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Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5

Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

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Page 1: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Cell Respiration & Metabolism

Physiology

Ch. 5

Page 2: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Carbohydrate Metabolism

Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption

Three monosaccharides are absorbed from digested food - glucose, galactose, and fructose, but the last two are quickly converted to glucose

All oxidative carbohydrate consumption is essentially a matter of glucose catabolism

Page 3: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O

Page 4: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Combustion -vs- Glucose Catabolism

Combustion carries out the preceding reaction in a single, uncontrolled step, releasing energy as heat

Cellular respiration occurs in many small, enzymatically-catalyzed steps, storing much of the energy as ATP

Page 5: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Three Major Pathways of Glucose Catabolism

Glycolysis - splits a glucose molecule into two molecules of pyruvic acid

Anaerobic respiration - occurs in the absence of oxygen; reduces pyruvic acid to lactic acid

Aerobic respiration - occurs in the presence of oxygen and oxidizes pyruvic acid to carbon dioxide and water

Page 6: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Glucose + 2 NAD + 2 ADP + 2 Pi 2 pyruvic acid + 2 NADH + 2 ATP

Fig 5.1P. 105

Page 7: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Fig 5.2P. 106

Page 8: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar activation

The enzyme hexokinase transfers a Pi from ATP to glucose, producing glucose 6-phosphate (G6P).

Keeps intracellular glucose concentration low, favoring continued diffusion of glucose.

Traps the glucose within the cell, as phosphorylated molecules cannot pass through the plasma membrane.

Phase 1.

Step 1. - Phosphorylation

Page 9: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar activation

G6P is isomerized to form fructose 6-phosphate (F6P).

It is phosphorylated again to form fructose 1,6- diphosphate by the action of phosphofructokinase.

Primes the process byproviding activation energy

Phase 1.

Steps 2 & 3. - Priming

At this point, two molecules of ATP have been consumed

Page 10: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar cleavage

F6P is split into glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (GAP) and dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP).

GAP is on the direct pathway of glycolysis; DHAP is not. The two are isomers and readilyinterconverted.

Phase 2.

Step 4. - Cleavage

Page 11: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar oxidation and ATP formation

Each GAP molecule is oxidized by removing a pair of hydrogen atoms.

A Pi is added (from the cell’s pool of free phosphate ions) to form 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate (1,3-BPG)

NAD is reduced by the hydrogens to NADH+ + H+.

Phase 3.

Step 5. - Oxidation

Page 12: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar oxidation and ATP formation

A phosphate group is removed from 1,3-BPG and transferred to ADP, phosphorylating it to ATP. 2 ATPs are made.

3-Phosphoglycerate is formed.

Phase 3.

Step 6. - ATP formation from 1,3-BPG

Page 13: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar oxidation and ATP formation

The position of the phosphate group is shifted in the conversion of 3-phosphoglycerate to 2-phosphoglycerate.

Phosphoenolpyruvic acid is created by the dehydration of 2-phosphoglycerate. This enol phosphate has a high phosphate transfer potential.

Phase 3.

Steps 7 & 8. - Isomerizations

Page 14: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Sugar oxidation and ATP formation

A phosphate group is removed from phosphoenolpyruvate and transferred to ADP, phosphorylating it to ATP. 2 more ATPs are made.

Two pyruvic acid molecules are formed from the single original glucose.

Phase 3.

Step 9. - ATP formation from phosphoenolpyruvate

Page 15: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

The tally from glycolysis…

Page 16: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Lactic Acid Pathway

Metabolic pathway by which glucose is converted to lactic acid (anaerobic respiration): Oxygen is not used in the process.

NADH + H+ + pyruvic acid lactic acid + NAD. Produce 2 ATP/glucose molecule.

Fig 5.3P. 106

Page 17: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Lactic Acid Pathway Some tissues better adapt to anaerobic

conditions: RBCs do not contain mitochondria and only use

the lactic acid pathway. Occurs in skeletal muscles and heart when ratio of

oxygen supply to oxygen need falls below critical level.

• Skeletal muscle: • Normal daily occurrence.• Does not harm muscle tissue.

• Cardiac muscle normally respires aerobically:• Myocardial ischemia occurs under anaerobic conditions.

Page 18: Cell Respiration & Metabolism Physiology Ch. 5. Carbohydrate Metabolism Most dietary carbohydrate is burned as fuel within a few hours of absorption Three

Also study Kreb’s, ETC, lipid and amino acid metabolism in Chapter 5