Chapter 8 An Introduction to Metabolism
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Energy of
Life
Concept 8.1 An organism’s metabolism transforms matter and energy,
subject to the laws of thermodynamics
·
The
totality of an organism’s chemical reactions is called metabolism.
·
Metabolism
is an emergent property of life that arises from interactions between molecules
within the orderly environment of the cell.
The
chemistry of life is organized into metabolic pathways.
·
Metabolic
pathways begin with a specific molecule, which is then altered in a series of
defined steps to form a specific product.
·
A
specific enzyme catalyzes each step of the pathway.
·
Catabolic
pathways release energy by breaking down complex molecules to simpler
compounds.
°
A
major pathway of catabolism is cellular respiration, in which the sugar glucose
is broken down in the presence of oxygen to carbon dioxide and water.
·
Anabolic pathways consume energy to build
complicated molecules from simpler compounds. They are also called biosynthetic
pathways.
°
The
synthesis of protein from amino acids is an example of anabolism.
·
The
energy released by catabolic pathways can be stored and then used to drive
anabolic pathways.
·
Energy
is fundamental to all metabolic processes, and therefore an understanding of
energy is key to understanding how the living cell works.
°
Bioenergetics is the study of how
organisms manage their energy resources.
Organisms transform energy.
·
Energy is the capacity to do
work.
°
Energy
exists in various forms, and cells transform energy from one type into another.
·
Kinetic energy is the energy associated
with the relative motion of objects.
°
Objects
in motion can perform work by imparting motion to other matter.
°
Photons
of light can be captured and their energy harnessed to power photosynthesis in
green plants.
°
Heat or thermal energy is kinetic energy associated with the random
movement of atoms or molecules.
·
Potential energy is the energy that matter
possesses because of its location or structure.
°
Chemical energy is a form of potential
energy stored in molecules because of the arrangement of their atoms.
·
Energy
can be converted from one form to another.
°
For
example, as a boy climbs stairs to a diving platform, he is releasing chemical
energy stored in his cells from the food he ate for lunch.
°
The
kinetic energy of his muscle movement is converted into potential energy as he
climbs higher.
°
As
he dives, the potential energy is converted back to kinetic energy.
°
Kinetic
energy is transferred to the water as he enters it.
°
Some
energy is converted to heat due to friction.
The energy transformations of life are subject
to two laws of thermodynamics.
·
Thermodynamics is the study of energy
transformations.
·
In
this field, the term system refers to
the matter under study and the surroundings
include everything outside the system.
·
A
closed system, approximated by liquid
in a thermos, is isolated from its surroundings.
·
In
an open system, energy and matter can
be transferred between the system and its surroundings.
·
Organisms
are open systems.
°
They
absorb energy—light or chemical energy in the form of organic molecules—and
release heat and metabolic waste products such as urea or CO2 to
their surroundings.
·
The
first law of thermodynamics states
that energy can be transferred and transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed.
°
The
first law is also known as the principle
of conservation of energy.
°
Plants
do not produce energy; they transform light energy to chemical energy.
·
During
every transfer or transformation of energy, some energy is converted to heat,
which is the energy associated with the random movement of atoms and molecules.
·
A
system can use heat to do work only when there is a temperature difference that
results in heat flowing from a warmer location to a cooler one.
°
If
temperature is uniform, as in a living cell, heat can only be used to warm the
organism.
·
Energy
transfers and transformations make the universe more disordered due to this
loss of usable energy.
·
Entropy is a quantity used as a
measure of disorder or randomness.
°
The
more random a collection of matter, the greater its entropy.
·
The
second law of thermodynamics states
that every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy of the
universe.
°
While
order can increase locally, there is an unstoppable trend toward randomization
of the universe.
°
Much
of the increased entropy of the universe takes the form of increasing heat,
which is the energy of random molecular motion.
·
In
most energy transformations, ordered forms of energy are converted at least
partly to heat.
°
Automobiles
convert only 25% of the energy in gasoline into motion; the rest is lost as
heat.
°
Living
cells unavoidably convert organized forms of energy to heat.
·
For
a process to occur on its own, without outside help in the form of energy
input, it must increase the entropy of the universe.
·
The
word spontaneous describes a process
that can occur without an input of energy.
°
Spontaneous
processes need not occur quickly.
°
Some
spontaneous processes are instantaneous, such as an explosion. Some are very
slow, such as the rusting of an old car.
·
Another
way to state the second law of thermodynamics is for a process to occur
spontaneously, it must increase the entropy of the universe.
·
Living
systems create ordered structures from less ordered starting materials.
°
For
example, amino acids are ordered into polypeptide chains.
