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CIFE
Carbohydrate Energetics
SUDHANSHU RAMAN
FNT-PA5-03
CIFE
Fates of Catabolized Organic Nutrients
• Energy (ATP)
• Raw materials used in anabolism
• Structural proteins
• Enzymes
• Lipid storage
• Glycogen storage
CIFE
Glucose
• Glucose is the molecule ultimately used by body cells to
make ATP.
• Neurons and RBCs rely almost entirely upon glucose to
fullfill their energy needs.
• Excess glucose is converted to glycogen or fat and stored.
CIFE
Figure 25–1
Cellular Metabolism
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Nutrient Use in Cellular Metabolism
Figure 25–2 (Navigator)
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Synthesis of New Organic Compounds
• In energy terms, anabolism is an “uphill” process that forms
new chemical bonds while catabolism is a downhill process that
provides energy by breaking chemical bonds
• Building new organic compounds requires both energy
(garnered from earlier catabolism) and raw materials.
CIFE
Organic Compounds
• Glycogen:
• a branched chain of glucose molecules
• most abundant storage carbohydrate
• Triglycerides:
• most abundant storage lipids
• Energy is primarily stored in the fatty acids
• Proteins:
• most abundant organic components in body
• perform many vital cellular functions
CIFE
Energy Extraction
• C-H bonds store the most energy
• C-C also store a lot of energy
• C-O bonds store very little energy
Macromolecules that we take in via our diet are mostly rich in C-
H and C-C bonds. In the body, these are broken down and turned
into C-O bonds that are then breathed out as carbon dioxide.
• In the process, some of the energy released by breaking those
bonds is captured to make ATP
CIFE
Carbohydrate Metabolism
• Generates ATP and other high-energy compounds by breaking
down carbohydrates:
glucose + oxygen  carbon dioxide + water
• Occurs in small steps which release energy to convert ADP to
ATP
• Involves glycolysis, TCA cycle, and electron transport
• 1 molecule of glucose nets 36* molecules of ATP
CIFE
Glycolysis
• Breaks down glucose in cytosol into smaller molecules used by
mitochondria .
• Does not require oxygen so it is anaerobic.
• 1 molecule of glucose yields only 2 ATP.
• Yields very little energy on its own, but it is enough to power
muscles for short periods .
• Some bacteria are entirely anaerobic and survive by
performing only glycolysis.
• RBCs and working muscle tissue use glycolysis as their primary
source of ATP.
CIFE
Aerobic / Cellular Respiration Reactions
• Include the TCA cycle and electron transport.
• Occur in mitochondria:
• consume oxygen
• produce lots of ATP
• Much more efficient
CIFE
Overview – Aerobic metabolism
• Glycolysis:
• breaks 6-carbon glucose into two 3-carbon pyruvic acid .
• TCA cycle
• 3 carbon pyruvate is adapted into 2 carbon acetyl CoA
(probably the most important, most central molecule in
metabolism)
• Acetyl CoA is conveted into carbon dioxide and the
energy is captured in an intermediate called NADH
• Electron Transport
• Uses oxidative phosphorylation to turn NADH into ATP
• requires oxygen and electrons; thus the rate of ATP
generation is limited by oxygen or electrons
CIFE
ATP Production
• For 1 glucose molecule processed, cell gains 36 molecules of
ATP:
• 2 from glycolysis
• 4 from NADH generated in glycolysis (requires oxygen)
• 2 from TCA cycle (through GTP)
• 28 from electron transport
CIFE
Energy Yield of Aerobic Metabolism
Figure 25–6
CIFE
Glycolysis
Triose
phosphate
isomerase
CIFE
Importance of Phosphorylated
Intermediates
1. Because the plasma membrane generally lacks transporters
for phosphorylated sugars, the phosphorylated glycolytic
intermediates cannot leave the cell.
• After the initial phosphorylation, no further energy is
necessary to retain phosphorylated intermediates in the cell,
despite the large difference in their intracellular and
extracellular concentrations.
CIFE
• 2. Phosphoryl groups are essential components in the
enzymatic conservation of metabolic energy. Energy
released in the breakage of phosphoanhydride bonds
(such as those in ATP) is partially conserved in the
formation of phosphate esters such as glucose 6-
phosphate.
• High-energy phosphate compounds formed in
glycolysis (1,3-bisphosphoglycerate and
phosphoenolpyruvate) donate phosphoryl groups to
ADP to form ATP.
