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Quaestio: How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food? Nunc Agenda: List what foods you have eaten today and the types of molecules that compose them.

Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

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Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?. Nunc Agenda: List what foods you have eaten today and the types of molecules that compose them. Energy. Energy : the ability to do work. Can you think of examples? In what forms does energy exist ? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Quaestio: How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Nunc Agenda: List what foods you have eaten today and

the types of molecules that compose them.

Page 2: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Energy

• Energy: the ability to do work.

• Can you think of examples?– In what forms does energy exist?

– How do we use energy on earth?

Page 3: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

A cell does 3 main kinds of work:

• Mechanical work: beating cilia, contraction of muscle cells, movement of chromosomes during reproduction

• Transport work: moving substances across membranes

• Chemical work: running chemical reactions, synthesis of polymers from monomers

Page 4: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 5: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

The Law of Conservation of Energy• The Law of Conservation of Energy: Energy can

neither be created nor destroyed; it can only change forms. – Remember, the sum of energy in the universe is constant.

• Examples of energy conversions: – Photosynthesis

• (Light E Electrical E Chemical E)– Respiration

• (Chemical E Kinetic E Thermal E)– Internal Combustion Engine

• (Chemical E Thermal E Kinetic E).

Page 6: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 7: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Energy for Living Things

• All living things need energy to carry out their life processes.

• Nutrition: the life process in which organisms obtain energy in food for metabolic processes.

• Energy must exist to run “cellular machinery.”

Page 8: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Examples of Energy Needs

• 1. Locomotion. (Muscle Contractions)

• 2. Building complex molecules from simple ones (Synthesis).

• 3. Digestion.

• 4. Breathing, Talking, Thinking, Existing!

Page 9: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 10: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Chemicalenergy

Heat CO2

H2O+

A Heterotroph’s nutrition must supply the organism with enough chemical energy to fuel its life’s activities.

Page 11: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

In fireflys, Energy in the form of ATP combines with an enzyme to run a chemical reaction to produce flashes of lights

Page 12: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Ctenophores (Comb Jellies), like fireflies, have bioluminescence using the power of ATP.

Page 13: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Energy from Food• Living things rely on the chemical energy stored in

their food to survive.

• Carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins all have chemical energy and all can be broken down to yield energy– known as cellular respiration

• Carbohydrates are the foods most commonly broken down. – Created during photosynthesis

Page 14: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 15: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Introducing the major players and processes:

ADP ATP

Page 16: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

ATP and ADP

• Cells use chemical energy in the form of ATP– The energy released during cellular respiration is

“stored” in the form of ADP and ATP.

• ADP: Adenosine diphosphate– Has two phosphate groups.

• ATP: Adenosine triphosphate– Has three phosphate groups

Page 17: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Behind the Names• Adenosine is the combination of a molecule of

the nitrogenous base adenine with a molecule of the sugar ribose.

– Adenine + Ribose = Adenosine

• Diphosphate = 2 phosphate groups attached to adenosine.

• Triphosphate = 3 phosphate groups attached to adenosine.

Page 18: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

: Nitrogenous Base

: 5-carbon sugar

ATP: C10H16N5O13P3

Page 19: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Molecular Similarities• ATP and ADP use the same subunits as the nucleic

acids:

– A nitrogenous base (adenine is present in DNA and RNA).

– A 5-carbon sugar (ribose is present in RNA only).• Can you remember what DNA has?

– Phosphate groups

Page 20: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 21: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

What makes ADP and ATP so important?

• ATP has more energy than ADP:– due to a high-energy bond between the 2nd and 3rd

phosphate group

• When the third phosphate group is removed from ATP, it forms ADP, and chemical energy is released. – ATP + H2O ADP + P + Energy

Page 22: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 23: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 24: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Phosphorylation

• Phosphorylation: the transfer of energy when a phosphate group is transferred among molecules.

• Phosphorylation is a common way for chemical energy to be transferred in living cells.– ATP loses a phosphate to the molecule that

becomes phosphyorylated.

Page 25: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
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ATP is recycled

• ATP is used continuously by a cell, but it can be regenerated by adding a phosphate to ADP.– It’s a renewable resource!

• If ATP could not be regenerated by the phosphorylation of ADP, humans would consume nearly their body weight in ATP each day

Page 29: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 30: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

AMP

• AMP stands for adenosine monophosphate. It has only one phosphate group attached.

• AMP has lower energy than ADP (and ATP).

• ADP is rarely broken down into AMP for energy.