°
The
structure of a multicellular body is organized and complex.
·
However,
an organism also takes in organized forms of matter and energy from its
surroundings and replaces them with less ordered forms.
°
For
example, an animal consumes organic molecules as food and catabolizes them to
low-energy carbon dioxide and water.
·
Over
evolutionary time, complex organisms have evolved from simpler ones.
°
This
increase in organization does not violate the second law of thermodynamics.
°
The
entropy of a particular system, such as an organism, may decrease as long as
the total entropy of the universe—the
system plus its surroundings—increases.
°
Organisms
are islands of low entropy in an increasingly random universe.
°
The
evolution of biological order is perfectly consistent with the laws of
thermodynamics.
Concept 8.2 The free-energy change of a reaction
tells us whether the reaction occurs spontaneously
·
How
can we determine which reactions occur spontaneously and which ones require an
input of energy?
·
The
concept of free energy provides a useful function for measuring spontaneity of
a system.
·
Free energy is the portion of a
system’s energy that is able to perform work when temperature and pressure is
uniform throughout the system, as in a living cell.
·
The
free energy (G) in a system is
related to the total enthalpy (in
biological systems, equivalent to energy) (H)
and the entropy (S) by this
relationship:
°
G = H − TS, where T is temperature in Kelvin units.
°
Increases
in temperature amplify the entropy term.
°
Not
all the energy in a system is available for work because the entropy component
must be subtracted from the enthalpy component.
°
What
remains is the free energy that is available for work.
·
Free
energy can be thought of as a measure of the stability of a system.
°
Systems
that are high in free energy—compressed springs, separated charges, organic
polymers—are unstable and tend to move toward a more stable state, one with
less free energy.
°
Systems
that tend to change spontaneously are those that have high enthalpy, low
entropy, or both.
·
In
any spontaneous process, the free energy of a system decreases.
·
We
can represent this change in free energy from the start of a process until its
finish by:
°
DG = Gfinal state − Gstarting
state
°
Or
DG = DH
− TDS
·
For
a process to be spontaneous, the system must either give up enthalpy (decrease
in H), give up order (increase in S), or both.
°
DG must be negative for a
process to be spontaneous.
§
Every
spontaneous process is characterized by a decrease in the free energy of the
system.
§
Processes
that have a positive or zero DG are never spontaneous.
°
The
greater the decrease in free energy, the more work a spontaneous process can
perform.
°
Nature
runs “downhill.”
·
A
system at equilibrium is at maximum stability.
°
In
a chemical reaction at equilibrium, the rates of forward and backward reactions
are equal, and there is no change in the concentration of products or
reactants.
°
At
equilibrium DG = 0, and the system can
do no work.
°
A
process is spontaneous and can perform work only when it is moving toward
equilibrium.
°
Movements
away from equilibrium are nonspontaneous and require the addition of energy
from an outside energy source (the surroundings).
·
Chemical
reactions can be classified as either exergonic or endergonic based on free
energy.
·
An
exergonic reaction proceeds with a
net release of free energy; DG is negative.
·
The
magnitude of DG for an exergonic reaction
is the maximum amount of work the reaction can perform.
·
The
greater the decrease in free energy, the greater the amount of work that can be
done.
°
For
the overall reaction of cellular respiration: C6H12O6
+ 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O
§
DG = −686 kcal/mol
°
For
each mole (180 g) of glucose broken down by respiration, 686 kcal of energy are
made available to do work in the cell.
§
The
products have 686 kcal less free energy than the reactants.
·
An
endergonic reaction is one that
absorbs free energy from its surroundings.
°
Endergonic
reactions store energy in molecules; DG
is positive.
°
Endergonic
reactions are nonspontaneous, and the magnitude of DG
is the quantity of energy required to drive the reaction.
·
If
cellular respiration releases 686 kcal, then photosynthesis, the reverse
reaction, must require an equivalent investment of energy.
°
For
the conversion of carbon dioxide and water to sugar, DG
= +686 kcal/mol.
·
Photosynthesis
is strongly endergonic, powered by the absorption of light energy.
·
Reactions
in a closed system eventually reach equilibrium and can do no work.
°
A
cell that has reached metabolic equilibrium has a DG
= 0 and is dead!
·
Metabolic
disequilibrium is one of the defining features of life.
·
Cells
maintain disequilibrium because they are open systems. The constant flow of
materials into and out of the cell keeps metabolic pathways from ever reaching
equilibrium.
°
A
cell continues to do work throughout its life.
·
A
catabolic process in a cell releases free energy in a series of reactions, not
in a single step.
