Title: Cellular Respiration
1Cellular Respiration
2What is Cellular Respiration?
- The process of converting food energy into ATP
energy - C6H12O6 6 O2 ? 6 CO2 6 H2O 36 ATP
3Why are both Photosynthesis and Cell Respiration
important to Ecosystems?
- Light is the ultimate source of energy for all
ecosystems - Chemicals cycle and Energy flows
- Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are
complimentary reactions
4Why do plants need both chloroplasts and
mitochondria?
- Chloroplasts use energy from the sun to make
glucose - Mitochondria convert glucose to ATPthe energy
currency of the cell
5What is ATP?
- Adenosine Triphosphate
- 5-Carbon sugar (Ribose)
- Nitrogenous base (Adenine)
- 3 Phosphate groups
- Energy currency of the cell
- The chemical bonds that link the phosphate groups
together are high energy bonds - When a phosphate group is removed to form ADP and
P, small packets of energy are released
6How is ATP used?
- As ATP is broken down, it gives off usable energy
to power chemical work and gives off some
nonusable energy as heat. - Synthesizing molecules for growth and
reproduction - Transport work active transport, endocytosis,
and exocytosis - Mechanical work muscle contraction, cilia and
flagella movement, organelle movement
7Why use ATP energy and not energy from glucose?
- Breaking down glucose yields too much energy for
cellular reactions and most of the energy would
be wasted as heat. - 1 Glucose 686 kcal
- 1 ATP 7.3 kcal
- 1 Glucose ? 36 ATP
- How efficient are cells at converting glucose
into ATP? - 38 of the energy from glucose yields ATP,
therefore 62 wasted as heat.
8Cellular Respiration is a Redox Reaction
-
- C6H12O6 6 O2 ? 6 CO2 6 H2O
- Oxidation is the loss of electrons or H
- Reduction is the gain of electrons or H
- Glucose is oxidized when electrons and H are
passed to coenzymes NAD and FAD before reducing
or passing them to oxygen. - Glucose is oxidized by a series of smaller steps
so that smaller packets of energy are released to
make ATP, rather than one large explosion of
energy.
(Reduction)
9Cell Respiration can be divided into 4 Parts
- 1) Glycolysis
- 2) Oxidation of Pyruvate / Transition Reaction
- 3) The Krebs Cycle
- 4) The Electron Transport Chain and
- Chemiosmotic Phosphorylation
10Where do the 4 parts of Cellular Respiration take
place?
- Glycolysis
- Cytosol
- Oxidation of Pyruvate
- Matrix
- The Krebs Cycled
- Matrix
- Electron Transport Chain and Cheimiosmotic
Phosphorylation - Cristae
11Parts of the Mitochondria
12Anaerobic Respiration (no oxygen required,
cytoplasm)
- Glycolysis
- (substrate level)
Glucose ? 4 ATP (Net 2 ATP) 2 ATP 2 NADH 2
Pyruvate
Aerobic Respiration (oxygen required,
mitochondria)
2. Oxidation of Pyruvate
2 Pyruvate ? 2 CO2 2 NADH 2 Acetyl CoA
- Krebs Cycle
- (substrate level)
2 Acetyl CoA ? 4 CO2 2 ATP 6 NADH 2 FADH2
- Electron
- Transport
- Chain
- (chemiosmotic)
10 NADH ? 32 ATP 2 FADH2 6 H2O 6 O2
Total 36 ATP produced
13ATP is made in two ways
- 1) Substrate Level Phosphorylation (glycolysis
Krebs cycle) - 2) Chemiosmotic Phosphorylation (electron
transport chain) - Substrate-Level Phosphorylation
- Energy and phosphate are transferred to ADP using
an enzyme, to form ATP. Phosphate comes from one
of the intermediate molecules produced from the
breakdown of glucose.
14Glycolysis
Glucose ? 2 Pyruvate 2 ATP 4 ATP (Net 2
ATP) 2 NADH
- Glucose (C6) is split to make
- 2 Pyruvates (C3)
- 1st ATP energy used to phosphorylate glucose
(stored energy) - 2nd phosphorylated glucose broken down into two
C3 sugar phosphates - 3rd the sugar phosphates are oxidized to yield
electrons and H ions which are donated to 2 NAD
? 2 NADH (stored electron and hydrogen for the
Electron Transport Chain) - 4th The energy from oxidation is used to make 4
ATP molecules (net 2 ATP) - This is substrate level phosphorylation because
an enzyme transfers phosphate to ADP making ATP - Glycolysis produces very little ATP energy, most
energy is still stored in Pyruvate molecules.
