CELLULAR RESPIRATION
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Transcript CELLULAR RESPIRATION
CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Energy in Food
To do work, cells require energy
One gram of glucose contains 3811
calories
A calorie is defined as the amount of
energy needed to raise the temperature of
1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius
Food labels use the kilocalorie or Calorie
which is actually 1000 calories
Cellular Respiration
Process by which glucose is broken down to
produce energy (ATP)
The cellular respiration reaction is:
energy
C6H12O6 + 6O2
6H2O + 6CO2
There are two types of cellular respiration:
Aerobic
Anaerobic
Aerobic Respiration
There are 3 steps in aerobic respiration:
Glycolysis
Krebs cycle
Electron transport
Glycolysis
Glucose is broken down to produce 2
molecules of pyruvic acid (a.k.a.
pyruvate) and the energy carriers ATP
and NADH
These reactions occur in the cytoplasm
2ATP
glucose
2ADP
4ADP
2PGAL
2NAD+
4ATP
2 pyruvic acid
2NADH + 2H+
Krebs Cycle (a.k.a. Citric Acid Cycle)
The pyruvic acid made during glycolysis is
converted into citric acid
The citric acid enters the Krebs cycle and
is converted into carbon dioxide (a waste
product), ATP, NADH, and FADH2
The NADH and FADH2 can now enter the
electron transport chain
These reactions take place in the
mitochondria
Electron Transport
NADH and FADH2 are put through the
chain so that their energy can be used to
convert ADP into ATP
These reactions require oxygen, which
accepts the H+ ions to form water
Occurs in the mitochondria
The entire process of aerobic respiration
produces 36 ATP molecules
ATP is made
during all 3
parts of
aerobic
respiration
Anaerobic Respiration
The extraction of energy from pyruvic acid
in the absence of oxygen
This is also known as fermentation
The process begins with glycolysis to
produce pyruvic acid
There are 2 types:
Alcoholic fermentation
Lactic acid fermentation
Alcoholic Fermentation
pyruvic acid + NADH CO2 + ethanol + NAD+
This reaction occurs mainly in yeast cells
Used to make bread as well as alcoholic
beverages
Lactic Acid Fermentation
pyruvic acid + NADH lactic acid + NAD+
This reaction occurs in muscle cells and it
is the build up of lactic acid that causes
muscle soreness
Excess Glucose
Excess glucose can be stored
Animal cells store it as glycogen or fat