CIFE
• 3. Binding energy resulting from the binding of phosphate
groups to the active sites of enzymes lowers the activation
energy and increases the specificity of the enzymatic reactions.
• The phosphate groups of ADP, ATP, and the glycolytic
intermediates form complexes with Mg2, and the substrate
binding sites of many glycolytic enzymes are specific for these
Mg2 complexes. Most glycolytic enzymes require Mg2 for
activity.
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Fate of Pyruvate
CIFE
Entry Into The Citric Acid Cycle
Glycolysis releases relatively little of the energy present in a glucose molecule; much more
is released by the subsequent operation of the citric acid cycle and oxidative
phosphorylation.
Following this route under aerobic conditions, pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA by the
enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase and the acetyl CoA then enters the citric acid cycle. The
pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction is an oxidative decarboxylation
Pyruvate dehydrogenase
pyruvate + NAD+ + CoA→ acetyl CoA + CO2 + NADH
CIFE
Conversion to fatty acid or ketone bodies.
• When the cellular energy level is high (ATP in
excess), the rate of the citric acid cycle decreases
and acetyl CoA begins to accumulate.
• Under these conditions, acetyl CoA can be used for
fatty acid synthesis or the synthesis of ketone bodies
CIFE
Conversion to Lactate
• The NAD+ used during glycolysis (in the formation of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate
by glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase); must be regenerated if
glycolysis is to continue.
• Under aerobic conditions, NAD+ is regenerated by the re-oxidation of NADH
via the electron transport chain.
• When oxygen is limiting, as in muscle during vigorous contraction, the re-
oxidation of NADH to NAD+ by the electron transport chain becomes
insufficient to maintain glycolysis.
• Under these conditions, NAD+ is regenerated instead by conversion of the
pyruvate to lactate by lactate dehydrogenase:
Lactate dehydrogenase
pyruvate + NADH + H+ lactate + NAD+
CIFE
Conversion to ethanol.
• In yeast and some other microorganisms under anaerobic conditions, the
NAD+ required for the continuation of glycolysis & is regenerated by a
process called alcoholic fermentation.
• The pyruvate is converted to acetaldehyde (by pyruvate decarboxylase) and
then to ethanol (by alcohol dehydrogenase), the latter reaction reoxidizing
the NADH to NAD+:
CIFE
Metabolism of Fructose
There are two pathways for the metabolism of fructose, one occurs in muscle and adipose tissue,
the other in liver :-
1. In muscle and adipose tissue, fructose can be phosphorylated by hexokinase (which is
capable of phosphorylating both glucose and fructose) to form fructose 6-phosphate which then
enters glycolysis.
2. In liver, the cells contain mainly glucokinase instead of hexokinase and this enzyme
phosphorylates only glucose. Thus in liver, fructose is metabolized instead by the fructose 1-
phosphate pathway
CIFE
Metabolism of Galactose
• The hydrolysis of the disaccharide lactose (in milk) yields galactose and glucose.
• Thus galactose is also a major dietary sugar for humans. Galactose and glucose
are epimers that differ in their configuration at C-4. Thus the entry of galactose into
glycolysis requires an epimerization reaction.
• This occurs via a four-step pathway called the galactose–glucose
interconversion pathway
CIFE
NEXT
CITRIC ACID CYCLE
CIFE
• In the second stage the acetyl groups are fed into the citric acid cycle, which
enzymatically oxidizes them to CO2; the energy released is conserved in the reduced
electron carriers NADH and FADH2.
• In the third stage of respiration, these reduced coenzymes are themselves oxidized, giving
up protons (H) and electrons.
• The electrons are transferred to O2—the final electron acceptor—via a chain of electron-
carrying molecules known as the respiratory chain.
• In the course of electron transfer, the large amount of energy released is conserved in
the form of ATP, by a process called oxidative phosphorylation
CITRIC ACID CYCLE
CIFE
“If citrate is added the rate of respiration is often increased .
. . the extra oxygen uptake is by far greater than can be
accounted for by the complete oxidation of citrate . . . Since
citric acid reacts catalytically in the tissue it is probable that
it is removed by a primary reaction but regenerated by a
subsequent reaction.”
—H. A. Krebs and W. A. Johnson, article in Enzymologia, 1937
CIFE
Catabolism of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates in the
three stages of cellular respiration.
Stage 1: oxidation of fatty acids, glucose, and some amino
acids yields acetyl-CoA.
Stage 2: oxidation of acetyl groups in the citric acid cycle
includes four steps in which electrons are abstracted.
