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"Cell Growth Due to Mutations in DNA
for Enzymes of Cellular Respiration"
Jason Trimble
Red 1
Dr. Thiemann
Introduction
All living organisms must have energy to survive and carry out their daily activities.
Most of this energy comes in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). The organisms harness
this energy from ATP through the process of cellular respiration. In this process, food molecules,
such as glucose, are oxidized in the presence of oxygen and water to carbon dioxide and more
water (C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O -> 12H2O + 6CO2). ATP is another product that is produced. The
steps of this process are glycolysis, the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA, the Krebs cycle, and
oxidative phosphorylation ("Cellular Respiration"). All but glycolysis occur in the mitochondria
organelles of the cell. Specifically in glycolysis and the Krebs cycle, substrate-level
phosphorylation produces ATP when enzymes bring substrates and ADPs together. In glycolysis,
a glucose molecule is broken down into two pyruvate (C3H3O3) molecules. This process requires
no oxygen and takes place in the cytosol of the cell. The glucose molecule is modified by a chain
of 10 enzymes with the end products being 2 pyruvate molecules, 2 net ATP (2 ATP are used to
make 4 ATP), and two reduced NADH electron carriers ("Glycolysis"). In the small oxidation of
pyruvate step, pyruvate enters a mitochondrium, 1 CO2 molecule is released, a NADH electron
carrier is reduced, and pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA. In the Krebs cycle, all of the carbons
are released as CO2 in an 8-enzyme cycle. For each pyruvate that enters the cycle, 1 ATP, 3
NADH, and 1 FADH2 are generated. The three experiments done on 7 different strains of a new
eukaryotic single-celled organism with mutated genes helps determine what the phenotype of
each gene is. Each mutated gene encodes for a certain enzyme in either glycolysis or the Krebs
cycle. If the mutation affects the function of the enzyme, the typical substrate of the enzyme will
accumulate in the cell by using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and other techniques. However, the
different phenotypes of the mutated genes are only apparent at a higher "restrictive" temperature
(37 C), and all the cells appear normal or wild-type at a lower "permissive" temperature (25 C).
Since there is a mutation in the genes of each strain, they should all grow at 25 C but also all not
grow at 37 C when provided with the starting molecule of glucose which is the first experiment.
When given pyruvate in the second experiment, a certain strain should grow if the mutation is in
a gene that encodes for an enzyme of glycolysis because this part of cellular respiration has been
skipped. Otherwise, the strain should not grow since there is either a mutation in a gene for an
enzyme involved in the oxidation of pyruvate or the Krebs cycle. For the third experiment with
fatty acids as a food source, the three strains used should grow since this uses a separate
metabolic pathway than glycolysis and the Krebs cycle. The fatty acids are used in acetyl CoA,
so this bypasses glycolysis and the oxidation of pyruvate in cellular respiration.
Results
Growth of Mutated Strains on Glucose
Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211
Growth at
25 C
+ + + + + + +
Growth at
37 C
- - - - - - -
Substance
Remaining
Fructose 1,6
bisphosphate
3 -
phospho-
glycerate
pyruvate pyruvate Phosphoenol-
pyruvate
2 -
phospho-
glycerate
pyruvate
Figure 1: Feeding Glucose to Mutated Strains. The mutated strains were grown both at the
permissive temperature of 25 C and the restrictive temperature of 37 C on glucose. The
chemicals that accumulate at the restrictive temperature were found out by using Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance and other chemical techniques.
Growth of Mutated Strains on Pyruvate at 37 C
Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211
Growth + + - - + + -
Figure 2: Feeding Pyruvate to Mutated Strains. The mutated strains were grown on pyruvate only
at the restrictive temperature of 37 C.
Growth of Mutated Strains on Fatty Acids at 37 C
Strain 164 166 211
Growth + + +
Figure 3: Feeding Fatty Acids to Mutated Strains. The three strains(164, 166, 211) that have not
grown yet at the restrictive temperature of 37 C were grown on fatty acids with the other
conditions remaining the same.
Enzymes Affected by the Mutations in Each Strain
Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211
Enzyme
Affected
Aldolase Phospho-
glyceromutase
Pyruvate
dehydrog-
enase
Pyruvate
dehydrog-
enase
Pyruvate
kinase
Enolase Pyruvate
dehydrog-
enase
Figure 4: The Mutated Enzymes for Each Strain. The enzymes affected by the mutations in each
strain were deduced by using the fact that the substance that accumulates from Figure 1 is the
substrate for the enzyme.