Page 31: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 32: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

The Role of Glucose.

• Glucose (a simple sugar) is broken down to supply the energy needed to add a phosphate group to ADP to form ATP.

• One C6H12O6 molecule can be used to form 36 molecules of ATP.

Page 33: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

More on Carbohydrates• Glucose is not usually present in its simple form in the

foods we eat.

• We need to break complex carbohydrates into glucose first.

• Review: Our digestive system breaks down complex carbohydrates:– Starch Maltose Glucose

• Can you remember what enzymes are involved and where?

Page 34: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Question• If ATP is directly used for energy, why do we

need glucose at all?

Answer: Glucose contains a lot more energy than ATP, but is actually a smaller molecule. Glucose is a good way to store chemical energy, while ATP is more appropriate for directly supplying immediate energy for cellular reactions.

Page 35: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

More on ATP vs. Glucose• Glucose Chemical Formula– C6H12O6

– Smaller Molecule with More Energy.

• ATP Chemical Formula– C10H16N5O13P3

– Larger Molecule with Less Energy.

Page 36: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Glucose

ATP

Glucose holds more energy than ATP

Page 37: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Glucose vs. ATP

• Like a gold bar • Cash!

Can you explain the analogy?

Glucose is smaller but holds more energy, and needs to be broken down or exchanged before you can purchase with it. A suitcase full of money may be larger, like ATP, but can be used immediately.

Page 38: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Questions

• If ATP is used as the main source of energy in a cell, then why does a cell only keep a small amount of ATP present at any time?– ATP is constantly being recycled from ADP

Page 39: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Ways to transfer energy in the cell

• Transfer phosphate groups• Transfer electrons• Transfer hydrogen

Page 40: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Oxidation-Reduction Reactions: the transfer of electrons

• Oxidation: A chemical change in which an atom or a molecule loses electrons.– Example: When sodium combines with chlorine to

form sodium chloride (NaCl), sodium loses an electron to become a sodium ion (Na+).

• Reduction: A chemical change in which an atom or a molecule gains electrons.– Example: Chlorine gains the electron from sodium,

becoming a chloride ion (Cl-).

Page 41: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Questions

• Why did sodium (Na) become Na+? • Why did chlorine (Cl) become Cl-?

Answer: Sodium lost an electron and became a positive ion. It now has more protons than electrons. Sodium was oxidized.

Answer: Chlorine gained an electron and became a negative ion. It now has more electrons than protons. Chlorine was reduced.

Page 42: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Remember Oil Rig!

Oxidation

Is

Loss (of electrons)

Reduction

Is

Gain (of electrons)

Page 43: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 44: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Another way to remember:LEO goes GER

• Lose• Electrons• Oxidation

• Gain• Electrons• Reduction

Page 45: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Oxidation-Reduction Reactions

• When one substance is oxidized, another must be reduced.

• Redox Reaction: (short for Reduction-Oxidation Reaction): A reaction that involves both oxidation and reduction.

Page 46: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Gaining and Losing Hydrogen• Occasionally, rather than exchanging electrons,

molecules will exchange hydrogen atoms. – Recall: a hydrogen atom consists of one proton and one

electron. It is the simplest element.

• The molecule that loses the hydrogen is oxidized– called the oxidant.

• The molecule that gains the hydrogen is reduced– called the reductant.

Page 47: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?
Page 48: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Hydrogen Ion = H+ =

Proton

Hydrogen was Oxidized

Page 49: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Hydrogen

Page 50: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Redox Reactions, Cont’d

• Redox reactions involve a transfer of energy.

• The oxidant (the electron or hydrogen donor) normally loses energy and the reductant (the electron or hydrogen acceptor) gains energy.

Page 51: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Biochemical Pathway

• Cellular Respiration follows a biochemical pathway: a sequence of chemical reactions that leads to a result.

• This pathway is fueled by redox reactions. • *Remember – if a molecule loses a hydrogen

(oxidation), another molecule must accept that hydrogen (reduction).

Page 52: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Hydrogen Acceptors

• NAD and FAD are two coenzymes that serve as hydrogen and electron acceptors.

• NAD = nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.• FAD = flavin adenine dinucleotide.

• To be reduced:• NAD + H NADH (higher energy)

• FAD + 2H FADH2 (higher energy)

Page 53: Quaestio : How do organisms obtain the energy stored in food?

Hydrogen Acceptors, Cont’d

• The extra energy (electrons) carried by NADH and FADH2 can be used to make ATP from ADP.