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Cellular Respiration

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Title: Bioenergetic Reactions Author: mmerritt Last modified by: Bonnie Nevel Created Date: 9/29/2006 2:13:19 PM Document presentation format: On-screen ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cellular Respiration


1
Cellular Respiration
  • Do our cells breathe?

2
Cellular Respiration
  • Using glucose to make energy (ATP)

3
Questions for this Lesson
  • If plants need ATP (energy) to form glucose, how
    can glucose be a source of energy for plants and
    animals?
  • How does our body use glucose to make energy?
  • Why do your muscles get really sore when you
    exercise intensely, but not when you pace
    yourself?
  • How do you get wine from grapes?

4
Where Do Plants Get Energy?
  • Plants get energy from the sun and store it in
    the bonds of ___________.

glucose
5
Glucose Turns into Energy
  • How do we get energy?
  • by eating food.
  • What types of food provide the most energy?
  • Carbs (sugars or glucose) have the most energy
  • e.g. candy bars, wheat, potatoes, rice, pasta
  • What does your body do to the food you eat?
  • - Our body digests our food (breaks apart bonds),
    releasing energy

6
Breaking Bonds
  • Breaking bonds releases energy!
  • Energy is stored in the glucose bonds breaking
    them releases the energy
  • What form of energy do our cell (and our body)
    use?
  • the molecule ATP
  • So.. our body breaks down
  • glucose and uses it to make ATP (ENERGY!)
  • Which organelle is
  • responsible for producing
  • energy for our cells?
  • The MITOCHONDRIA

7
What is ATP?
  • ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a nucleic acid
    that can transfer energy within the cell.
  • Ex a small amount of energy from a glucose
    molecule can be used directly
  • The extra energy is transferred to ATP.
  • The energy in ATP is stored in the bonds between
    the phosphates (ATP has 3 phosphates).

http//www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/ahp/LAD/C7/graphic
s/C7_atp_2.GIF
8
Steps of Cellular Respiration
  • Remembercellular respiration is using glucose to
    make energy
  • Step 1 glycolysis
  • glyco refers to glucose
  • lysis break apart
  • Glycolysis break down 1 glucose into 2 pyruvic
    acid molecules, which have three carbons each
    (splits glucose in half)
  • Also makes 2 ATP! ?
  • Takes place in the cytoplasm

9
Steps of Cellular Respiration (cont)Why
Glycolysis?
  • Why would we need to break down glucose in the
    cytoplasm first before we use it in the
    mitochondria? (think transport)
  • Glucose molecules are too large to move into the
    mitochondria, so glycolysis makes them smaller to
    get through the mitochondrias membranes

10
Steps of Cellular Respiration (cont)
  • After glycolysis, there are two possible paths
  • Aerobic respiration requires oxygen
  • Anaerobic respiration does not require oxygen
    happens if oxygen is lacking

11
Aerobic Cellular Respiration
  • An aerobic process (requires oxygen).
  • Reaction releases energy from the chemical bonds
    of carbohydrates.
  • Takes place in the mitochondria.
  • Equation
  • 6O2 C6H12O6 6H20 6CO2
    36ATP
  • Oxygen Glucose Water Carbon
    Dioxide Energy

12
HOLD IT!Notice Anything Similar?
  • Equation for photosynthesis
  • Energy 6H2O 6CO2 C6H12O6
    6O2
  • Equation for aerobic cellular respiration
  • 6O2 C6H12O6 6H20 6CO2
    36ATP


13
Organisms that Do Aerobic Cellular Respiration
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14
Organisms that Do Aerobic Cellular Respiration
  • Plants
  • Animals
  • Fungi
  • Protists
  • Some bacteria
  • almost everything alive!

