Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Mitochondria :: essays research papers
 Mitochondria      Mitochondria are responsible for energy production. They are also the  responsible location for which respiration takes place. Mitochondria contain  enzymes that help convert food material into adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which  can be used directly by the cell as an energy source. Mitochondria tend to be  concentrated near cellular structures that require large inputs of energy, such  as the flagellum. The role of the mitochondria is very important in respiration.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In the presence of oxygen, pyruvate or fatty acids, can be further  oxidized in the mitochondria. Each mitochondrion is enclosed by two membranes  separated by an intermembrane space. The intermembrane space extends into the  folds of the inner membrane called cristae which dramatically increase the  surface area of the inner membrane. Cristae extend into a dense material called  the matrix, an area which contains RNA, DNA, proteins, ribosomes and range of  solutes. This is similar to the contents of the chloroplast stroma and like the  chloroplast, the mitochondrion is a semi-autonomous organelles containing the  machinery for the production of some of its own proteins. The main function of  the mitochondrion is the oxidation of the pyruvate derived from glycolysis and  related processes to produce the ATP required to perform cellular work.(Campbell  182-9)  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Pyruvate, or fatty acids from the breakdown of triglycerides or  phospholipids, pass easily through pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane  made up of a channel protein called porin. The inner membrane is a more  significant barrier and specific transport proteins exist to carry pyruvate and  fatty acids into the matrix. Once inside the matrix, pyruvate and fatty acids  are converted to the two carbon compound acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA). For  pyruvate this involves a decarboxylation step which removes one of the three  carbons of pyruvate as carbon dioxide. The energy released by the oxidation of  pyruvate at this stage is used to reduce NAD to NADH. (185)  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The C2 acetyl CoA is then taken into a sequence of reactions known as  Krebs cycle which completes the oxidation of carbon and regenerates an acceptor  to keep the cycle going. The oxidation of the carbon is accompanied by the  reduction of electron acceptors and the production of some ATP by substrate  phosphorylation. The C2 acetyl CoA is coupled to oxaloacetate, a C4 acceptor in  the cycle. The product is citrate a C6 compound. This first product, citrate,  is the reason the cycle is sometimes called the citric acid or ticarboxylic acid  cycle, referring it after the scientist whose lab most advanced our  understanding of it, Sir Hans Krebs. (Comptons 160)  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Two of the early reactions of the cycle are decarboxylations which  shorten citrate to succinate a C4 compound.  					    
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