Title: Respiration
1Respiration
- Cellular respiration is the process by which
cells transfer chemical energy from sugar
molecules to ATP molecules. - As this happens cells release CO2 and use up O2
- Respiration can be AEROBIC or ANAEROBIC
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- Breathing supplies oxygen to our cells and
removes carbon dioxide - Breathing provides for the exchange of O2 and
CO2 - Between an organism and its environment
Figure 6.2
3.
- The human body uses energy from ATP for all its
activities. - ATP powers almost all cellular and body activities
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4CELLULAR RESPIRATION
- Cellular respiration is an energy- releasing
process. It produces ATP - ATP is the universal energy source
- Making ATP
- Plants make ATP during photosynthesis
- Cells of all organisms make ATP by breaking down
carbohydrates, fats, and protein
5- The energy in an ATP molecule
- Lies in the bonds between its phosphate groups
Figure 5.4A
6REDOX REACTIONS
- The loss of electrons is called oxidation.
- The addition of electrons is called reduction
7Overview of Aerobic Respiration
- C6H12O6 6O2 ? 6CO2 6H2O ATP
- glucose oxygen carbon
water - dioxide
80
- When glucose is converted to carbon dioxide
- It loses hydrogen atoms, which are added to
oxygen, producing water
Figure 6.5A
9STAGES OF CELLULAR RESPIRATION
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- Overview Cellular respiration occurs in three
main stages - Glycolysis
- Krebs Cycle or Citric Acid Cycle
- Electron Transport Chain or Phosphorylation
100
- Stage 1
- Glycolysis
- No oxygen needed. It is universal
- Occurs in the cytoplasm
- Breaks down glucose into pyruvate, producing a
small amount of ATP (2)
11GLYCOLYSIS
- Where? In the cytosol of all cells.
- Both aerobic and anaerobic respiration begin with
glycolysis. - What happens? The cell harvests energy by
oxidizing glucose to pyruvate. - One molecule of glucose (6 carbons) is converted
to two pyruvate molecules (3 carbons) through a
series of 10 reactions mediated by enzymes. - Result
- 2 pyruvate molecules (each with a 3
carbon backbone) - 2 NADH molecules. Carrier that picks
up hydrogens stripped from glucose. - 2 ATP molecules. 4 are made but cells
use 2 to start glycolysis so net gain is 2
12An overview of cellular respiration
13Preparatory steps to enter the Krebs cycle
- The 2 pyruvate molecules enter the mitochondrion
and an enzyme strips one carbon from each
pyruvate. - This two carbon molecule is picked up by
Co-enzyme A in preparation for the Krebs cycle. - This is acetyl CoA. This is what enters the
Krebs cycle C-C-CoA (oxaloacetate)
140
- Stage 2
- The citric acid cycle or Krebs cycle
- Takes place in the mitochondria
- Completes the breakdown of glucose (catabolism),
producing a small amount of ATP (2ATP) - Pyruvate is broken down to carbon dioxide
- More coenzymes are reduced .Supplies the third
stage of cellular respiration with electrons
(hydrogen carriers such as NADH)
15KREBS CYCLE or citric acid cycle
- This cycle involves a series of 8 steps forming
and rearranging. Each time it releases CO2 and
NADH carries hydrogen to the last step. 6 CO2
are given off as waste (this is the most oxidized
form of Carbon)In total - 6 CO2
- 6 NADH are produced and
- 2 FADH and only
- 2 ATP
16An overview of cellular respiration
170
- Stage 3
- Oxidative phosphorylation or electron transport
chain - Occurs in the mitochondria (inner membrane)
- Uses the energy released by falling electrons
to pump H across a membrane - Harnesses the energy of the H gradient through
chemiosmosis, producing ATP
18Chemiosmosis
- Chemiosmosis is an energy coupling mechanism that
uses energy stored on H - Chemiosmosis is the coupling of the REDUX
reactions of the electron transport chain to ATP
synthesis
190
- NADH passes electrons to an electron transport
chain - As electrons fall from carrier to carrier and
finally to O2 - Energy is released in small quantities
Figure 6.5C
20ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN
- Electron transport systems are embedded (protein
molecules) in inner mitochondrial membranes
(cristae) - NADH and FADH2 give up electrons that they picked
up in earlier stages to electron transport system - Electrons are transported through the system
- The final electron acceptor is oxygen. The
hydrogen combines with the oxygen to form water
21Electron transport chain
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23HOW MUCH TOTAL ATP(ENERGY) WAS PRODUCED?
- Glycolysis
- 2 ATP formed by substrate-level phosphorylation
- Krebs cycle and preparatory reactions
- 2 ATP formed by substrate-level phosphorylation
- Electron transport phosphorylation
- 32-34 ATP formed
- 223438
- Most ATP production occurs by oxidative
phosphorylation or electron transport chain
24WHY OXYGEN?
