Cell Respiration PPT
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Transcript Cell Respiration PPT
Chapter 7 – The Working Cell:
Energy from Food
College Prep Biology
Mr. Martino
7.1 How Cells Make ATP
Cellular Respiration: harvesting of E from
food molecules by cells
2 types of respiration:
Aerobic: requires oxygen (harvests 40% of E in glucose)
Anaerobic: does not require oxygen (harvests 2% of E
in glucose)
Evolved about 3.8 billion years ago - before oxygen
C6H12O6 + 6 O2
6 CO2 + 6 H2O + E
Glucose is the example carbohydrate
Glycolysis:
(exergonic) splits
glucose into 2 pyruvic
acid
Occurs in
cytoplasm
Oxygen is final
electron acceptor
= water
Enzymes catalyze
First stage of all
respiration
Overview of Aerobic Respiration
Aerobic Respiration is
continuous – but occurs in 3
main stages
Glycolysis: (exergonic)
splits glucose into pyruvic
acid
Occurs in cytoplasm
Kreb’s Cycle: (exergonic)
completes glucose
breakdown - pyruvic acid
becomes CO2
ETC: (endergonic) NADH
and FADH2 shuttle e- and
generates most of cell’s ATP
by chemiosmosis
Two Mechanisms Generate ATP
Chemiosmosis: cells
use the potential E of
concentration
gradients to make ATP
Depends upon
membranes and ATP
synthase
ETC makes this E
transport possible
Cells generate most of
their E this way
Substrate-level
phosphorylation: an
enzyme transfers a Pgroup from a substrate
to ADP
No membrane
involved
Only generates a
small percentage of
a cell’s ATP
7.3 Second Stage – Pyruvic Acid
Conversion and Kreb’s Cycle
2 pyruvate molecules from glycolysis enter mitochondrion
Pyruvic acid from glycolysis does not enter the Kreb’s cycle
+
1. It is oxidized while NAD is reduced to NADH
2. 1 C is released in the form of CO2
3. Coenzyme A + fragment = acetyl CoA
Each glucose produces 2 acetyl CoAs for Kreb’s
Kreb’s Cycle
Only the acetyl part of
acetyl CoA participates
Each turn of Kreb’s
produces:
1 ATP by substrate
level phosphorylation
3 NADH
1 FADH2
Turns twice per
glucose
7.4 Third Stage – Electron
Transport System
Final stage of respiration is ETC & ATP formation
1.
2.
3.
4.
The fold of the cristae provide space for many ETC’s and
ATP synthases
NADH is shuttled down the e- carriers
Oxygen is the final e- (H) acceptor forming H2O
Proteins shuttle H+ across the membrane
The greater the gradient the more potential E
H+ are passed through ATP synthase which catalyzes the
formation of about 34 ATP
7.5 Anaerobic Respiration
2 forms of anaerobic respiration
1.
Alcoholic fermentation: anaerobic respiration in which
pyruvic acids form ethyl alcohol
Performed by yeasts and bacteria
Releases CO2
Ethanol is toxic to the organisms who produce it – if
too concentrated
7.5 – con’t
2.
Lactic Acid Fermentation: anaerobic
fermentation in which pyruvic acids form
lactic acids
Used to make cheese and yogurt
Occurs in muscle cells – causing pain and fatigue
No CO2 is released