·
Some
reversible reactions of respiration are constantly “pulled” in one direction,
as the product of one reaction does not accumulate but becomes the reactant in
the next step.
·
Sunlight
provides a daily source of free energy for photosynthetic organisms.
·
Nonphotosynthetic
organisms depend on a transfer of free energy from photosynthetic organisms in
the form of organic molecules.
Concept 8.3 ATP powers cellular work by coupling
exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions
·
A
cell does three main kinds of work:
1. Mechanical work, such as
the beating of cilia, contraction of muscle cells, and movement of chromosomes
during cellular reproduction.
2. Transport work, the
pumping of substances across membranes against the direction of spontaneous movement.
3. Chemical work, driving
endergonic reactions such as the synthesis of polymers from monomers.
·
Cells
manage their energy resources to do this work by energy coupling, the use of an exergonic process to drive an
endergonic one.
·
In
most cases, the immediate source of energy to power cellular work is ATP.
·
ATP (adenosine
triphosphate)
is a type of nucleotide consisting of the nitrogenous base adenine, the sugar
ribose, and a chain of three phosphate groups.
·
The
bonds between phosphate groups can be broken by hydrolysis.
°
Hydrolysis
of the end phosphate group forms adenosine diphosphate.
§
ATP
-> ADP + Pi
§
This
reaction releases 7.3 kcal of energy per mole of ATP under standard conditions
(1 M of each reactant and product, 25°C, pH 7).
°
In
the cell, DG for hydrolysis of ATP is
about −13 kcal/mol.
·
While
the phosphate bonds of ATP are sometimes referred to as high-energy phosphate
bonds, these are actually fairly weak covalent bonds.
°
However,
they are unstable, and their hydrolysis yields energy because the products are
more stable.
·
The
release of energy during the hydrolysis of ATP comes from the chemical change
to a state of lower free energy, not from the phosphate bonds themselves.
·
Why
does the hydrolysis of ATP yield so much energy?
°
Each
of the three phosphate groups has a negative charge.
°
These
three like charges are crowded together, and their mutual repulsion contributes
to the instability of this region of the ATP molecule.
·
In
the cell, the energy from the hydrolysis of ATP is directly coupled to
endergonic processes by the transfer of the phosphate group to another
molecule.
°
This
recipient molecule is now phosphorylated.
°
This
molecule is now more reactive (less stable) than the original unphosphorylated
molecules.
·
Mechanical,
transport, and chemical work in the cell are nearly always powered by the
hydrolysis of ATP.
°
In
each case, a phosphate group is transferred from ATP to another molecule and
the phosphorylated molecule undergoes a change that performs work.
·
ATP
is a renewable resource that can be regenerated by the addition of a phosphate
group to ADP.
°
The
energy to phosphorylate ADP comes from catabolic reactions in the cell.
°
A
working muscle cell recycles its entire pool of ATP once each minute.
°
More
than 10 million ATP molecules are consumed and regenerated per second per cell.
·
Regeneration
of ATP is an endergonic process, requiring an investment of energy.
°
DG = 7.3 kcal/mol.
·
Catabolic
(exergonic) pathways, especially cellular respiration, provide the energy for
the exergonic regeneration of ATP.
·
The
chemical potential energy temporarily stored in ATP drives most cellular work.
Concept 8.4 Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions
by lowering energy barriers
·
Spontaneous
chemical reactions may occur so slowly as to be imperceptible.
°
The
hydrolysis of table sugar (sucrose) to glucose and fructose is exergonic.
§
DG = −7 kcal/mol
°
Despite
this, your sugar sits in its bowl with no observable hydrolysis.
°
If
we add a small amount of the enzyme catalyst sucrase to a solution of sugar,
all the sucrose will be hydrolyzed within seconds.
·
A
catalyst is a chemical agent that
speeds up the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction.
°
An
enzyme is a catalytic protein.
·
Enzymes
regulate metabolic pathways.
·
Every
chemical reaction involves bond breaking and bond forming.
°
To
hydrolyze sucrose, the bond between glucose and fructose must be broken and new
bonds must form with hydrogen and hydroxyl ions from water.
·
To
reach a state where bonds can break and reform, reactant molecules must absorb
energy from their surroundings. When the new bonds of the product molecules
form, energy is released as heat as the molecules assume stable shapes with
lower energy.
·
The
initial investment of energy for starting a reaction is the free energy of activation or activation energy (EA).
·
Activation
energy is the amount of energy necessary to push the reactants over an energy
barrier so that the reaction can proceed.
°
At
the summit, the molecules are in an unstable condition, the transition state.
°
Activation
energy may be supplied in the form of heat that the reactant molecules absorb
from the surroundings.
