Stoichiometry and Energetics
Stoichiometry and Energetics
Stoichiometry and Energetics
Stochiometry 1
Stoichiometry and Energetics
Typically, chemical reactions are written as a
single or a system of stoichiometric equations.
2 Stochiometry
the reactions occur in an environment that
water molecules are the predominant species,
sometimes even water molecules is not explicityly
written. In performing measurement for matieral
blance, balancing on water is virtually impossible
unless isotope labeling is used. Many require
cosubstrates or cofactors, which are largely
“recycled” or “regenerated” by another reaction
or reactions. Those reactions are thus “coupled”.
Diversity in Stochiometry
Since the biological reactions are catalyzed by
enzymes in the organism, the starting point in
setting up the stoichiometric equation is to consult
the biochemical pathways. In addition to various
textbook, a number of websites also provide
valuable data; some are more comprehensive and
covers important pathways of general interest,
including the KEGG (http://www.genome.ad.jp/
kegg), Brenda, and ExPASy (http://www.expasy.ch .
Stochiometry 3
C6H12O6 → 2C2H5OH +
2CO2 ∆Go = -56.5 kcal/mole
ADP + Pi → ATP +
H2O ∆Go = 7.3 kcal/mole
∆Go = 41.9
-
kcal/mole
COOH COOH
C =0 H 2 N ⋅ CH
NH 3 + CH 2 + NADPH 2 → CH 2 + NADP + + H 2O
+
CH 2 CH 2
COOH COOH
The product, L-glutamate, can then be the
amino group donor to transfer the amino group
to other α-keto acid to form other amino acids.
When the ammonia concentration is low, E.
coli employs an energetically more expensive
pathway with a higher affinity for ammonia (a
4 Stochiometry
lower km) to assimilate ammonia. The enzyme
catalyzing the reaction is glutamine synthetase.
COOH COOH
H 2 NCH H 2 NCH
CH 2 + ATP + NH 3 → CH 2 + ADP + Pi
CH 2 CH 2
COOH CONH 2
The amino group in glutamine can be transferred
to α position of α-ketoglutarate to form
glutamate as catalyzed by glutamate synthase.
Glutamine + α-ketaglutarate
+ NADPH2 → 2
+
glutamate + NADP+
The second molecule of glutamate is recycled
to be used in the slutamine synthetase
catalyzed reaction. The net reaction is
a − ketoglutarate + ATP + NH 3 + NADPH 2 + → glutamate + NADP
In the above two examples the same chemical
conversions, from glucose to ethanol and from
α-ketoglutarate and ammonia to glutamate, are
accomplished. But different biochemical pathways
are used with different energetic efficiency.
Stochiometry 5
The cost of making polymers (protein, nucleic
acids) from building blocks is rather high. The
incorporation of each mole of nucleotide into DNA
or RNA requires 2 moles of ATP. The synthesis of
each peptide bond or the addition of each amino
acid, through translation costs at leat 4 ATP. The
energetic cost of synthesizing a unit amount of
biopolymers which constitute the bulk of biomass
thus can be estimated, at least in principle.
6 Stochiometry
ethanol + 2CO2 + 2ATP+2H2O
MWAve =
∑a M
W i i
∑ ai a i
ai ’
=
∑ ai
However, when the molar composition of the
protein mixture is uncertain, as in the case of the
cellular proteins, this approach is not applicable.
One has to resort to various methods of estimation.
In the same vein, if the molar composition of the
cell, including all the biopolymers and building
blocks, is all known, by summing up the equations
for all those components, one will be able to write
a “formula” of the cell. In practice the precise molar
formula cannot be easily written by summing
up all components in the cell and developing
a weighted average formula. Rather, a cell
Stochiometry 7
cormula can be written, but largely by doing an
elemental analysis (usually considering only key
component elements, C, N, O, H, maybe also P, S).
8 Stochiometry
equation for biomass arises from “turn-over” of
cellular materials. Both protein and mRNA “turns
over” in the cells. In other words, after being
synthesized they serve their function for a period of
time, and then get degraded. Some components
become degradation products and are excreted
or catabolized, others become monomers
like amino acids and recycled to build cellular
biopolymers. The balance in the intracellular
concentration of protein P is described as
dP
=a - β P - μ P
dt
2 O
where α is the average synthetic rate, β is the rate
constant for degradation (turn over), and μ is the rate
of cell expansion which causes P, the intracellular
concentration of proteins, to decrease due to
the expansion of cell volume. The degradation
rate of protein and mRNA and varies widely. The
formula for the synthesis of biopolymers can
reasonably accurately incorporate energetic cost
(i.e. specify the number of moles of ATP used to
synthesize a mole of biopolymer), or can specify
the energetic cost associated with α. However,
knowing steady state cellular composition P is not
sufficient to determine α unless β and μ are also
determined. In practice, even though μ can be
determined accurately, β is largely undetermined.