Stage 3: electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 are funneled
into a chain of mitochondrial (or, in bacteria, plasma
membrane–bound) electron carriers—the respiratory
chain—ultimately reducing O2 to H2O. This electron flow
drives the production of ATP.
CIFE
Breakdown of Pyruvate:
• Each pyruvate
molecule loses a
carboxylic group in the
form of carbon
dioxide.
• The remaining two
carbons are then
transferred to the
enzyme CoA to
produce Acetyl CoA.
CIFE
CIFE
THREE DIMENSIONAL
image of PDH complex, showing the
subunit structure:
E1, pyruvate dehydrogenase;
E3,dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase
E2, dihydrolipoyl transacetylase;
.
CIFE
CIFE
ELECTRON TRANSPORT AND OXIDATIVE
PHOSPHORYLATION
• Electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation re-oxidize
NADH and FADH2 and trap the energy released as ATP.
• In eukaryotes, electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation
occur in the inner membrane of mitochondria whereas in
prokaryotes the process occurs in the plasma membrane.
ATP synthase
CIFE
Cytochrome oxidase
4 cyt. c (Fe2+) + 4 H+ + O2 → 4 cyt. c (Fe3+) + 2 H2O
The cytochrome oxidase reaction is complex; it transfers four electrons from four
cytochrome c molecules and four H+ ions to molecular oxygen to form two
molecules of water
Inter membrane space
1 NADH->3ATP;FADH2->2ATP
CIFE
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Carbohydrate energetics

  • 2. CIFE Fates of Catabolized Organic Nutrients • Energy (ATP) • Raw materials used in anabolism • Structural proteins • Enzymes • Lipid storage • Glycogen storage
  • 3. CIFE Glucose • Glucose is the molecule ultimately used by body cells to make ATP. • Neurons and RBCs rely almost entirely upon glucose to fullfill their energy needs. • Excess glucose is converted to glycogen or fat and stored.
  • 5. CIFE Nutrient Use in Cellular Metabolism Figure 25–2 (Navigator)
  • 6. CIFE Synthesis of New Organic Compounds • In energy terms, anabolism is an “uphill” process that forms new chemical bonds while catabolism is a downhill process that provides energy by breaking chemical bonds • Building new organic compounds requires both energy (garnered from earlier catabolism) and raw materials.
  • 7. CIFE Organic Compounds • Glycogen: • a branched chain of glucose molecules • most abundant storage carbohydrate • Triglycerides: • most abundant storage lipids • Energy is primarily stored in the fatty acids • Proteins: • most abundant organic components in body • perform many vital cellular functions
  • 8. CIFE Energy Extraction • C-H bonds store the most energy • C-C also store a lot of energy • C-O bonds store very little energy Macromolecules that we take in via our diet are mostly rich in C- H and C-C bonds. In the body, these are broken down and turned into C-O bonds that are then breathed out as carbon dioxide. • In the process, some of the energy released by breaking those bonds is captured to make ATP
  • 9. CIFE Carbohydrate Metabolism • Generates ATP and other high-energy compounds by breaking down carbohydrates: glucose + oxygen  carbon dioxide + water • Occurs in small steps which release energy to convert ADP to ATP • Involves glycolysis, TCA cycle, and electron transport • 1 molecule of glucose nets 36* molecules of ATP
  • 10. CIFE Glycolysis • Breaks down glucose in cytosol into smaller molecules used by mitochondria . • Does not require oxygen so it is anaerobic. • 1 molecule of glucose yields only 2 ATP. • Yields very little energy on its own, but it is enough to power muscles for short periods . • Some bacteria are entirely anaerobic and survive by performing only glycolysis. • RBCs and working muscle tissue use glycolysis as their primary source of ATP.
  • 11. CIFE Aerobic / Cellular Respiration Reactions • Include the TCA cycle and electron transport. • Occur in mitochondria: • consume oxygen • produce lots of ATP • Much more efficient
  • 12. CIFE Overview – Aerobic metabolism • Glycolysis: • breaks 6-carbon glucose into two 3-carbon pyruvic acid . • TCA cycle • 3 carbon pyruvate is adapted into 2 carbon acetyl CoA (probably the most important, most central molecule in metabolism) • Acetyl CoA is conveted into carbon dioxide and the energy is captured in an intermediate called NADH • Electron Transport • Uses oxidative phosphorylation to turn NADH into ATP • requires oxygen and electrons; thus the rate of ATP generation is limited by oxygen or electrons
  • 13. CIFE ATP Production • For 1 glucose molecule processed, cell gains 36 molecules of ATP: • 2 from glycolysis • 4 from NADH generated in glycolysis (requires oxygen) • 2 from TCA cycle (through GTP) • 28 from electron transport
  • 14. CIFE Energy Yield of Aerobic Metabolism Figure 25–6
  • 16.