When growing the strains on glucose in experiment 1, only the restrictive temperature
makes the phenotypes of the mutations appear. All mutated strains grew at 25 C but none grew at
37 C as shown in Figure 1. The substances accumulated for each enzyme are fructose 1, 6
bisphosphate for 136, 3-phosphoglycerate for 152, phosphoenolpyruvate for 189, 2-
phosphoglycerate for 195, and pyruvate for 164, 166, and 211. In Figure 2, experiment 2 shows
that strains 136, 152, 189, and 195 grow on pyruvate while strains 164, 166, and 211 do not grow
on this medium. When put on fatty acids of a different molecular structure, all of the strains
tested(164, 166, and 211) are able to grow as shown in Figure 3. Mostly from the substances
accumulated, it can be inferred that the enzyme affected by a mutation is aldolase for 136,
phosphoglyceromutase for 152, pyruvate kinase for 189, enolase for 195, and pyruvate
dehydrogenase for 164, 166, and 211.
Discussion
From experiment 2, it can be concluded that strains 136, 152, 189, and 195 all must have
mutations in a gene for an enzyme used in glycolysis since they did not grow when given
glucose in experiment 1. If an enzyme is non-functional, then the substrate must accumulate.
From the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) technique, it can also be concluded that the
mutation is in aldolase for strain 136 since fructose 1, 6 bisphosphate accumulates, is in pyruvate
kinase for strain 189 since phosphoenolpyruvate accumulates, is in phosphoglyceromutase for
strain 152 since 3-phosphoglycerate accumulates, and is in enolase for strain 195 since 2-
phosphoglycerate accumulates. For the other three mutant strains, the mutation can only be in the
enzymes after glycolysis since pyruvate accumulates. Experiment 3 helps narrow down the
enyme affected for these strains since they all grow on fatty acids. Fatty acids are directly used to
make acetyl CoA to be used in the Krebs cycle. The only enzyme between pyruvate and acetyl
CoA is pyruvate dehydrogenase, so this must be the mutated enzyme for strains 164, 166, and
211. Through genetic crossing, it appears that the mutation for strain 211 is in a different gene
than that of strains 164 and 166. These different mutations might lead to an identical phenotype
(pyruvate dehydogenase cannot work) because the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase consists of
more than one polypeptide subunit. The genetic information for these subunits are found on
different genes and they combine to form a quaternary structure that is the enzyme pyruvate
dehydrogenase. If a mutation is found on either gene that encodes for a polypeptide subunit, then
the resulting enzyme will not work.
Works Cited
"Glycolysis." Uic.edu. University of Illinois at Chicago, n.d. Web. 5 Nov. 2014.
Kimball, John W. "Cellular Respiration." Users.rcn.com. Users.rcn.com, 17 Apr. 2014. Web. 5
Nov. 2014.

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Bio 61 Lab Report

  • 1. "Cell Growth Due to Mutations in DNA for Enzymes of Cellular Respiration" Jason Trimble Red 1 Dr. Thiemann
  • 2. Introduction All living organisms must have energy to survive and carry out their daily activities. Most of this energy comes in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). The organisms harness this energy from ATP through the process of cellular respiration. In this process, food molecules, such as glucose, are oxidized in the presence of oxygen and water to carbon dioxide and more water (C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O -> 12H2O + 6CO2). ATP is another product that is produced. The steps of this process are glycolysis, the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA, the Krebs cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation ("Cellular Respiration"). All but glycolysis occur in the mitochondria organelles of the cell. Specifically in glycolysis and the Krebs cycle, substrate-level phosphorylation produces ATP when enzymes bring substrates and ADPs together. In glycolysis, a glucose molecule is broken down into two pyruvate (C3H3O3) molecules. This process requires no oxygen and takes place in the cytosol of the cell. The glucose molecule is modified by a chain of 10 enzymes with the end products being 2 pyruvate molecules, 2 net ATP (2 ATP are used to make 4 ATP), and two reduced NADH electron carriers ("Glycolysis"). In the small oxidation of pyruvate step, pyruvate enters a mitochondrium, 1 CO2 molecule is released, a NADH electron carrier is reduced, and pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA. In the Krebs cycle, all of the carbons are released as CO2 in an 8-enzyme cycle. For each pyruvate that enters the cycle, 1 ATP, 3 NADH, and 1 FADH2 are generated. The three experiments done on 7 different strains of a new eukaryotic single-celled organism with mutated genes helps determine what the phenotype of each gene is. Each mutated gene encodes for a certain enzyme in either glycolysis or the Krebs cycle. If the mutation affects the function of the enzyme, the typical substrate of the enzyme will accumulate in the cell by using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and other techniques. However, the different phenotypes of the mutated genes are only apparent at a higher "restrictive" temperature
  • 3. (37 C), and all the cells appear normal or wild-type at a lower "permissive" temperature (25 C). Since there is a mutation in the genes of each strain, they should all grow at 25 C but also all not grow at 37 C when provided with the starting molecule of glucose which is the first experiment. When given pyruvate in the second experiment, a certain strain should grow if the mutation is in a gene that encodes for an enzyme of glycolysis because this part of cellular respiration has been skipped. Otherwise, the strain should not grow since there is either a mutation in a gene for an enzyme involved in the oxidation of pyruvate or the Krebs cycle. For the third experiment with fatty acids as a food source, the three strains used should grow since this uses a separate metabolic pathway than glycolysis and the Krebs cycle. The fatty acids are used in acetyl CoA, so this bypasses glycolysis and the oxidation of pyruvate in cellular respiration. Results Growth of Mutated Strains on Glucose Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211 Growth at 25 C + + + + + + + Growth at 37 C - - - - - - - Substance Remaining Fructose 1,6 bisphosphate 3 - phospho- glycerate pyruvate pyruvate Phosphoenol- pyruvate 2 - phospho- glycerate pyruvate Figure 1: Feeding Glucose to Mutated Strains. The mutated strains were grown both at the permissive temperature of 25 C and the restrictive temperature of 37 C on glucose. The chemicals that accumulate at the restrictive temperature were found out by using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and other chemical techniques.