- Electron transport phosphorylation requires the
presence of oxygen - Oxygen withdraws spent electrons from the
electron transport system, then combines with H
to form water
25Web site tutorials to check
- http//www.sp.uconn.edu/terry/Common/respiration.
html - http//www2.nl.edu/jste/electron_transport_system.
htm - http//www.wisc-online.com/objects/MBY2604/MBY2604
.swf
26An overview of cellular respiration
27An overview of cellular respiration
28(No Transcript)
29Animation Cell Respiration Overview
30How efficient is cellular respiration?
- Only about 40 efficient.
- In other words, a call can harvest about 40
of the energy stored in glucose. - Most energy is released as heat
31Evolution of cellular respiration
- When life originated, atmosphere had little
oxygen - Earliest organisms used anaerobic pathways
- Later, photosynthesis increased atmospheric
oxygen - Cells arose that used oxygen as final acceptor in
electron transport (without oxygen to act as the
final hydrogen acceptor the cells will die)
32Fermentation
- Fermentation allows some cells to produce ATP
without oxygen. - This is Anaerobic respiration
33ANAEROBIC RESPIRATIONFermentation is an
anaerobic alternative to cellular respiration
- Do not use oxygen
- Produce less ATP( 2) than aerobic pathways
- Two types. One produces alcohol and the other
lactic acid as waste products - Fermentation pathways
- Anaerobic electron transport
34Fermentation
- Under anaerobic conditions, many kinds of cells
- can use glycolysis alone to produce small amounts
of ATP - Begin with glycolysis
- Do not break glucose down completely to carbon
dioxide and water - Yield only the 2 ATP from glycolysis
- Steps that follow glycolysis serve only to
regenerate NAD
35Yeast
- Single-celled fungi
- Carry out alcoholic fermentation
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Bakers yeast
- Carbon dioxide makes bread dough rise
- Saccharomyces ellipsoideus
- Used to make beer and wine
36Our muscle cells
- In the absence of oxygen our muscles can carry
out fermentation, but the pyruvate from
glycolysis is turned into lactic acid instead of
alcohol
370
- In alcohol fermentation
- NADH is oxidized to NAD while converting
pyruvate to CO2 and ethanol
Figure 6.13C
38More details
39Two stages of glycolysis
- Energy-requiring steps
- ATP energy activates glucose and its six-carbon
derivatives - Energy-releasing steps
- The products of the first part are split into
three-carbon pyruvate molecules - ATP and NADH form
40- Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing
glucose to pyruvate - In glycolysis, ATP is used to prime a glucose
molecule - Which is split into two molecules of pyruvate
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Figure 6.7A
41- In the first phase of glycolysis
- ATP is used to energize a glucose molecule, which
is then split in two
PREPARATORY PHASE (energy investment)
Steps A fuel molecule is
energized, using ATP.
Glucose
ATP
Step
1
ADP
Glucose-6-phosphate
P
2
Fructose-6-phosphate
P
ATP
3
ADP
Fructose-1,6-diphosphate
P
P
Step A six-carbon intermediate splits
into two three-carbon intermediates.
4
Figure 6.7C
42- In the second phase of glycolysis
- ATP, NADH, and pyruvate are formed
P
P
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate(G3P)
Step A redox reaction generates NADH.
5
6
9
ENERGY PAYOFF PHASE
NAD
?
NAD
?
6
6
P
P
NADH
NADH
H?
H?
P
P
P
P
1,3 -Diphosphoglycerate
Steps ATP and pyruvate are
produced.
6
9
ADP
ADP
7
7
ATP
ATP
P
3 -Phosphoglycerate
P
P
P
8
8
2-Phosphoglycerate
H2O
H2O
P
P
Phosphoenolpyruvate(PEP)
9
9
ADP
ADP
ATP
ATP
Pyruvate
43Net Energy Yield from Glycolysis
- Energy requiring steps
- 2 ATP invested
- Energy releasing steps
- 2 NADH formed
- 4 ATP formed
- Glycolysis net yield is 2 ATP and 2 NADH
44Preparatory reactions before the Krebs cycle
- Preparatory reactions
- Pyruvate is oxidized into two-carbon acetyl units
and carbon dioxide - NAD is reduced
- pyruvate coenzyme A NAD
- acetyl-CoA NADH CO2
- One of the carbons from pyruvate is released in
CO2 - Two carbons are attached to coenzyme A and
continue on to the Krebs cycle
45- Pyruvate is gets ready for the citric acid cycle
- Prior to the citric acid cycle
- Enzymes process pyruvate, releasing CO2 and
producing NADH and acetyl CoA
2
1
3
46Krebs cycle
- The acetyl units are oxidized to carbon dioxide
- NAD and FAD are reduced
- Products
- Coenzyme A
- 2 CO2
- 3 NADH
- FADH2
- ATP
47- The citric acid cycle (Krebs)completes the
oxidation of organic fuel (glucose), generating
many NADH and FADH2 molecules - In the citric acid cycle
- The two-carbon acetyl part of acetyl CoA is
oxidized
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Figure 6.9A
48Krebs Cycle or Citric Acid Cycle
49 For each turn of the Krebs cycle
- Two CO2 molecules are released (All of the
carbon molecules in pyruvate end up in carbon
dioxide) - Three NADH and one FADH2 (Coenzymes are reduced,
they pick up electrons and hydrogen) - One molecule of ATP is formed for each turn so
the net yield of ATP for the Krebs or Citric Acid
cycle is 2 ATP molecules.
