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Ch 6 Cellular Respiration Energy for life ECOSYSTEM Photosynthesis in chloroplasts Glucose CO + 2 + H2O O2 Cellular respiration in mitochondria ATP (for cellular work) Heat energy Breathing vs Cellular Respiration • Breathing- gas exchange • Cellular respiration- aerobic harvesting of energy from food molecules by cells Cellular Respiration • Energy stored in ATP C6H12O6 Glucose + 6 O2 Oxygen 6 CO2 Carbon dioxide + 6 H2O Water + ATPs Energy Cell Respiration Redox • Oxidation- loss of e• Reduction- addition of e- Loss of hydrogen atoms (oxidation) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy (ATP) Gain of hydrogen atoms (reduction) Glucose Oxidation • Significant in oxidation f Glucose – Dehydrogenase – NAD+--coenzyme, electron carrier molecule • Becomes NADH • ***FADH Oxidation Dehydrogenase NAD+ + 2 H Reduction 2 H+ + 2 e– NADH+ H+ (carries 2 electrons) Electron Transport Chain • NADH transfer eto ETC • Redox reactions as NAD e- travel through + H chain • O2 final e- acceptor • Energy released at each step NADH ATP + 2e– Controlled release of energy for synthesis of ATP + 2e– H+ H2O 1 2 O2 Cell Respiration Glycolysis • Splits sugar • Breaks Glucose from 6- C sugar into two 3- C sugars • Yields 2 pyruvate molecules – Net gain of 2 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 H2O Glucose 2 ADP 2 NAD+ + 2 P 2 NADH 2 ATP + 2 H+ 2 Pyruvate Glycolysis • Substrate-level phosphorylation – Transfer of P from substrate to ADP to become ATP • Energy banked in ATP and NADH Enzyme P Enzyme ADP + P Substrate ATP P Product Glycolysis • 3 “phases” – Energy consuming – Glucose split – Energy producing • G3P is significant intermediate – Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate Fig. 6-7c ENERGY INVESTMENT PHASE Glucose ATP Steps 1 – 3 A fuel molecule is energized, using ATP. Step 1 ADP P Glucose-6-phosphate P Fructose-6-phosphate P Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate 2 ATP 3 ADP P Step 4 A six-carbon intermediate splits Into two three-carbon intermediates. 4 P Step 5 A redox reaction generates NADH. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) P NAD+ NAD+ 5 P NADH 5 NADH + H+ ENERGY PAYOFF PHASE P + H+ P P ADP P P 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate ADP 6 6 ATP ATP P P 3-Phosphoglycerate 7 Steps 6 – 9 ATP and pyruvate are produced. 7 P P 2-Phosphoglycerate 8 H2 O P P ADP Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) ADP 9 ATP 8 H2 O 9 ATP Pyruvate Pyruvate • • Cannot enter Citric Acid Cycle directly 3 reactions take place 1. Carboxyl group removed, given off as CO2 2. Remaining 2-C compound oxidized, NAD+ reduced (2 NADH formed) 3. Coenzyme A combines with 2-C compound to form Acetyl Coenzyme A Formation of Acetyl CoA NADH + H+ NAD+ 2 CoA Pyruvate Acetyl coenzyme A 1 3 CO2 Coenzyme A Cell Respiration Krebs Cycle • AKA the Citric Acid Cycle – Mitochondrial matrix • Starts with Acetyl Coenzyme A – Only Acetyl part joins cycle (2-C) – Coenzyme A is recycled • Nets 2 CO2, 3 NADH, 1 FADH2 and 1 ATP per turn – 1 glucose=2 pyruvate=2 Acelty CoA=2 turns Kreb Cycle Krebs Cycle Cell Respiration Oxidative Phosphorylation • Stage where most ATP is produced – Membrane of mitochondria • 2 parts – ETC – Chemiosmosis • ETC creates gradient • Chemiosmosis uses gradient to generate ATP Oxidative Phosphorylation Intermembrane space Protein complex of electron carriers H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ Electron carrier H+ H+ ATP synthase Inner mitochondrial membrane FADH2 Electron flow NADH Mitochondrial matrix FAD NAD+ H+ 1 2 O2 + 2 H+ H+ H+ H2O Electron Transport Chain OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION ADP + P ATP H+ Chemiosmosis Overall • Start with 1 glucose molecule – Split into 2 pyruvate in Glycolysis – Yields 2 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 H20 • 2 Pyruvate converted to 2 Acetyl CoA – Yields 2 NADH • Acetyl CoA enters Kreb Cycle – Yields 2 ATP, 6 NADH, 2 FADH (per glucose) • Oxidative Phosphorylation – Yields 34 ATP ATP yield Electron shuttle across membrane Cytoplasm 2 Mitochondrion 2 NADH NADH (or 2 FADH2) 2 6 NADH GLYCOLYSIS 2 Pyruvate Glucose 2 Acetyl CoA CITRIC ACID CYCLE + 2 ATP + 2 ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation by substrate-level phosphorylation Maximum per glucose: About 38 ATP NADH 2 FADH2 OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis) + about 34 ATP by oxidative phosphorylation Stopping the chain • Poisons can act during Oxidative Phosphorylation – Rotenone • Blocks ETC by binding to e- carrier molecules – Cyanide, CO • Blocks ETC by binding to e- carrier molecules • O2 cannot accept e- – Oligomycin • Blocks ATP synthase – Uncouplers (DNP) • Creates leaky membrane Fig. 6-11 Cyanide, carbon monoxide Rotenone Oligomycin H+ H+ H+ ATP synthase H+ H+ H+ H+ DNP FADH2 FAD 1 2 NAD+ NADH O2 + 2 H+ H+ H+ H2O ADP + P ATP H+ Electron Transport Chain Chemiosmosis Alternate Pathways • Aerobic v Anaerobic • Obligate anaerobes • Facultative anaerobes Fermentation • Anaerobic – Allows cells to generate ATP in absence of O2 • • • • Regenerates NAD+ to break down glucose Only yields 2 ATP Lactic Acid in animal muscles Ethanol in bacteria and yeast Fermentation Glucose + 2 2 P ATP 2 NAD+ 2 ADP + 2 P 2 NADH 2 ATP 2 Pyruvate 2 NAD+ GLYCOLYSIS 2 ADP GLYCOLYSIS Glucose 2 NADH 2 Pyruvate 2 NADH NADH 2 2 CO2 released NAD+ 2 NAD+ 2 2 Lactate 2 Ethanol We eat more than just glucose • Different foods enter the process at different stages • Typically broken down before entering cycles Fig. 6-15 Food, such as peanuts Carbohydrates Fats Glycerol Sugars Proteins Fatty acids Amino acids Amino groups Glucose G3P Pyruvate GLYCOLYSIS Acetyl CoA ATP CITRIC ACID CYCLE OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis) • ETC • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Idy2XAlZIVA&fea ture=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbJ0nbzt5Kw • Glycolysis • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-stLxqPt6E • Kreb • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCypoN3X7KQ&f eature=related • Overview • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXmw3fR8fh0 • Fermentation • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_k8xLrBUfg