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Chapter 8 Pictures.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8 Pictures."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8 Pictures

2 Potential and Kinetic Energy

3 2nd Law of Thermodynamics
Kinetic Energy 25% drives the pistons 75% lost as heat Potential Energy-Fuel *In every chemical reaction, some energy is lost as heat.

4 Theoretical metabolic pathway
Enzyme 1 Enzyme 2 Enzyme 3 A B C D Reaction 1 Reaction 2 Reaction 3 Starting molecule Product

5

6 Fig 5.2. Catabolic vs. Anabolic Reactions
Condensation → reactions (anabolic) Hydrolysis → reactions (catabolic)

7 Catabolic Rxns – O-O O + O + Energy Anabolic Rxns- O + O + Energy O-O
Figure 8.6

8 Fig 8.14 Energy Profile for a Catabolic (Exergonic) Reaction
ALL rxns require some input of energy In exergonic rxns ∆G is a negative number

9 Question 8.1 fructose + + H2O glucose Example 2: Sucrose hydrolysis
(very slow reaction) Example 1: Baking soda + vinegar (fast reaction)

10 Examples of an exergonic and endergonic reaction
+ Ammonia Glutamic Acid Glutamine ΔG = kcal/mol + Ammonia Glutamic Acid Glutamine ΔG = kcal/mol

11 Chemical Equilibrium

12 An organism in metabolic equilibrium

13 Equilibrium ATP

14 Metabolic Disequilibrium
Food ATP ATP ATP Waste Products

15 Fig 8.3

16 Chapter 8-ATP

17 ATP = Currency of the Cell

18 Fig 8.11

19 Fig 8.9 ATP hydrolysis

20 Fig 8.8

21 Coupled Reactions

22 Fig 8.10 ATP hydrolysis ATP synthesis

23

24 Question 8.2

25 Chapter 8 - Enzymes

26 Fig 8.13. Enzyme-catalyzed reaction: hydrolysis by sucrase

27 Metabolic Map

28 Fig 8.13. Enzyme-catalyzed reaction: hydrolysis by Sucrase

29 Fig 8.14 Energy Profile Energy (heat) absorbed from Energy (heat)
the surroundings Energy (heat) released by the reaction

30 Progress of the reaction
Course of reaction without enzyme Fig 8.15 Energy Profile +/- Enzyme EA without enzyme EA with enzyme is lower Reactants Free energy Course of reaction with enzyme ∆G is unaffected by enzyme Products Progress of the reaction

31

32 Fig 8.17

33 Fig 8.16

34 (a) Optimal temperature for two enzymes
Fig 8.18a Optimal temperature for typical human enzyme Optimal temperature for enzyme of thermophilic (heat-tolerant) bacteria Rate of reaction 20 40 80 100 Temperature (Cº) (a) Optimal temperature for two enzymes

35 (b) Optimal pH for two enzymes
Fig 8.18b Optimal pH for pepsin (stomach enzyme) Optimal pH for trypsin (intestinal enzyme) Rate of reaction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 (b) Optimal pH for two enzymes

36 Question 8.3

37 (b) Competitive inhibition
Figure 8.19 (b) Competitive inhibition A competitive inhibitor mimics the substrate, competing for the active site. Competitive inhibitor A substrate can bind normally to the active site of an enzyme. Substrate Active site Enzyme (a) Normal binding Fig 8.19 a, b

38 (c) Noncompetitive inhibition
Fig 8.19c Figure 8.19 A noncompetitive inhibitor binds to the enzyme away from the active site, altering the conformation of the enzyme so that its active site no longer functions. Noncompetitive inhibitor (c) Noncompetitive inhibition

39 Fig 8.21

40 Question 8.4


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