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Cellular Respiration

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Cellular Respiration A.P. Biology Fermentation enables some cells to produce ATP without the use of oxygen Glycolysis Can produce ATP with or without oxygen, in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cellular Respiration


1
Cellular Respiration
  • A.P. Biology

2
Energy
  • Flows into an ecosystem as sunlight and leaves as
    heat

3
Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing
organic fuels
  • The breakdown of organic molecules is exergonic
  • Fermentation
  • Is a partial degradation of sugars that occurs
    without oxygen

4
Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing
organic fuels
  • Cellular respiration
  • Is the most prevalent and efficient catabolic
    pathway
  • Consumes oxygen and organic molecules such as
    glucose
  • Yields ATP

5
Redox Reactions Oxidation and Reduction
  • Catabolic pathways yield energy
  • Due to the transfer of electrons
  • Redox reactions
  • Transfer electrons from one reactant to another
    by oxidation and reduction
  • Oxidation
  • A substance loses electrons, or is oxidized
  • Reduction
  • A substance gains electrons, or is reduced

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becomes oxidized(loses electron)
becomes reduced(gains electron)
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Some redox reactions
  • Do not completely exchange electrons
  • Change the degree of electron sharing in covalent
    bonds

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Oxidation of Organic Fuel Molecules During
Cellular Respiration
  • During cellular respiration
  • Glucose is oxidized and oxygen is reduced

G -686 kcal/mol
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Step by step catabolism of glucose
  • If electron transfer is not stepwise
  • A large release of energy occurs
  • As in the reaction of hydrogen and oxygen to form
    water

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ETC
  • The electron transport chain
  • Passes electrons in a series of steps
  • Uses the energy from the electron transfer to
    form ATP

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NAD Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide(Electron
Acceptor)
  • Electrons from organic compounds
  • Are usually 1st transferred to NAD, a coenzyme

Dehydragenase removes 2 hydrogen atoms
12
NADH
  • NADH, the reduced form of NAD
  • Passes the electrons to the electron transport
    chain
  • Electrons are ultimately passed to a molecule of
    oxygen (Final electron acceptor)
  • G -53 kcal/mol

Electron path in respiration
Food ? NADH ? ETC ? Oxygen
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Cellular Respiration
  • Respiration is a cumulative function of three
    metabolic stages
  • Glycolysis
  • The citric acid cycle (TCA or Krebbs)
  • Oxidative phosphorylation

C6H12O6 6O2   lt----gt   6 CO2 6 H20    e-
---gt    36-38 ATP                                
  DG    -686 Kc/mole                             
   263Kc  38
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Respiration
  • Glycolysis
  • Breaks down glucose into two molecules of
    pyruvate
  • The citric acid cycle
  • Completes the breakdown of glucose
  • Oxidative phosphorylation
  • Is driven by the electron transport chain
  • Generates ATP

16
Respiration Overview
2 ATP
2 ATP 34 ATP
17
Aerobic Respiration Substrates
18
Substrate Level Phosphorylation
  • Both glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
  • Can generate ATP by substrate-level
    phosphorylation

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Glycolysis
  • Harvests energy by oxidizing glucose to pyruvate
  • Glycolysis
  • Means splitting of sugar
  • Breaks down glucose into pyruvate
  • Occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell
  • Two major phases
  • Energy investment phase
  • Energy payoff phase

21
Energy Investment Phase
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Energy Payoff Phase
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Glycolysis Summary
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  • The First Stage of Glycolysis
  • Glucose (6C) is broken down into 2 PGAL's (3C)
  • This requires two ATP's

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  • The Second Stage of Glycolysis
  • 2 PGAL's (3C) are converted to 2 pyruvates
  • This creates 4 ATP's and 2 NADH's
  • The net ATP production of Glycolysis is 2 ATP's

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Citric Acid Cyclea.k.a. Krebs Cycle
  • Completes the energy-yielding oxidation of
    organic molecules
  • The citric acid cycle
  • Takes place in the matrix of the mitochondrion