°
The
bonds of the reactants break only when the molecules have absorbed enough
energy to become unstable and, therefore, more reactive.
°
The
absorption of thermal energy increases the speed of the reactant molecules, so
they collide more often and more forcefully.
°
Thermal
agitation of the atoms in the molecules makes bonds more likely to break.
°
As
the molecules settle into new, stable bonding arrangements, energy is released
to the surroundings.
°
In
exergonic reactions, the activation energy is released back to the
surroundings, and additional energy is released with the formation of new
bonds.
·
For
some processes, EA is not high, and the thermal energy provided by
room temperature is sufficient for many reactants to reach the transition
state.
·
In
many cases, EA is high enough that the transition state is rarely
reached and that the reaction hardly proceeds at all. In these cases, the
reaction will only occur at a noticeable rate if the reactants are heated.
°
A
spark plug provides the energy to energize a gasoline-oxygen mixture and cause
combustion.
°
Without
that activation energy, the hydrocarbons of gasoline are too stable to react
with oxygen.
·
Proteins,
DNA, and other complex organic molecules are rich in free energy. Their
hydrolysis is spontaneous, with the release of large amounts of energy.
°
However,
there is not enough energy at the temperatures typical of the cell for the vast
majority of organic molecules to make it over the hump of activation energy.
·
How
are the barriers for selected reactions surmounted to allow cells to carry out
the processes of life?
°
Heat
would speed up reactions, but it would also denature proteins and kill cells.
·
Enzymes
speed reactions by lowering EA.
°
The
transition state can then be reached even at moderate temperatures.
·
Enzymes
do not change DG.
°
They
hasten reactions that would occur eventually.
°
Because
enzymes are so selective, they determine which chemical processes will occur at
any time.
Enzymes are substrate specific.
·
The
reactant that an enzyme acts on is the substrate.
·
The
enzyme binds to a substrate, or substrates, forming an enzyme-substrate complex.
·
While
the enzyme and substrate are bound, the catalytic action of the enzyme converts
the substrate to the product or products.
·
The
reaction catalyzed by each enzyme is very specific.
·
What
accounts for this molecular recognition?
°
The
specificity of an enzyme results from its three-dimensional shape.
·
Only
a portion of the enzyme binds to the substrate.
°
The
active site of an enzyme is
typically a pocket or groove on the surface of the protein into which the
substrate fits.
°
The
active site is usually formed by only a few amino acids.
·
The
specificity of an enzyme is due to the fit between the active site and the
substrate.
·
As
the substrate enters the active site, interactions between the substrate and
the amino acids of the protein causes the enzyme to change shape slightly,
leading to a tighter induced fit
that brings chemical groups in position to catalyze the reaction.
The active site is an enzyme’s catalytic
center.
·
In
most cases, substrates are held in the active site by weak interactions, such
as hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds.
°
R
groups of a few amino acids on the active site catalyze the conversion of
substrate to product.
°
The
product then leaves the active site.
·
A
single enzyme molecule can catalyze thousands of reactions a second.
·
Enzymes
are unaffected by the reaction and are reusable.
·
Most
metabolic enzymes can catalyze a reaction in both the forward and reverse
directions.
°
The
actual direction depends on the relative concentrations of products and
reactants.
°
Enzymes
catalyze reactions in the direction of equilibrium.
·
Enzymes
use a variety of mechanisms to lower activation energy and speed up a reaction.
°
In
reactions involving more than one reactant, the active site brings substrates
together in the correct orientation for the reaction to proceed.
°
As
the active site binds the substrate, it may put stress on bonds that must be
broken, making it easier for the reactants to reach the transition state.
°
R
groups at the active site may create a microenvironment that is conducive to a
specific reaction.
§
An
active site may be a pocket of low pH, facilitating H+ transfer to
the substrate as a key step in catalyzing the reaction.
°
Enzymes
may briefly bind covalently to substrates.
§
Subsequent
steps of the reaction restore the R groups within the active site to their
original state.
·
The
rate that a specific number of enzymes convert substrates to products depends
in part on substrate concentrations.
°
At
low substrate concentrations, an increase in substrate concentration speeds
binding to available active sites.
°
However,
there is a limit to how fast a reaction can occur.
°
At
high substrate concentrations, the active sites on all enzymes are engaged.
§
The
enzyme is saturated.
§
The
rate of the reaction is determined by the speed at which the active site can
convert substrate to product.
·
The
only way to increase productivity at this point is to add more enzyme
molecules.
A cell’s physical and chemical environment
affects enzyme activity.
·
The
activity of an enzyme is affected by general environmental conditions, such as
temperature and pH.
