerobic” glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm

5 ATP Generation The purpose of glycolysis and aerobic respiration is to produce ATP All of the systems we study in Exercise Physiology relate to ATP production

6 ATP as universal energy donor that drives energy needs of cells

7 Breakdown of glucose to CO2 + H2O via cellular oxidation releases energy (Big Picture)

8 The First Step

9 Glycolysis: part 1

10 glycolysis: part 2

11 Substrate Level Phosphorylation

12 Production of Lactate

13 Fate of Glucose (Glycolysis) glucose is broken down to pyruvate pyruvate can then enter the Krebs Cycle (aerobic) or pyruvate can form lactate (lactic acid) –anaerobic, feel the burn

14 The Krebs Cycle

15 pyruvate enters the Krebs from glycolysis fatty acids also enter the Krebs cycle together pyruvate and fatty acids drive the Krebs to produce a lot of ATP

16 Krebs in Detail

17 Electrons enter respiratory chain from glycolysis and Krebs

18 Electron transport

19 Electron transport 1

20 Electron transport 2

21 Chemiosmotic theory of aerobic ATP production

22 Movement of protons across membrane and electrons along ETC

23 A high proton gradient enables ATP to be generated

24 Movement of protons through ATPase generates ATP

25 ATP tally from breakdown of 1 glucose molecule

26 Putting it together Glycolysis occurs in the cytosol Glycolysis feeds the Krebs cycle Krebs occurs in the mitochondria

27 Energy Transformation Exergonic vs. endergonic rxns –exergonic produces energy –endergonic requires energy input Coupled rxns –by coupling exergonic rxn, energy can run endergonic rxn

28 Coupling exergonic and endergonic reactions

29

30 The energy systems Anaerobic vs aerobic systems Anaerobic (non-oxidative) –ATP-PC (Phosphocreatine or phosphagen) PC + ADP => ATP + C –Glycolysis breakdown of glucose to form 2 pyruvate or lactate Aerobic –Krebs Cycle (TCA or oxidative phosphorylation)

31 The Phosphocreatine (PC) System

32

33 Phosphogen Reactions PCr + ADP + H + ATP + Cr Creatine Kinase ADP + ADP ATP + AMP Adenylate Kinase Determines Energy State of Cell –Hi [ATP] = lo [ADP],[ AMP], [Pi] –Low [ATP]= Hi [ADP, [AMP], [Pi]

34 Phosphagen System as Bioenergetic Regulator Phosphagen system produces ATP at high rate to maintain energy state Results in metabolites (AMP, Pi, ADP) which stimulate metabolism Elevations in AMP and decrease in [ATP]/[ADP] ratio stimulate metabolism

35 Enzymes –necessary for almost all biological processes –lower Energy of Activation –work in a “lock and key” type of mechanism –very sensitive to temperature and pH remember body temp regulated in narrow range

36 Enzymes catalyze reactions by lowering energy of activation

37 Lock and Key model of enzyme action

38 Take Home Message enzymes catalyze reactions by bringing the reactants into close proximity this means less energy is required to activate the reaction

39 Fuels for Exercise Carbohydrates Fats Proteins

40 Carbohydrates-”A quick fix” Simple sugars –glucose, fructose, sucrose, maltose Complex carbs (polysaccharides) –starch, cellulose, glycogen –storage form of glucose is glycogen Glycogenolysis –process by which glycogen is broken down into glucose for use by the body

41 Fats-”Energy for the long haul” More efficient storage form of energy than CHO (9 kcal/gram vs 4 kcal/gram) Kinds of fats –fatty acids, triglycerides, phospholipids, steroids Fatty acids and triglycerides are used for energy Phospholipids and steroids are used for structural and regulatory purposes

42 Proteins-”The building blocks” Composed of sub-units called amino acids Primarily used for structural purposes (muscle tissue, tendons, ligaments) Also serve as enzymes Can be used for energy (4 kcal/gram), but not readily

43 Metabolism of Proteins, Carbohydrates and Fats

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