  • 17. CIFE Importance of Phosphorylated Intermediates 1. Because the plasma membrane generally lacks transporters for phosphorylated sugars, the phosphorylated glycolytic intermediates cannot leave the cell. • After the initial phosphorylation, no further energy is necessary to retain phosphorylated intermediates in the cell, despite the large difference in their intracellular and extracellular concentrations.
  • 18. CIFE • 2. Phosphoryl groups are essential components in the enzymatic conservation of metabolic energy. Energy released in the breakage of phosphoanhydride bonds (such as those in ATP) is partially conserved in the formation of phosphate esters such as glucose 6- phosphate. • High-energy phosphate compounds formed in glycolysis (1,3-bisphosphoglycerate and phosphoenolpyruvate) donate phosphoryl groups to ADP to form ATP.
  • 19. CIFE • 3. Binding energy resulting from the binding of phosphate groups to the active sites of enzymes lowers the activation energy and increases the specificity of the enzymatic reactions. • The phosphate groups of ADP, ATP, and the glycolytic intermediates form complexes with Mg2, and the substrate binding sites of many glycolytic enzymes are specific for these Mg2 complexes. Most glycolytic enzymes require Mg2 for activity.
  • 21. CIFE Entry Into The Citric Acid Cycle Glycolysis releases relatively little of the energy present in a glucose molecule; much more is released by the subsequent operation of the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation. Following this route under aerobic conditions, pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA by the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase and the acetyl CoA then enters the citric acid cycle. The pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction is an oxidative decarboxylation Pyruvate dehydrogenase pyruvate + NAD+ + CoA→ acetyl CoA + CO2 + NADH
  • 22. CIFE Conversion to fatty acid or ketone bodies. • When the cellular energy level is high (ATP in excess), the rate of the citric acid cycle decreases and acetyl CoA begins to accumulate. • Under these conditions, acetyl CoA can be used for fatty acid synthesis or the synthesis of ketone bodies
  • 23. CIFE Conversion to Lactate • The NAD+ used during glycolysis (in the formation of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate by glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase); must be regenerated if glycolysis is to continue. • Under aerobic conditions, NAD+ is regenerated by the re-oxidation of NADH via the electron transport chain. • When oxygen is limiting, as in muscle during vigorous contraction, the re- oxidation of NADH to NAD+ by the electron transport chain becomes insufficient to maintain glycolysis. • Under these conditions, NAD+ is regenerated instead by conversion of the pyruvate to lactate by lactate dehydrogenase: Lactate dehydrogenase pyruvate + NADH + H+ lactate + NAD+
  • 24. CIFE Conversion to ethanol. • In yeast and some other microorganisms under anaerobic conditions, the NAD+ required for the continuation of glycolysis & is regenerated by a process called alcoholic fermentation. • The pyruvate is converted to acetaldehyde (by pyruvate decarboxylase) and then to ethanol (by alcohol dehydrogenase), the latter reaction reoxidizing the NADH to NAD+:
  • 25. CIFE Metabolism of Fructose There are two pathways for the metabolism of fructose, one occurs in muscle and adipose tissue, the other in liver :- 1. In muscle and adipose tissue, fructose can be phosphorylated by hexokinase (which is capable of phosphorylating both glucose and fructose) to form fructose 6-phosphate which then enters glycolysis. 2. In liver, the cells contain mainly glucokinase instead of hexokinase and this enzyme phosphorylates only glucose. Thus in liver, fructose is metabolized instead by the fructose 1- phosphate pathway
  • 26. CIFE Metabolism of Galactose • The hydrolysis of the disaccharide lactose (in milk) yields galactose and glucose. • Thus galactose is also a major dietary sugar for humans. Galactose and glucose are epimers that differ in their configuration at C-4. Thus the entry of galactose into glycolysis requires an epimerization reaction. • This occurs via a four-step pathway called the galactose–glucose interconversion pathway
  • 28. CIFE • In the second stage the acetyl groups are fed into the citric acid cycle, which enzymatically oxidizes them to CO2; the energy released is conserved in the reduced electron carriers NADH and FADH2. • In the third stage of respiration, these reduced coenzymes are themselves oxidized, giving up protons (H) and electrons. • The electrons are transferred to O2—the final electron acceptor—via a chain of electron- carrying molecules known as the respiratory chain. • In the course of electron transfer, the large amount of energy released is conserved in the form of ATP, by a process called oxidative phosphorylation CITRIC ACID CYCLE
  • 29. CIFE “If citrate is added the rate of respiration is often increased . . . the extra oxygen uptake is by far greater than can be accounted for by the complete oxidation of citrate . . . Since citric acid reacts catalytically in the tissue it is probable that it is removed by a primary reaction but regenerated by a subsequent reaction.” —H. A. Krebs and W. A. Johnson, article in Enzymologia, 1937
  • 30. CIFE Catabolism of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates in the three stages of cellular respiration. Stage 1: oxidation of fatty acids, glucose, and some amino acids yields acetyl-CoA. Stage 2: oxidation of acetyl groups in the citric acid cycle includes four steps in which electrons are abstracted. Stage 3: electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 are funneled into a chain of mitochondrial (or, in bacteria, plasma membrane–bound) electron carriers—the respiratory chain—ultimately reducing O2 to H2O. This electron flow drives the production of ATP.
