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Clicker Question #1
1. What compound directly provides energy for cellular
work?
A. DNA
B. C6H12O6
C. glucose
D. ATP
E. fat
Energy Conversion
Fuel rich in
chemical
energy
Energy conversion
Waste products
poor in chemical
energy
Heat
energy
Gasoline

Oxygen
Combustion
Kinetic
energy
of movement
Energy conversion in a car
Carbon dioxide

Water
Heat
energy
Food

Oxygen
Cellular
respiration
ATP
Energy for cellular work
Energy conversion in a cell
Carbon dioxide

Water
Cellular Respiration
Cellular respiration: A catabolic energy yielding pathway in
which oxygen and organic fuels are consumed and ATP is
produced
• An aerobic process—it requires oxygen
Summary equations:
Organic
Compounds
+
Oxygen
Carbon + Water
Dioxide
+ Energy
Cellular Respiration
•By oxidizing glucose, energy is taken out of “storage” and
made available for ATP synthesis
Oxidation
Glucose loses electrons
(and hydrogens)
C6H12O6
Glucose

6
O2
Oxygen
6
CO2
Carbon
dioxide

6
H2O
Water
Reduction
Oxygen gains electrons (and hydrogens)
Cellular Respiration
*Substrate-level
phosphorylation
3 metabolic stages:
*glycolysis *Krebs cycle
*electron transport chain and
oxidative phosphorylation
*Oxidative phosphorylation
Mitochondrion
Cytoplasm
Cytoplasm
Plant cell
Animal cell
Animal cell
Plant cell
Cytoplasm
Cytoplasm
High-energy
High-energy
electrons
electrons
carried
carried
NADH
bybyNADH
Glycolysis
Glycolysis2
Glucose Pyruvic
acid
ATP
2 ATP
Mitochondrion
Mitochondrion
High-energy
High-energy
electrons
carried
electrons carried
mainly
mainlyby
by
NADH
NADH
Citric
Citric
Electron
Acid
Electron
Acid
Transport
Cycle
Transport
Cycle
2
ATP
ATP
~34
ATP
ATP
~38
ATP
per
Figure 6.6
Metabolic Disequilibrium
*Multi-step open system
Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing
glucose to pyruvate
Glycolysis: Energy Investment Phase
1) Glucose is
phosphorylated
2) G-6-P is
rearranged
3) Addition of another
phosphate group
4) Cleavage
into 2
3-carbon
sugars
5) Conversion b/w the 2
3-carbon sugars
6) Two components:
*electron transfer
*Phosphate
group
addition
Glycolysis: Energy Payoff Phase
9) Loss of
water
7) ATP
production
8) Rearrangement
of phosphate group
10) ATP
production
Fermentation enables cell to produce ATP w/o O2
anaerobic
aerobic
*Fermentation generates ATP by
substrate-level phosphorylation
The presence or absence of O2 dictates the
fate of pyruvate
anaerobic
aerobic
The Krebs cycle: energy-yielding oxidation
The junction b/w glycolysis and
the Krebs cycle:
Multienzyme complex:
1) Removal of CO2
2) Electron transfer
*pyruvate dehydrogenase
3) Addition of CoA
The Krebs cycle: energy-yielding oxidation
8) electron transfer
Malate dehydrogenase
1) Addition of 2 Carbons
Citrate synthase
2) Isomerization
Aconitase
7) Rearrangement
of bonds
Fumarase
6) electron transfer
Succinate
dehydrogenase
3) *Loss of CO2
*electron transfer
Isocitrate
dehydrogenase
4) *Loss of CO2
*electron transfer
a-ketoglutarate
dehydrogenase
5) substrate-level phosphorylation
Succinyl CoA-synthetase
Electron transport and ATP synthesis
*Multi-step open system
Generation and maintenance of an H+ gradient
*Exergonic flow of e-, pumps H+ across the membrane
*chemiosmosis
high energy
electrons
ATP synthase
*How does the mitochondrion
couple electron transport
and ATP synthesis?
Versatility of Cellular Respiration
– In addition to glucose, cellular respiration can
“burn”:
• Diverse types of carbohydrates
• Fats
• Proteins
Polysaccharides
Food
Fats
Sugars Glycerol Fatty
acids
Glycolysis
Acetyl
CoA
ATP
Proteins
Amino acids
Citric
Acid
Cycle
Electron
Transport
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