Title: Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy
1Cellular Respiration Harvesting Chemical Energy
2Respiration is the process of extracting stored
energy from glucose to make ATP.
3Cellular Respiration Equation
- C6H12O6 6 O2 6 CO2 6 H2O and energy
- As a result of respiration, energy is released
from the chemical bonds found in complex organic
molecules (food).
4Aerobic Respiration
- Aerobic Respiration is respiration which takes
place in the presence of oxygen
5Respiration is controlled by Enzymes
rate is controlled by enzymes
6Cell Respiration is divided into 3 stages.
(components)
- 1. Glycolysis
- 2. Krebs Cycle
- 3. Oxidative Phosphorylation
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8Glycolysis
- Glyco- glucose, -lysis to split
- Universal step in all forms of respiration
- Likely used to supply energy for the ancient
cells.
9Glycolysis
- Function - To split glucose and produce NADH, ATP
and Pyruvate (pyruvic acid). - Location - Cytoplasm.
- Occurs in 9 steps. 6 of the steps use magnesium
Mg as cofactors.
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11NAD Energy carrier
- Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide
- NAD 2 e- NADH
- NAD oxidized form
- NADH reduced form
12Requirements for Glycolysis
- Glucose
- 2 ATP. As activation energy
- 4 ADP
- 2 NAD
- Enzymes
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14The Products of Glycolysis
- 2 Pyruvic Acids (a 3C acid)
- 4 ATP
- 2 NADH
15Net Energy Result
- 2 ATP per glucose
- 2 NADH
- In summary, glycolysis takes one glucose and
turns it into 2 pyruvate, 2 NADH and a net of 2
ATP.
16Krebs CycleAlso called Citric Acid Cycleor
Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle
- Function Oxidize pyruvic acid to CO2
- Produce 3NADH, 1FADH2 and 1ATP
- Location Mitochondria matrix
17Formation of Acetyl CoAAcetyl CoA is formed
when the pyruvate , from glycolysis, combines
with Coenzyme A tis takes place in the matrix.
18Requirements for Krebs Cycle
- Pyruvic acid (3C acid)
- Coenzyme A
- 3 NAD
- 1 ADP
- 1 FAD
- Double this list for each glucose.
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21Products of Krebs Cycle
- 3 CO2
- Acetyl CoA
- 3 NADH
- 1 ATP
- 1 FADH2
- Double this list for each glucose.
22Krebs Cycle
- Produces most of the cell's energy in the form of
NADH and FADH2 not ATP - Does NOT require O2
- The CO2 produced by the Krebs cycle is the CO2
animal exhale when they breathe.
23Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Process of extracting to energy from NADH and
FADH2 to form ATP. - Function Convert NADH and FADH2 into ATP.
- Location Mitochondria cristae.
24Oxidative Phosphorylation
25Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Requires the Electron Transport Chain the
Electron Transport Chain is a collection of
proteins, embedded in the inner membrane, used to
transport the electrons from NADH and FADH2
26Cytochrome c
- Cytochrome c is one of the proteins of the
electron transport chain often used by
geneticists to determine relatedness exists in
all living organisms. - The Cytochromes alternate between RED and OX
forms and pass electrons down to O2
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28 ATP Yield
- Each NADH energizes 3 ATP
- Each FADH2 energizes 2 ATP
29Chemiosmotic Hypothesis
- ETC energy is used to move H (protons) across
the cristae membrane. - ATP is generated as the H diffuse back into the
matrix through ATP Synthase
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31ATP Synthase
- Uses the flow of H to make ATP.
- Works like an ion pump in reverse, or like a
waterwheel under the flow of H water.
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33Alcoholic Fermentation
- Carried out by yeast, a kind of fungus.
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35Alcoholic Fermentation
- Uses only Glycolysis.
- An incomplete oxidation - energy is still left in
the products (alcohol). - Does NOT require O2
- Produces ATP when O2 is not available.
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37Lactic Acid Fermentation
- Uses only Glycolysis.
- An incomplete oxidation - energy is still left in
the products (lactic acid). - Does NOT require O2
- Produces ATP when O2 is not available.
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39Lactic Acid Fermentation
- Done by human muscle cells under oxygen debt.
- Lactic Acid is a toxin and causes soreness and
stiffness in muscles.
40Fermentation - Summary
- Way of using up NADH so Glycolysis can still run.
- Provides ATP to a cell even when O2 is absent.
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42Aerobic vs Anaerobic
- Aerobic - Respiration with O2
- Anaerobic - Respiration without O2
- Aerobic - All three Respiration steps.
- Anaerobic - Glycolysis only.
43Strict vs. Facultative Respiration
- Strict - can only carry out Respiration one way
aerobic or anaerobic. - Facultative - can switch respiration types
depending on O2 availability. Ex - yeast
44ATP yields by Respiration type
- Anaerobic - Glycolysis only Gets 2 ATPs per
glucose. - Aerobic - Glycolysis, Krebs, and Oxidative
Phosphorylation (electron transport chain)
Generates many more ATPs per glucose.
45Aerobic ATP yield
- Glycolysis - 2 ATPS, 2 NADHs
- Krebs - 2 ATPS, 8 NADHs, 2 FADH2
- Each NADH 3 ATP
- Each FADH2 2 ATP
46ATP Sum
- 10 NADH x 3 30 ATPs
- 2 FADH2 x 2 4 ATPs
- 2 ATPs (Gly) 2 ATPs
- 2 ATPs (Krebs) 2 ATPs
- Max 38 ATPs per glucose
47However...
- Some energy is used in shuttling the NADH from
Glycolysis into the mitochondria. - Actual ATP yield 36/glucose
48Yeast
- Would rather do aerobic Respiration it has 18x
more energy per glucose. - But, anaerobic will keep you alive if oxygen is
not present.
49 Importance of fermentation
- Alcohol Industry - almost every society has a
fermented beverage. - Baking Industry - many breads use yeast to
provide bubbles to raise the dough.
50Summary
- Know the 3 main reactions of Respiration and the
4 required items for each.