  • 4. Growth of Mutated Strains on Pyruvate at 37 C Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211 Growth + + - - + + - Figure 2: Feeding Pyruvate to Mutated Strains. The mutated strains were grown on pyruvate only at the restrictive temperature of 37 C. Growth of Mutated Strains on Fatty Acids at 37 C Strain 164 166 211 Growth + + + Figure 3: Feeding Fatty Acids to Mutated Strains. The three strains(164, 166, 211) that have not grown yet at the restrictive temperature of 37 C were grown on fatty acids with the other conditions remaining the same. Enzymes Affected by the Mutations in Each Strain Strain 136 152 164 166 189 195 211 Enzyme Affected Aldolase Phospho- glyceromutase Pyruvate dehydrog- enase Pyruvate dehydrog- enase Pyruvate kinase Enolase Pyruvate dehydrog- enase Figure 4: The Mutated Enzymes for Each Strain. The enzymes affected by the mutations in each strain were deduced by using the fact that the substance that accumulates from Figure 1 is the substrate for the enzyme. When growing the strains on glucose in experiment 1, only the restrictive temperature makes the phenotypes of the mutations appear. All mutated strains grew at 25 C but none grew at 37 C as shown in Figure 1. The substances accumulated for each enzyme are fructose 1, 6 bisphosphate for 136, 3-phosphoglycerate for 152, phosphoenolpyruvate for 189, 2-
  • 5. phosphoglycerate for 195, and pyruvate for 164, 166, and 211. In Figure 2, experiment 2 shows that strains 136, 152, 189, and 195 grow on pyruvate while strains 164, 166, and 211 do not grow on this medium. When put on fatty acids of a different molecular structure, all of the strains tested(164, 166, and 211) are able to grow as shown in Figure 3. Mostly from the substances accumulated, it can be inferred that the enzyme affected by a mutation is aldolase for 136, phosphoglyceromutase for 152, pyruvate kinase for 189, enolase for 195, and pyruvate dehydrogenase for 164, 166, and 211. Discussion From experiment 2, it can be concluded that strains 136, 152, 189, and 195 all must have mutations in a gene for an enzyme used in glycolysis since they did not grow when given glucose in experiment 1. If an enzyme is non-functional, then the substrate must accumulate. From the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) technique, it can also be concluded that the mutation is in aldolase for strain 136 since fructose 1, 6 bisphosphate accumulates, is in pyruvate kinase for strain 189 since phosphoenolpyruvate accumulates, is in phosphoglyceromutase for strain 152 since 3-phosphoglycerate accumulates, and is in enolase for strain 195 since 2- phosphoglycerate accumulates. For the other three mutant strains, the mutation can only be in the enzymes after glycolysis since pyruvate accumulates. Experiment 3 helps narrow down the enyme affected for these strains since they all grow on fatty acids. Fatty acids are directly used to make acetyl CoA to be used in the Krebs cycle. The only enzyme between pyruvate and acetyl CoA is pyruvate dehydrogenase, so this must be the mutated enzyme for strains 164, 166, and 211. Through genetic crossing, it appears that the mutation for strain 211 is in a different gene than that of strains 164 and 166. These different mutations might lead to an identical phenotype (pyruvate dehydogenase cannot work) because the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase consists of
  • 6. more than one polypeptide subunit. The genetic information for these subunits are found on different genes and they combine to form a quaternary structure that is the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase. If a mutation is found on either gene that encodes for a polypeptide subunit, then the resulting enzyme will not work.
  • 7. Works Cited "Glycolysis." Uic.edu. University of Illinois at Chicago, n.d. Web. 5 Nov. 2014. Kimball, John W. "Cellular Respiration." Users.rcn.com. Users.rcn.com, 17 Apr. 2014. Web. 5 Nov. 2014.