Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Intro. To Cellular Respiration and Redox Big Picture • Sun gives energy to plants • Plants store energy as organic molecules • Animals eat plants • Energy eventually leaves as heat • Chemical elements are recycled Working Together… Photosynthesis Cellular Respiration • Occurs in chloroplasts • Uses CO2 and H2O • Generates Oxygen and • Occurs in mitochondria • Uses Oxygen and Organic Organic Molecules molecules • Generates CO2 and H2O Catabolism • 2 Catabolic Pathways: • • Fermentation – degradation of sugars without O2 Cellular Respiration – degradation of sugars with O2 • Cellular Respiration has 3 Key Pathways: Glycolysis, Citric Acid Cycle, and Oxidative Phosphorylation • Uses enzymes to break down (catabolize) complex organic molecules (rich in potential energy); some energy is released to do work, the rest is released as heat Overall Reaction • Organic compound + Oxygen Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy • C6H12O6 + O2 CO2 + H2O + ATP and heat • Why does this generate energy? Transfer of electrons releases energy stored in organic molecules and helps make ATP Redox Reactions • “Oxidation-Reduction Reactions” = REDOX reactions • Transfer of one or more electrons from one reactant to another • Loss of Electrons = Oxidation • Gain of Electrons = Reduction • • Reducing agent is oxidized (causes the other reactant to be reduced) Oxidizing agent is reduced (causes the other reactant to be oxidized) Respiration • C6H12O6 is oxidized and O2 is reduced • When C6H12O6 is oxidized, it releases energy and makes it available for ATP synthesis • Energy foods (fats and carbs) have lots of electrons associated with Hydrogen, but require enzymes to lower Activation Energy. • Organic fuel is oxidized in a series of steps so energy can be harnessed for work Electron Transport Chain • Composed of molecules (mostly proteins) embedded in the inner membrane of the mitochondria • Breaks the fall of electrons into several energy-releasing steps on their way to Oxygen • Electrons are stripped from glucose at key steps and travel with a proton (as a H atom) • A coenzyme NAD+ transports H • • • It is an electron acceptor and oxidizing agent Enzymes take 2 H atoms from the sugar to give their electrons and 1 H to NAD+ (the other H+ is released) NAD+ becomes NADH Electron Transport Chain • NADH shuttles electrons to the higher-energy end of the chain and at the lower-energy end, Oxygen captures electrons to form H2O • Each carrier is more electronegative than the last • Summary of e- pathway: Food NADH ETC Oxygen Stages of Cellular Respiration • 1. Glycolysis – occurs in the cytosol, breaks down glucose into 2 pyruvate • 2. Citric Acid Cycle – occurs in the mitochondrial matrix, oxidizes a derivative of pyruvate into CO2 • 3. Oxidative Phosphorylation – occurs at the mitochondrion inner membrane, includes ETC and chemiosmosis, produces most of ATP • For every glucose molecule, ~38 molecules of ATP are produced Glycolysis • “splitting of sugar” • Starts with a 6-C sugar breaking into two 3-C sugars • Does not require Oxygen • Has an “Energy investment phase” and an “Energy payoff phase” • Spends 2 ATP… Produces 4 ATP and 2 NADH • Net: 2 ATP and 2 NADH