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Chapter 5 The Working Cell.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 5 The Working Cell."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 5 The Working Cell

2 Energy is the capacity to perform work
ENERGY AND THE CELL Energy is the capacity to perform work All organisms require energy! (“ability to obtain and use energy” was a defining characteristic of living things!) What is Energy?

3 Kinetic energy is the energy of motion
Potential energy is stored energy, which can be converted to kinetic energy. Rollercoaster animation Figure 5.1A–C

4 Chemical reactions either store or release energy

5 Endergonic reactions - absorb energy and yield products rich in potential energy.
Potential energy of molecules Reactants Energy required Products Amount of energy required Figure 5.3A

6 Exergonic reactions - release energy and yield products that contain less potential energy than their reactants Reactants Energy released Products Amount of energy released Potential energy of molecules Figure 5.3B

7 Energy coupling- Uses exergonic reactions to fuel endergonic reactions
Energy coupling- Uses exergonic reactions to fuel endergonic reactions. This is how cells carry out thousands of chemical reactions! (cellular metabolism) Endergonic and exergonic

8 Currency of the cells Energy is like a bank account, with ATP being the “currency” for the cells. You either save $ or you withdraw $! You cells can either store (save $) energy by forming bonds OR release (withdraw $) energy by breaking bonds! Can only do one or the other at any given time!

9 ATP (adenosine triphosphate) powers nearly all forms of cellular work
The energy in an ATP molecule lies in the bonds between its phosphate groups. Phosphate groups ATP Energy P Hydrolysis Adenine Ribose H2O Adenosine diphosphate Adenosine Triphosphate + ADP Figure 5.4A

10 Take off a phosphate; breaks the bond = release of energy.
Phosphorylation = adding a phosphate group to make molecules more reactive by storing energy. ATP Chemical work Mechanical work Transport work P Molecule formed Protein moved Solute transported ADP + Product Reactants Motor protein Membrane protein Solute Take off a phosphate; breaks the bond = release of energy. Add a phosphate; builds a bond = stores/absorbs energy. Animation Figure 5.4B

11 Cellular work can be sustained because ATP is a renewable resource that cells constantly regenerate!
ADP + P Energy for endergonic reactions Energy from exergonic reactions Phosphorylation Hydrolysis Figure 5.4C

12 HOW ENZYMES FUNCTION For a chemical reaction to begin reactants must absorb some energy, called the energy of activation (energy needed to get the reaction going) Enzymes speed up the cell’s chemical reactions by lowering energy barriers. EA barrier Reactants Products 1 2 Enzyme Figure 5.5A

13 Progress of the reaction
A catalyst speeds up a reaction, by decreasing the energy of activation needed to begin a reaction. Reactants EA without enzyme EA with enzyme Net change in energy Products Energy Progress of the reaction Figure 5.5B

14 THEREFORE, ALL ENZYMES are catalysts!

15 An enzymes specific shape determines which chemical reactions it will catalyze.
1 Enzyme available with empty active site Active site Substrate (sucrose) 2 Substrate binds to enzyme with induced fit Enzyme (sucrase) Glucose Fructose H2O 4 Products are released 3 Substrate is converted to products Animation 1 Figure 5.6

16 What affects enzyme activity??
Temperature, salt concentration, and pH influence enzyme activity and can affect its function. DENATURATION!

17 Plasma membrane: selectively permeable; controls the flow of substances into or out of the cell
Phospholipid bilayer: 2 layers of phospholipids; hydrophilic head and 2 hydrophobic tails. CH2 CH3 CH N + O O– P C Phosphate group Symbol Hydrophilic head Hydrophobic tails Heads touch water surrounding cell and water in cytoplasm; Tails TOUCH facing inward Water Hydrophilic heads Hydrophobic tails Figure 5.11A

18 Fluid mosaic model of a cell membrane-
Made up of proteins, lipids and carbohydrate embedded in a phospholipid bilayer or along each side. Fibers of the extracellular matrix Carbohydrate (of glycoprotein) Glycoprotein Microfilaments Phospholipid Cholesterol Proteins Plasma membrane Glycolipid Cytoplasm Figure 5.12

19 TYPES OF TRANSPORT ACROSS A MEMBRANE

20 PASSIVE TRANSPORT = NO ENERGY REQUIRED!
Simple Diffusion: particles move through membranes without work by the cell; spread from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration Diffusion animation Equilibrium Membrane Molecules of dye Small nonpolar molecules such as O2 and CO2 diffuse easily across the phospholipid bilayer of a membrane Figure 5.14A Figure 5.14B

21 Proteins MUST provide passage across membranes
Facilitated diffusion: NO ENERGY REQUIRED! For molecules that DO NOT diffuse freely across membranes (i.e. Glucose, amino acids, charged ions) Proteins MUST provide passage across membranes Solute molecule Transport protein Facilitated diffusion animation Figure 5.15

22 Osmosis: NO ENERGY REQUIRED!
FACILITATED DIFFUSION of water across a membrane (AQUAPORINS) Water travels from a solution of lower solute concentration to one of higher solute concentration (higher water conc. to lower water conc.) Lower concentration of solute Higher concentration of solute Equal concentration of solute H2O Solute molecule Selectively permeable membrane Water molecule Solute molecule with cluster of water molecules Net flow of water Osmosis animation Figure 5.16

23 Shrink in hypertonic solutions Swell in hypotonic solutions
The control of water balance is called Osmoregulation. Shrink in hypertonic solutions Swell in hypotonic solutions Equal movement of particles in isotonic solutions (Animal cells are normal, but plant cells are limp) Plant cell H2O Plasma membrane (1) Normal (2) Lysed (3) Shriveled (4) Flaccid (5) Turgid (6) Shriveled (plasmolyzed) Isotonic solution Hypotonic solution Hypertonic solution Animal cell Watch animation in red blood cells! Figure 5.17

24 Active transport = ENERGY REQUIRED!
Protein pumps- transport proteins that move solutes AGAINST the concentration gradient; requires ATP (example: sodium-potassium pump used in nerve impulses) P Protein changes shape Phosphate detaches ATP ADP Solute Transport protein Solute binding 1 Phosphorylation 2 Transport 3 Protein reversion 4 Figure 5.18

25 ACTIVE TRANSPORT = ENERGY REQUIRED!
Exocytosis -move large molecules through a membrane; vesicle fuses with membrane and expel its contents Fluid outside cell Cytoplasm Protein Vesicle Vesicle forming Endocytosis- Membranes fold inward enclosing material from the outside, forming a transport vesicle

26 Endocytosis can occur in a few ways:
Active transport = ENERGY REQUIRED! Endocytosis can occur in a few ways: Phagocytosis – cellular eating (animation) Pinocytosis – cellular drinking Pseudopodium of amoeba Food being ingested Phagocytosis Pinocytosis Receptor-mediated endocytosis Material bound to receptor proteins PIT Cytoplasm Plasma membrane TEM 54,000 TEM 96,500  LM 230 Microscope video of white blood cells engulfing bacteria Figure 5.19C


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