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• Test Date: • Nov 28th(B-DAY) • Nov 29th(A-DAY) • Lab: Closed-toe shoes • Thursday (BDAY) • Friday (ADAY) Essential Questions • What is cellular Respiration? • What is the equation for cellular respiration? • What are the similarities/differences with photosynthesis? • Stages: • Aerobic Anaerobic – glycolysis – Krebs cycle – Electron Transport glycolysis fermentation Food • A living organism such as an animal consumes food, then converts some of that food into useable ATP. The rest gets stored and converted later • Proteins, carbohydrates, lipids can all be used to convert to ATP but at different rates • Lipids give long term large amounts of energy • carbs give short term quick energy • Proteins give the least amount of useable energy, so body usually stores it instead of converting it The role of ATP • Adenosine Triphosphate is the energy currency in living organisms • It cannot be stored-instead glucose is stored and converted as the body needs it. This conversion is called cellular respiration • When ATP is made, it then can be released and used by the cells in functions such as making proteins, active transport, and maintaining homeostasis • Glucose must be converted slowly in order to get the maximum amount of ATP from it. It does this in stages Cellular Respiration Overview • Goal: to convert chemical energy (food) into useable energy (ATP) • Two types – aerobic in the presence of oxygen – anaerobic without oxygen • Glycolysis is the first step regardless if there is oxygen or not – takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell Equation Glycolysis-pre step • Goal: One molecule of glucose is broken in half, producing two molecules of pyruvic acid • Steps: – Two ATP molecules are used to break down a glucose molecule – It is split into two three carbon molecules (3Carbon; 3C) called PGAL. Enzymes rearrange the molecules – Energized electrons from the molecules are transferred to molecules of NAD+ to make NADH – A series of reactions converts the PGAL molecules to pyruvate, which will enter the mitochondria for cellular respiration – 4ATP are made, but two were used to begin with, so only 2ATP are gained • Equation: – Glucose+2ATP 2Pyruvate+NADH+4ATP Oxidative Decarboxylation • Pyruvic acid then comes into the mitochondrial matrix • It reacts with a molecule of coenzyme A to form acetyl coenzyme A, abbreviated acetyl CoA • In the process, a carbon dioxide molecule is released as waste, and a molecule of NAD+ is reduced to NADH Krebs Cycle (citric acid cycle)-aerobic • Named after Sir Hans Adolf Krebs • Each (2) acetyl CoA will enter the Kreb’s cycle and be transformed into several products: – 4NADH – 3CO2 – FADH2 – 1ATP • Equation: • 2 Acetyl CoA 8NADH+6CO2+2FADH2+2ATP Steps to Krebs Cycle 1. Acetyl CoA combines with oxaloacetic acid (4C) to produce citric acid (6C) which in turn regenerates the coenzyme A 2. Citric acid releases a CO2 molecule and a hydrogen atom to form a 5C compound. The hydrogen in transferred to NAD+ reducing it to NADH 3. The 5C molecule releases a CO2 molecule and a H atom to form a 4C compound. Again, NAD+ is reduced to NADH. Also, an ATP is synthesized from ADP 4. The 4C compound from step 3 releases a hydrogen to form another 4C compound. This time FAD is reduced to form FADH2 5. The 4C from step 4 releases an H atom to regenerate oxaloacetic acid, which keeps the Krebs cycle operating. The H atom reduces NAD+ to NADH Electron Transport Chain • The electron transport chain is a series of chemical reactions ending with hydrogen combining with oxygen to form water. Carbon dioxide is released as a waste product as it is formed in several stages of the Krebs cycle. • The NADH and FADH2 are converted into ATP – 1 NADH=3 ATP and 1FADH2=2ATP • Each reaction produces a small amount of energy, which by the end of the cycle produces 38 ATP molecules, but two are spent in glycolysis so the net gain is 36 ATP O2 + C6H12O6 CO2 + H2O + 36ATP Anaerobic respiration • Glycolysis-same glycolysis as aerobic respiration – One glucose is split into two pyruvate producing two ATP total • Fermentation-Two types, both named after products in which they produce. Aerobic respiration produces water – Lactic acid – Alcoholic Lactic Acid Fermentation • Lactic acid fermentation occurs when oxygen is not available, for example, in muscle tissues during rapid and vigorous exercise when muscle cells may be depleted of oxygen. • The pyruvic acid formed during glycolysis is broken down to lactic acid, and in the process energy is released (which is used to form ATP). • Glucose Pyruvic acid Lactic acid + energy • The process of lactic acid fermentation replaces the process of aerobic respiration so that the cell can continue to have a continual source of energy even in the absence of oxygen, however this shift is only temporary and cells need oxygen for sustained activity. • Lactic acid that builds up in the tissue causes a burning, painful sensation. Alcoholic Fermentation • Alcohol fermentation occurs in yeasts and some bacteria. • In this process, pyruvic acid formed during glycolysis is broken down to produce alcohol and carbon dioxide, and in the process energy is released (which is used to form ATP). • Glucose Pyruvic acid alcohol + carbon dioxide + energy Why learn about fermentation? • Cheese • Bread • Alcohol • Wine Venn Diagram