Cellular Respiration
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Transcript Cellular Respiration
Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration
How Cells Make ATP:
Energy-Releasing Pathways
Summary:
Cellular respiration - the process by which
your cells transfer the energy in organic
compounds to ATP.
The byproduct of this reaction is water and carbon
dioxide.
It occurs in the cells mitochondria, which are the
energy producers for the cell.
Summary:
Each cell converts the energy in the chemical
bonds of nutrients to chemical energy stored
in ATP
May be aerobic or anaerobic
Most cells use aerobic respiration
3 pathways that are exergonic and release
energy:
Aerobic respiration
Anaerobic respiration
Fermentation
Aerobic Respiration
Most eukaryotes and prokaryotes
To obtain energy from glucose
Requires oxygen
Nutrients are catabolized to CO2 and H2O
Glucose + Oxygen
Carbon Dioxide + Water
+ Energy (in bonds of ATP)
Aerobic Respiration
A redox process
Glucose is oxidized to form Carbon Dioxide
Oxygen is reduced, forming water
The electrons produced are used to form
ATP
Aerobic Respiration
3 stages:
1.
2.
3.
Glycolysis
Citric Acid (Krebs) Cycle
Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmosis
Aerobic Respiration
*In eukaryotes, glycolysis occurs in cytosol and
remaining 2 steps occur in mitochondria.
* In bacteria, all stages occur in cytosol working
with plasma membrane.
Mitochondrion Structure
Glycolysis
Occurs in cytosol
Glucose converted to two 3-carbon
molecules of pyruvic acid
ATP and NADH are formed
NADH - temporarily stores large amounts of free
energy
Energy from NADH ultimately participates in
reactions that form ATP
Net production of 2 ATP
Animation of Glycolysis
Advantages of Glycolysis
The process of glycolysis is so fast that cells can
produce thousands of ATP molecules in a few
milliseconds.
Glycolysis does not require oxygen.
Citric Acid Cycle (Krebs Cycle)
Pyruvic Acid from Glycolysis moves into
mitochondria.
Pyruvic acid breaks apart
1 molecule of CO2 is produced
2 other Carbon atoms form acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA combines with 4 carbon
molecules to produce citric acid.
Citric Acid Cycle (Krebs Cycle)
Citric Acid is broken down
CO2 released
Electrons transferred to energy carriers.
Carbon Dioxide is a waste product
ATP, NADH and FADH2 are produced
2 ATP are produced/glucose
Electron Transport Chain and
Chemiosmosis
Electrons from Krebs cycle are passed to
NADH and FADH2 in Electron Transport
Chain
Enzymes present in mitochondrial membrane
As NADH and FADH2 pass along enzymes, they
give up electrons (energy) = chemiosmosis
H+ ions are transported across membrane and
come in contact with ATP synthase
ADP + Pi = ATP
End of chain – electrons combined with
oxygen and hydrogen to form water
Via chemiosmosis, 34 ATP produced.
ATP synthesis continues until ADP stores are
depleted
Equation
C6H12O6 + 6O2 -->6 CO2 + 6H2O + 38 ATP
Aerobic Respiration – End Results
One glucose gives maximum of 36-38 ATP’s
Glycolysis produces 2 ATP molecules
2 ATP molecules are produced in the citric
acid cycle
Remainder of ATP is produced in the electron
transport system (32 or 34)
Efficiency is about 40%; remaining energy is
disseminated as heat
Other nutrients (besides glucose) provide
energy
More energy is gained from burning fats than
glucose
Lipids contain 9 kcal/gram
Lipids are broken down and glycerol enters
glycolysis
Fatty acids are converted to acetyl CoA and enter
the citric acid cycle
Proteins are broken down to amino acids
Proteins contain 4 kcal/gram
Anaerobic Respiration and Fermentation
do not Require Oxygen
Anaerobic Respiration
Various inorganic substances serve as the final
electron acceptor
Yield is only the 2 ATP molecules from glycolysis
Types of Fermentation
Alcohol
Lactate
Alcoholic Fermentation
Alcoholoic fermentation
Alcoholic fermentation produces ethanol
Pyruvate is converted to ethanol
Ethanol is a potentially toxic waste product
Yeast carry out alcoholic fermentation when
oxygen deprived
Pyruvic acid + NADH -> alcohol + CO2 + NAD+
Lactate Fermentation
Bacteria and some fungi carry out lactate
fermentation
Strenuous exercise in mammals results in
lactate fermentation as well
Yields only the 2 ATP molecules from
glycolysis
Pyruvic acid + NADH -> lactic acid + NAD+
Fermentation
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