15Oxidation of Pyruvate /Transition Reaction
2 Pyruvate ? 2 CO2 2 NADH 2 Acetyl CoA
- When Oxygen is present, 2 Pyruvates go to the
matrix where they are converted into 2 Acetyl CoA
(C2). - Multienzyme complex
- 1st each Pyruvate releases CO2 to form Acetate.
- 2nd Acetate is oxidized and gives electrons and
H ions to 2 NAD ? 2 NADH. - 3rd Acetate is combined with Coenzyme A to
produce 2 Acetyl CoA molecules. - 2 NADHs carry electrons and hydrogens to the
Electron Transport Chain.
16The Krebs Cycle / Citric Acid Cycle
2 Acetyl CoA ? 4 CO2 2 ATP 6 NADH 2 FADH2
- 8 Enzymatic Steps in Matrix of Mitochondria
Break down and Oxidize each Acetyl CoA (2-Cs) to
release 2 CO2 and yield electrons and H ions to
3 NAD 1 FAD ? 3 NADH FADH2. This
yields energy to produce ATP by substrate level
phosphorylation. - The first step of the Krebs cycle combines
Oxaloacetate (4 Cs) with Acetyl CoA to form
Citric Acid, then the remaining 7 steps
ultimately recycle oxalacetate. - Two Turns of the Krebs Cycle are required to
break down both Acetyl Coenzyme A molecules. - The Krebs cycle produces some chemical energy in
the form of ATP but most of the chemical energy
is in the form of NADH and FADH2 which then go on
to the Electron Transport Chain.
17The Electron Transport Chain
10 NADH ? 32 ATP 2 FADH2 H2O Oxygen
- NADH and FADH2 produced earlier, go to the
Electron Transport Chain. - NADH and FADH2 release electrons to
carriers/proteins embedded in the membrane of the
cristae. As the electrons are transferred, H
ions are pumped from the matrix to the
intermembrane space up the concentration
gradient. Electrons are passed along a series of
9 carriers until they are ultimately donated to
an Oxygen molecule. - ½ O2 2 electrons 2 H (from NADH and FADH2) ?
H2O.
http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/etc/movie.h
tm
18Chemiosmotic Phosphorylation
- Hydrogen ions travel down their concentration
gradient through a channel protein coupled with
an enzyme called ATP Synthase. - As H ions move into the matrix, energy is
released and used to combine ADP P ? ATP. - Hydrogens are recycled and pumped back across the
cristae using the Electron Transport Chain. - ATP diffuses out of the mitochondria through
channel proteins to be used by the cell.
http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/atpgradient
/movie.htm
19ATP Synthase
- Multisubunit complex with 4 parts
- Rotor spins as H ions flow
- Stator holds the rotor and knob complex
together in the cristae - Internal Rod extends between rotor and knob,
spins when rotor spins which then turns the knob - Knob contains 3 catalytic sites that when
turned change shape and activate the enzyme used
to make ATP
20Review ATP Production
- 1) Glycolysis ? 2 ATP
- 2) Oxidation of Pyruvate ? No ATP
- 3) The Krebs Cycle ? 2 ATP
- 4) The Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmotic
Phosphorylation - Each NADH produces 2-3 ATP so 10 NADH ? 28 ATP
- Each FADH2 produces 2 ATP so 2 FADH2 ? 4
ATP - Total 36 ATP
- 1 Glucose 686 kcal
- 1 ATP 7.3 kcal
- 1 Glucose ? 36 ATP
- How efficient are cells at converting glucose
into ATP? - 38 of the energy from glucose yields ATP,
therefore 62 wasted as heat (used to maintain
body temperature or is dissipated) - Ex. Most efficient Cars only 25 of the energy
from gasoline is used to move the car, 75 heat.
21All Types of Molecules can be used to form ATP
by Cell Respiration
- Proteins, Carbohydrates, and Lipids must first be
broken down into their monomers and absorbed in
the small intestine. - Monomers may be further broken down into
intermediate molecules before entering different
parts of Cell respiration to ultimately form ATP.
22Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
- If there is NO oxygen, then cells can make ATP by
Fermentation - Without oxygen, Oxidation of Pyruvate and the
Electron Transport Chain do not operate. - Glucose ? Pyruvate ? Lactate
- NAD Glycolysis 2 NADH Reduction Rxn
or - 2 ATP Alcohol CO2
- Fermentation yields a net gain of 2 ATP by
substrate level phosphorylation for every 1
Glucose. (Inefficient) - Two Forms of Fermentation
- Lactic Acid Fermentation (animals)
- Alcohol Fermentation (yeast)