In other words, cells with the same P
and the same μ may have very different
α and β even both have the same dP/dt.
Stochiometry 9
gradient of a chemical species requires energy
Stoichiometric Equation for (otherwise, no matter how small the permeability
Bi
Biomass F
Formation
i the cellular membrane is, eventually the two sides
of the membrane will reach equilibrium). Transport
C6H12O6+ of molecules utilizing H+ or Na+/K+ gradient is
¦ i CD i H E i NJ i OG i aO
O2 bNH
N 3 o cC
CD ' H E ' NJ 'OG ' dCO
CO2 eH 2 O thus energy dependent indirectly. In many cases,
the cost of those transport process are not
Inputs Outputs clearly known. In Eukaryote, organelles provides
Subsrates consumed ĺ biomass produced+ (CO2 + water) produced
compartmentalization in all the cell. Electric or
Can write four balance equations on elements carbon, nitrogen,
pH potential exists across those membranes
hydrogen, and oxygen
There are four unknown
separating the cytosol and lumen of organells.
Reaction intermediates are transported across
these organelles. Maintaining these gradients and
transport across orgenell is also energy dependent.
10 Stochiometry
symbol, x, will be used to denote dry biomass.
Stochiometry 11
The stochiometric equation of biomass can
be seen as a conversion of new materials (or
input) into cells and other products (outputs).
A yield coefficient is often used to describe
the conversion efficiency. This term yield is
loosely defined and used in different units.
Virtually any pair of output and input can be
combined to give a yield coefficient. The most
commonly used ones are shown in Table III.
ΔX
Yx / s =
In the Δcase
S that multiple nutrients and products
are invovlved, for example, in mammalian cell
Yield on biomass = mass of biomass produced culture, a stoichiometric ratio (βίј) for a pair of
mass of substrate consumed nutrients/products is often used. For example, in
mammalian cell culture, a large fraction of glucose
consumed by cells is converted to lactate. Under the
condition that glucose concentration is controlled
at a very low level, much less lactate is produced.
It is not dimensionless.
dimensionless The units can be g cells/g The stoichiometric ratio of lactate to glucose is
glucose. The value is dependent on the units often used to characterize the metabolism of
chosen for the expression.
p
glucose. Yield coefficient and stoichiometric ratio
can be applied to a wide variety of substrates,
with a variety of units. Referring to the biomass
formation equation, on a mass basis it is basically
Yield coefficient of biomass the product of the stoichiometric coefficient of
the biomass and the formula weight of biomass
• Determined experimentally divided by the product of the stoichiometric
• The efficiency differs from organisms, coefficient and the formula weight of the substrate.
growth conditions
conditions, and substrates
succinate
succ ate
Anaerobic
Substrate consumed
12 Stochiometry
xt 2
Yx / s =
∫
xt 1
dx
st 2
∫
st 1
ds
Stochiometry 13
and the theoretical maximum is (2x48/180=)
0.51 Kg ethanol/Kg glucose. The true yield in
process is lower because some glucose will be
diverted to make biomass and for the cells other
energetic needs. The basic way of calculating the
theoretical yield of such products is to tabulate the
pathway and examine its energetic conversion.
The second example, production of glutamic acid
from glucose and ammonia in corynebacterium
glutamican encompasses the following pathways.
a. Synthesis of a product is energetically feasible
if a net production of ATP and/or 1 NADH, results in
the process. As seen in the example, the theoretical
maximum conversion based on carbon is 5/6 (mole
carbon in glutamate/mole carbon in glucose), or
on a mass basis (143/180=) 0.79 for glutamine.
b. Products which require energetic contribution
of energy derived from the catabolism of raw
materials.Some products from biosynthetic
pathways require the catabolism of substrate
to make the reaction energetically favorable. In
this case, from the biochemical pathways the
biosynthetic reaction equation requires the supply
of energy in the form of NADPH/NADH or ATP.
14 Stochiometry
aimed at producing new products. Many others
are aimed at alternating the carbon or energy
efficiency of the process. The estimation of the
maximum theoretical yield of a product from
a substrate is now not just based on the path-
ways in the producing organism, but on path-
ways, or the combination of segments of path-
ways, available in the living system. One may
even take one step further by combining with
protein engineering to create new enzymes to
facilitate improved carbon flow or energy effi-
ciency for product formation. Therefore, maxi-
mizing the thermodynamic efficiency for the
conversion of substrates to product is desired.
Stochiometry 15
biomass yield is not critical in most process design.
16 Stochiometry
Stochiometry 17
18 Stochiometry