50What happened to co-enzymes (NAD and FAD) during
the first two stages?
- Co-enzymes were reduced (gained electrons)
- Glycolysis 2 NADH
- Preparatory
- reactions 2 NADH
- Krebs cycle 2 FADH2 6 NADH
- Total 2 FADH2 10 NADH
510
- Most ATP production occurs by oxidative
phosphorylation or electron transport chain - Electrons from NADH and FADH2
- Travel down the electron transport chain to
oxygen, which picks up H to form water - Energy released by the redox reactions
- Is used to pump H into the space between the
mitochondrial membranes
52ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN OR PHOSPHORYLATION
- Takes place in the mitochondria
- Coenzymes deliver electrons to electron transport
systems - Electron transport sets up H ion gradients
- Flow of H down gradients powers ATP formation
- The net yield from oxidative phosphorilation is
32 to 34 ATP molecules
53Making ATP Chemiosmotic model
540
- In chemiosmosis, the H diffuses back through the
inner membrane through ATP synthase complexes - Driving the synthesis of ATP
55Certain poisons interrupt critical events in
cellular respiration
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- Various poisons
- Block the movement of electrons
- Block the flow of H through ATP synthase
- Allow H to leak through the membrane
Figure 6.11
560
- Review Each molecule of glucose yields many
molecules of ATP - Oxidative phosphorylation, using electron
transport and chemiosmosis - Produces up to 38 ATP molecules for each glucose
molecule that enters cellular respiration
Electron shuttleacross membrane
Mitochondrion
2
2
NADH
NADH
Cytoplasm
(or 2 FADH2)
FADH2
2
6
2
NADH
NADH
OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport
and Chemiosmosis)
GLYCOLYSIS
2 AcetylCoA
CITRIC ACIDCYCLE
2
Glucose
Pyruvate
2 ATP
about 34 ATP
2 ATP
by substrate-level phosphorylation
by oxidative phosphorylation
by substrate-level phosphorylation
About38 ATP
Maximum per glucose
Figure 6.12
57Anaerobic Electron Transport
- Carried out by certain bacteria
- Electron transport system is in bacterial plasma
membrane - Final electron acceptor is compound from
environment (such as nitrate), NOT oxygen - ATP yield is almost as good as from aerobic
respiration
58INTERCONNECTIONS BETWEEN MOLECULAR BREAKDOWN AND
SYNTHESIS
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- Cells use many kinds of organic molecules as
fuel for cellular respiration
590
- Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins can all fuel
cellular respiration - When they are converted to molecules that enter
glycolysis or the citric acid cycle
Figure 6.14
60How is energy obtained from proteins?
- Proteins are broken down to amino acids
- Amino acids are broken apart
- Amino group is removed, ammonia forms, is
converted to urea and excreted - Carbon backbones can enter the Krebs cycle
61How do we get energy from fats?
- Most stored fats are triglycerides
- Triglycerides are broken down to glycerol and
fatty acids - Glycerol is converted to PGAL, an intermediate of
glycolysis - Fatty acids are broken down and converted to
acetyl-CoA, which enters Krebs cycle
62LE 9-19
Proteins
Carbohydrates
Fats
Amino acids
Sugars
Glycerol
Fatty acids
Glycolysis
Glucose
Glyceraldehyde-3-
P
NH3
Pyruvate
Acetyl CoA
Citric acid cycle
Oxidative phosphorylation
63- Food molecules provide raw materials for
biosynthesis - Cells use some food molecules and intermediates
from glycolysis and the citric acid cycle as raw
materials - This process of biosynthesis
- Consumes ATP
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Figure 6.15
64- The fuel for respiration ultimately comes from
photosynthesis - All organisms
- Can harvest energy from organic molecules
- Plants, but not animals
- Can also make these molecules from inorganic
sources by the process of photosynthesis
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Figure 6.16
65Electrons fall from organic molecules to oxygen
during cellular respiration
- In cellular respiration, glucose and other fuels
are oxidized, releasing energy. - In the summary equation of cellular respiration
C6H12O6 6O2 ? 6CO2 6H2O ATP - Glucose is oxidized (loses electrons), oxygen is
reduced ( gains electrons) - Cellular respiration does not oxidize glucose in
a single step that transfers all the hydrogen in
the fuel to oxygen at one time. - glucose is broken down gradually in a series
of steps, each catalyzed by a specific enzyme