15
Aerobic Cellular Respiration
  • Recap Step 1 glycolysis 2 ATP molecules are
    produced in cytoplasm and enter mitochondria.
  • For aerobic respiration, in mitochondria
  • Step 2 Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle) in
    matrix
  • Step 3 Electron Transport Chain in inner
    membrane
  • ATP is generated in each step, but most of the
    ATP is made in the
  • Electron Transport Chain

16
Krebs Cycle (matrix)
  • Right before the Krebs Cycle, the Pyruvate from
    glycolysis is converted to Acetyl-CoA.
  • During Krebs, the Acetyl-CoA is broken down into
    CO2 electrons (H).
  • 2 ATP are created.
  • The electrons then
  • move on to the
  • Electron Transport
  • Chain.

17
Glycolysis Krebs Overview
  • We start with one molecule of glucose and end up
    with 6 CO2 molecules, a handful of electrons (H)
    and 4 ATP molecules.
  • The CO2 is waste that will move out of the cell
    (and which you exhale).
  • The 4 ATP molecules can be used by the cell as
    energy.
  • What about the other 32 ATPs from our equation?

18
Electron Transport Chain
  • Embedded in the mitochondria inner membrane are
    proteins called electron carriers.
  • The electrons (H) from Glycolysis and the Krebs
    Cycle are passed from electron carrier to
    electron carrier (like a bucket brigade).
  • With every pass,
  • energy is released
  • from the electrons,
  • and ATP is made.
  • As a result, 32 ATP
  • are made in the
  • Electron Transport
  • Chain.

19
Summary of Aerobic Respiration
C6H12O6 6O2 ? 6CO2
6H2O 36 ATP Glucose Oxygen ?
Carbon dioxide Water ATP
(Krebs Cycle)
20
Other Catabolic Pathways
  • What happens with respiration of lipids,
    proteins, and nucleic acids?
  • Starch broken down into glucose, which enters
    glycolysis
  • Fats broken down into fatty acids and glycerol
    fatty acids are cut into 2-carbon compounds,
    converted to Acetyl-CoA, and enter the Krebs
    Cycle
  • Proteins broken down into amino acids, which can
    be converted into Acetyl-CoA or other compounds
    that enter the Krebs cycle at various points
  • The amino group is removed excreted as urea.

21
Nucleic Acids
Proteins
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Fatty Acids/ Glycerol
Sugars
Nucleotides
Amino Acids
Pyruvate
Acetyl-CoA
Krebs Cycle
H2O
Urea
CO2
22
Importance of Oxygen
  • During aerobic respiration, where do the
    electrons (H) end up as they are passed from
    protein to protein?
  • They end up in the loving arms of oxygen.
  • When oxygen accepts electrons, water is made.
  • If oxygen wasnt there to accept the electrons,
    the Electron Transport Chain would get backed up,
    and no energy would be produced.
  • What type of respiration happens when there is no
    oxygen? and where does it happen?

23
Anaerobic Cellular Respiration
  • AKA fermentation
  • An anaerobic process (does not require oxygen)
  • Two types of fermentation
  • Alcohol fermentation
  • Lactic acid fermentation
  • Both take place in the cytoplasm.

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24
Alcohol Fermentation
  • Pyruvic acid NADH
  • NAD
  • alcohol
  • CO2
  • 2 ATP

25
Organisms that do alcohol fermentation
  • Yeast perform alcohol fermentation in the absence
    of oxygen.
  • The alcohol produced is the type that we drink.
  • The CO2 produced is used to make bread rise.

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t201.jpg
26
Lactic Acid Fermentation
  • Pyruvic acid NADH
  • NAD
  • lactic acid
  • 2 ATP
  • Lactic acid is what makes your muscles sore when
    you exercise.

27
Organisms that do lactic acid fermentation
  • Humans (and other animals) - when they are
    exercising and their muscles arent getting
    enough O2 to keep up with the energy demand.
  • The build up of lactic acid is what makes your
    muscles start to burn.

http//www.donlemmonsknowhow.com/img/exercise-sess
ion.jpg
28
Whats the big deal about aerobic vs. anaerobic
respiration?
  • You get way more ATP from aerobic cellular
    respiration than you do from anaerobic cellular
    respiration (fermentation).
  • Fermentation is mostly used to provide organisms
    with short-term bursts of energy when oxygen is
    not available.

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uploads/2006/08/washington.jpg
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