27
  • Krebs's Cycle (citric acid cycle, TCA cycle)
  • Goal take pyruvate and put it into the Krebs's
    cycle, producing NADH and FADH2
  • Where the mitochondria
  • There are two steps
  • The Conversion of Pyruvate to Acetyl CoA
  • The Kreb's Cycle proper
  • In the Krebs's cycle, all of Carbons, Hydrogens,
    and Oxygeng in pyruvate end up as CO2 and H2O
  • The Krebs's cycle produces 2 ATP's, 8 NADH's, and
    2FADH2's per glucose molecule

28
Fate of Pyruvate
29
Carboxyl (coo-) is cleaved CO2 is released
30
Before the citric acid cycle can begin
  • Pyruvate must first be converted to acetyl CoA,
    which links the cycle to glycolysis

31
An overview of the citric acid cycle
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  • The Kreb's Cycle
  • 6 NADH's are generated
  • 2 FADH2 is generated
  • 2 ATP are generated
  • 4 CO2's are released


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  • Net Engergy Production from Aerobic Respiration
  • Glycolysis 2 ATP
  • Kreb's Cycle 2 ATP
  • Electron Transport Phosphorylation 32 ATP
  • Each NADH produced in Glycolysis is worth 2 ATP
    (2 x 2 4) - the NADH is worth 3 ATP, but it
    costs an ATP to transport the NADH into the
    mitochondria, so there is a net gain of 2 ATP for
    each NADH produced in gylcolysis
  • Each NADH produced in the conversion of pyruvate
    to acetyl COA and Kreb's Cycle is worth 3 ATP (8
    x 3 24)
  • Each FADH2 is worth 2 ATP (2 x 2 4)
  • 4 24 4 32
  • Net Energy Production 36 ATP

35
  • Energy Yields
  • Glucose 686 kcal/mol
  • ATP 7.5 kcal/mol
  • 7.5 x 36 270 kcal/mol for all ATP's produced
  • 270 / 686 39 energy recovered from aerobic
    respiration

36
After the Krebs Cycle
  • During oxidative phosphorylation, chemiosmosis
    couples electron transport to ATP synthesis
  • NADH and FADH2
  • Donate electrons to the electron transport chain,
    which powers ATP synthesis via oxidative
    phosphorylation

37
The Pathway of Electron Transport
  • In the electron transport chain
  • Electrons from NADH and FADH2 lose energy in
    several steps
  • At the end of the chain
  • Electrons are passed to oxygen, forming water

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Chemiosmosis The Energy-Coupling Mechanism
  • ATP synthase
  • Is the enzyme that actually makes ATP

40
ETC
  • Electron transfer causes protein complexes to
    pump H from the mitochondrial matrix to the
    intermembrane space
  • The resulting H gradient
  • Stores energy
  • Drives chemiosmosis in ATP synthase
  • Is referred to as a proton-motive force

41
Chemiosmosis
  • Is an energy-coupling mechanism that uses energy
    in the form of a H gradient across a membrane to
    drive cellular work
  • H gradient Proton motive force

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An Accounting of ATP Production by Cellular
Respiration
  • During respiration, most energy flows in this
    sequence
  • Glucose to NADH to electron transport chain to
    proton-motive force to ATP

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Anaerobic Respiration
  • Fermentation enables some cells to produce ATP
    without the use of oxygen
  • Glycolysis
  • Can produce ATP with or without oxygen, in
    aerobic or anaerobic conditions
  • Couples with fermentation to produce ATP

68
Anaerobic Respiration
  • Fermentation consists of
  • Glycolysis plus reactions that regenerate NAD,
    which can be reused by glyocolysis
  • Alcohol fermentation
  • Pyruvate is converted to ethanol in two steps,
    one of which releases CO2
  • Lactic acid fermentation
  • Pyruvate is reduced directly to NADH to form
    lactate as a waste product

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Pyruvate is a key juncture in catabolism
71
  • Glycolysis
  • Occurs in nearly all organisms
  • Probably evolved in ancient prokaryotes before
    there was oxygen in the atmosphere

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  • Cellular respiration
  • Is controlled by allosteric enzymes at key points
    in glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
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