Cell Respiration
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Transcript Cell Respiration
Introduction/Basic Info
Respiration
Controlled release of energy from organic compounds
in cells to form adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
Glycolysis is the first step in respiration
Two types of respiration: Aerobic (uses oxygen) and
anaerobic (without oxygen)
Two types of anaerobic respiration: Lactic acid
fermentation (humans) and alcoholic fermentation
(yeast)
Respiration
Organic compounds contained stored (potential)
chemical energy in their bonds
When that energy is released, cells can use it for
metabolism
Glucose (from glycogen stores) typically used first as
the source of energy
No glucose? Lipids next, then amino acids/proteins
(only in extreme cases- i.e. starvation)
ATP- synthesized in mitochondria
Energy “currency” of life
High energy molecule that stores energy for just about
every cellular process we need
Found in the cytoplasm and the nucleoplasm
ATP
ATP
Phosphate part is most
important
Because of the negative charge on all the attached
oxygens, there is a lot of potential energy in these
bonds
Removing the last phosphate group makes the
molecule much “happier” (chemically stable)
Breaking that bond releases about 7,000 calories per
mole (6.02 x 1023 molecules) similar to a whole peanut!
ATP to ADP
“renewable” molecule; ATP
ADP, energy to do
this comes from food you eat
Constantly being used and remade…estimated the
more than 2 x 1026 molecules or >160kg (352lbs) of ATP
is formed in the human body daily!
Glycolysis- in the cytoplasm
Glucose enters the cell via the cell membrane and stays
in the cytoplasm
After a few modifications and a handful of reactions (Ch.
8) glucose eventually cleaved into 2 pyruvate (3-C)
2 ATP molecules needed to start, 4 ATP molecules
produced, net gain of 2 ATPs
Anaerobic Respiration-cytoplasm
Breakdown of organic molecules for ATP WITHOUT
using oxygen
Organisms that do this only are called anaerobes
Fermentation is another word for this
Two main pathways: Alcoholic Fermentation and
Lactic acid fermentation
ONLY ATP comes from glycolysis
Anaerobic Respiration
Lactic Acid Fermentation
Occurs in Humans—why your muscles “burn” when
you workout
Normally in aerobic organisms that find themselves in
a situation where oxygen is no longer available—why
you breather harder when you work out
Pyruvate converted to lactate (3-C), no CO2 produced,
no ATP produced
When O2 becomes available, lactate converted back to
pyruvate and then pushed through the aerobic
pathway
Anaerobic Respiration
Alcoholic Fermentation
Occurs in yeast cells
This is a “normal” situation for the yeast
Pyruvate converted to ethanol (2-C) and CO2 is
released…both waste products for the organism
Bakers’ and brewers’ yeast allows bread to rise and
beer to be carbonated (most commercial beer is
forcibly carbonated as well)
Aerobic Respiration-mitochondria
Most efficient pathway to produce ATP
Begins with glycolysis just like anaerobic…pyruvate
enters a mitochondrion to finish pathway though
Pyruvate loses a C as CO2, becomes acetyl-CoA
Acetyl-CoA enters Kreb’s cycle where two more CO2
molecules are produced, as well as some ATP
Byproducts of Kreb’s cycle move onto electron
transport chain where most ATPs are produced
Aerobic Respiration
Kreb’s Cycle-mitochondrial matrix
Aerobic Respiration-mitochondria
Folds of the mitochondrial cristae provide huge
surface area = high efficiency/production
Cellular Respiration-Summary
Can occur with or without oxygen
Aerobic is more efficient (net gain of 2 ATPs vs
possible gain of 36 ATPs)
Glycolysis and anaerobic respiration occur in the
cytoplasm
Aerobic respiration occurs in the mitochondria