  • 31. CIFE Breakdown of Pyruvate: • Each pyruvate molecule loses a carboxylic group in the form of carbon dioxide. • The remaining two carbons are then transferred to the enzyme CoA to produce Acetyl CoA.
  • 32. CIFE
  • 33. CIFE THREE DIMENSIONAL image of PDH complex, showing the subunit structure: E1, pyruvate dehydrogenase; E3,dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase E2, dihydrolipoyl transacetylase; .
  • 34. CIFE
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37. CIFE ELECTRON TRANSPORT AND OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION • Electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation re-oxidize NADH and FADH2 and trap the energy released as ATP. • In eukaryotes, electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation occur in the inner membrane of mitochondria whereas in prokaryotes the process occurs in the plasma membrane.
  • 39.
  • 40. CIFE
  • 41. Cytochrome oxidase 4 cyt. c (Fe2+) + 4 H+ + O2 → 4 cyt. c (Fe3+) + 2 H2O The cytochrome oxidase reaction is complex; it transfers four electrons from four cytochrome c molecules and four H+ ions to molecular oxygen to form two molecules of water
  • 42. Inter membrane space 1 NADH->3ATP;FADH2->2ATP
  • 43. CIFE
  • 44. CIFE
  • 45. CIFE
  • 46. CIFE

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Galactose 1-phosphate uridylyl transferase catalyzes the transfer of a uridyl group from UDP-glucose to galactose 1-phosphate to form UDP-galactose and glucose 1-phosphate
  2. FIGURE 16–1 Catabolism of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates in the three stages of cellular respiration. Stage 1: oxidation of fatty acids, glucose, and some amino acids yields acetyl-CoA. Stage 2: oxidation of acetyl groups in the citric acid cycle includes four steps in which electrons are abstracted. Stage 3: electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 are funneled into a chain of mitochondrial (or, in bacteria, plasma membrane–bound) electron carriers—the respiratory chain— ultimately reducing O2 to H2O. This electron flow drives the production of ATP.
  3. Source: Boundless. “Breakdown of Pyruvate.” Boundless Biology. Boundless, 08 Jan. 2016. Retrieved 14 Jan. 2016 from https://www.boundless.com/biology/textbooks/boundless-biology-textbook/cellular-respiration-7/oxidation-of-pyruvate-and-the-citric-acid-cycle-75/breakdown-of-pyruvate-359-11585/
  4. The cytochrome oxidase reaction is complex; it transfers four electrons from four cytochrome c molecules and four H+ ions to molecular oxygen to form two molecules of water
  5. Oxidative phosphorylation is ATP synthesis linked to the oxidation of NADH and FADH2 by electron transport through the respiratory chain. This occurs via a mechanism originally proposed as the chemiosmotic hypothesis. Energy liberated by electron transport is used to pump H+ ions out of the mitochondrion to create an electrochemical proton (H+) gradient. The protons flow back into the mitochondrion through the ATP synthase located in the inner mitochondrial membrane, and this drives ATP synthesis. Approximately three ATP molecules are synthesized per NADH oxidized and approximately two ATPs are synthesized per FADH2 oxidized.