·
Each
enzyme works best at certain optimal
conditions, which favor the most active conformation for the enzyme
molecule.
·
Temperature
has a major impact on reaction rate.
°
As
temperature increases, collisions between substrates and active sites occur
more frequently as molecules move more rapidly.
°
As
temperature increases further, thermal agitation begins to disrupt the weak
bonds that stabilize the protein’s active conformation, and the protein
denatures.
°
Each
enzyme has an optimal temperature.
§
Most
human enzymes have optimal temperatures of about 35–40°C.
§
Bacteria
that live in
·
Each
enzyme also has an optimal pH.
·
Maintenance
of the active conformation of the enzyme requires a particular pH.
°
This
falls between pH 6 and 8 for most enzymes.
°
However,
digestive enzymes in the stomach are designed to work best at pH 2, while those
in the intestine have an optimum of pH 8.
·
Many
enzymes require nonprotein helpers, called cofactors,
for catalytic activity.
°
Cofactors
bind permanently or reversibly to the enzyme.
°
Some
inorganic cofactors include zinc, iron, and copper.
·
Organic
cofactors are called coenzymes.
°
Many
vitamins are coenzymes.
·
Binding
by inhibitors prevents enzymes from catalyzing reactions.
°
If
inhibitors attach to the enzyme by covalent bonds, inhibition may be
irreversible.
°
If
inhibitors bind by weak bonds, inhibition may be reversible.
·
Some
reversible inhibitors resemble the substrate and compete for binding to the
active site.
°
These
molecules are called competitive
inhibitors.
°
Competitive
inhibition can be overcome by increasing the concentration of the substrate.
·
Noncompetitive inhibitors impede enzymatic
reactions by binding to another part of the molecule.
°
Binding
by the inhibitor causes the enzyme to change shape, rendering the active site
less effective at catalyzing the reaction.
·
Toxins
and poisons are often irreversible enzyme inhibitors.
·
Sarin
is the nerve gas that was released by terrorists in the
°
Sarin
binds covalently to the R group on the amino acid serine.
°
Serine
is found in the active site of acetylcholinesterase, an important nervous
system enzyme.
Concept 8.5 Regulation of enzyme activity helps control metabolism
Metabolic control often depends on allosteric
regulation.
·
In
many cases, the molecules that naturally regulate enzyme activity behave like
reversible noncompetitive inhibitors.
·
Regulatory
molecules often bind weakly to an allosteric
site, a specific receptor on the enzyme away from the active site.
°
Binding
by these molecules can either inhibit or stimulate enzyme activity.
·
Most
allosterically regulated enzymes are constructed of two or more polypeptide
chains.
°
Each
subunit has its own active site.
°
Allosteric
sites are often located where subunits join.
·
The
binding of an activator stabilizes
the conformation that has functional active sites, while the binding of an inhibitor stabilizes the inactive form
of the enzyme.
·
As
the chemical conditions in the cell shift, the pattern of allosteric regulation
may shift as well.
·
By
binding to key enzymes, reactants and products of ATP hydrolysis may play a
major role in balancing the flow of traffic between anabolic and catabolic
pathways.
°
For
example, ATP binds to several catabolic enzymes allosterically, inhibiting
their activity by lowering their affinity for substrate.
°
ADP
functions as an activator of the same enzymes.
°
ATP
and ADP also affect key enzymes in anabolic pathways.
°
In
this way, allosteric enzymes control the rates of key reactions in metabolic
pathways.
·
In
enzymes with multiple catalytic subunits, binding by a substrate to one active
site stabilizes favorable conformational changes at all other subunits, a
process called cooperativity.
°
This
mechanism amplifies the response of enzymes to substrates, priming the enzyme
to accept additional substrates.
·
A
common method of metabolic control is feedback
inhibition in which an early step in a metabolic pathway is switched off by
the pathway’s final product.
°
The
product acts as an inhibitor of an enzyme in the pathway.
·
Feedback
inhibition prevents a cell from wasting chemical resources by synthesizing more
product than is needed.
The localization of enzymes within a cell
helps order metabolism.
·
Structures
within the cell help bring order to metabolic pathways.
·
A
team of enzymes for several steps of a metabolic pathway may be assembled as a
multienzyme complex.
·
The
product from the first reaction can then pass quickly to the next enzyme until
the final product is released.
·
Some
enzymes and enzyme complexes have fixed locations within the cells as
structural components of particular membranes.
°
Others
are confined within membrane-enclosed eukaryotic organelles.
·
Metabolism,
the intersecting set of chemical pathways characteristic of life, is a
choreographed interplay of thousands of different kinds of cellular molecules.