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Clicker Question Monosaccharide sugars and amino acids first enter the blood stream at the: A. capillaries in the small intestine B. capillaries in the stomach C. left atrium D. right atrium E. capillaries in the salivary glands Where are we? • Last time I discussed: – – – The circulatory system and the transport of oxygen, glucose and other nutrients throughout the body. Heart attacks, strokes and pulmonary embolisms. The heart and lungs. • Speaking of hearts and lungs, – We sang together (with Chloe): “How do you measure, a year in the life?” • Today we will cover: – Cellular respiration and the biosynthesis of molecules. With a Little Help from My Friends • Take a couple minutes to meet or get to know a little better the people sitting around you. • Make sure that nobody is left out. • Study through living. Study nutrition, digestion, etc. together over lunch or dinner! Joe Cocker With a Little Help from My Friends Woodstock 1969 With a Little Help from My Friends with Clapton, Page and Beck Town of Bethel, New York Bethel Woods Center for the Arts Cells Differ Because the Specifics of a Cell Depend on Its Functional Specialization • Each cell has the basic organelles • • of a eukaryotic cell. However, the proportion and position of each organelle depends on the cell type. Each cell has the basic chemicals required for life, however, the precursors required by each cell, the rate of turnover of the chemicals, and the chemicals produced by each cell differ depending on cell type. The structure and chemical composition of a cell depends on the function of the cell in an organ. However Almost All Cells Require Glucose and Oxygen to Make ATP • Every cell “burns” glucose as an energy • • source to synthesize ATP from ADP and Pi. Each cell also uses the carbon skeleton of glucose to synthesize chemicals that are necessary for that cell. The majority of cells burn glucose completely during cellular respiration. – The complete combustion of glucose requires oxygen. Aerobic respiration results in about 38 ATP/glucose. – Some fast twitch muscle cells burn glucose quickly but incompletely in the absence of oxygen. This anaerobic respiration results in only 2 ATP/glucose. Figure 5.2B Aerobic Energy transformations in a cell Heat Chemical reactions From the aorta Carbon dioxide + Glucose + ATP ATP water Oxygen Energy for cellular work Burning: The combination of oxygen with a reduced carbon source which yields carbon dioxide, water and heat. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings Figure 6.2 We must breathe so that the cells of our body get oxygen and eliminate carbon dioxide O2 Breathing CO2 Lungs CO2 Bloodstream O2 Muscle cells carrying out Cellular Respiration Glucose + O2 CO2 + H2O + ATP Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings First Law of Thermodynamics • Energy cannot be created or destroyed. • That is, our bodies require energy for the organs to do their work and we get that energy by eating food. We Need to Eat Approximately 1600 Calories/Day Just to Maintain the Body Various activities use up additional Calories (=kcal). McDonalds Burger King Wendy's Putting the Number and Distribution of Calories in Perspective clintonbushhaitifund.org www.redcross.org www.unicef.org/ • If you eat a Quarter Pounder with Cheese, a medium French Fries and drink a medium Classic Coke, you take in 1110 Calories. • These are enough Calories to allow you to run 7 minute miles for about 1.4 hours. • If you don’t run for 1.4 hours (or do an equivalent amount of work), you will store the Calories as 123 g of fat (about ¼ of a pound) since fat has a fuel value of 9 Calories/gram. There Are Other Ways to Burn Calories Fat is Good • Fat is a very efficient • form of energy storage since 1 gram of fat can store 9 Calories, whereas 1 gram of carbohydrate or 1 gram of protein can only store 4 Calories. If we stored energy as carbohydrate or as protein, we would weigh more than we do. Fat is a Light Way to Store Calories • ~ 2000 Calories can be stored by ~½ pound of fat in our body. – (2000 Calories) (1 g fat/9 Calories)(2.2 pounds/1000 g) = 0.49 pounds of fat • ~ 2000 Calories would be stored as ~ 1 pound of protein or ~ 1 pound of carbohydrate in our body. – (2000 Calories) (1 g protein or carbohydrate/4 Calories)(2.2 pounds/1000 g) = 1.1 pounds of protein or carbohydrate Although Storing too Many Calories as Fat (BMI >30) is Unhealthy Skeletal Muscle Cells Burn (Oxidize) Calories When We Do Work • The food (glucose) is oxidized (loss of electrons and • • their accompanying protons) by oxygen to form carbon dioxide, water and available energy (ATP). The oxygen is reduced (gain of electrons and their accompanying protons) to form water. The ATP formed is used for muscle contraction. Food is Oxidized by a Class of Enzymes Called Dehydrogenases The dehydrogenases work by transferring the electrons and their accompanying protons to NAD to make NADH. ATP is then Formed By a Controlled Oxidation of NADH by an Electron Transport Chain • The burning of wood • is an uncontrolled release of energy in the form of heat. By passing electrons stepwise though the electron transport chain, the energy of NADH can be conserved in ATP molecules with a minimal loss as heat. The Controlled Burning of Food For Energy Occurs in the Cytoplasm (Glycolysis) and the Mitochondrion (Krebs Cycle and Electron Transport Chain) As the Electrons Travel from NADH to Oxygen through Various Acceptors of the Electron Transport Chain, They Pull Protons Across a Membrane and Form an Electrical Battery that can Make ATP Respiratory Poisons, Including Cyanide and Carbon Monoxide, Inhibit Electron Transport and Prevent ATP Formation The Carbohydrates, Fats and Proteins Enter the Respiratory Pathway in Various Places to Make ATP This is a miracle. Imagine a car engine that could run on gas, butter, peanuts and hay. Perhaps One Day a Car will be able to Run on All Wastes Many Molecules in Cells are Synthesized from Intermediates Formed During Respiration • Some of the food • molecules are incompletely oxidized and are transformed into other molecules. The ATP is used to do muscular work and to put together carbon skeletons in the biosynthesis of macromolecules. The Discovery of Cellular Respiration • That is cellular • • respiration and biosynthesis in a nutshell. How were these miraculous processes discovered? It all started with Robert Boyle (1662) and his vacuum pump. Robert Boyle Accidentally Discovered that Air Is Necessary for Life • Robert Boyle was conducting • • experiments to see whether butterflies could fly in air made thin by his newly invented vacuum pump. When he pulled a vacuum in the bell jar, in which they were flying, the butterflies fell down and died. Did they die as a consequence of the fall or did they become weak because they needed air? Robert Boyle Accidentally Discovered that Air Is Necessary for Life • Boyle realized that the air • was necessary for life after he repeated his experiments using a lark with a broken wing. Since the lark could not fly, any adverse effects of the lack of air on the lark in the bell jar would not be caused by falling but would indicate the necessity of air for life. The lark died in the vacuum, showing that air is necessary for life. Mice also Need Air to Live • By putting a mouse in a • bell jar and removing the air with a vacuum, Boyle showed that air was also a necessity for mice. But his critics suggested that the animals might have died from being in an uncomfortable place, claustrophobia or the lack of food. Robert Boyle Performed Controls to Convince Critics In response to his critics, Boyle put a mouse in the bell jar overnight, gave it a paper bed and plenty of cheese and then placed the bell jar by the fireside to keep the mouse warm during the night. Robert Boyle Performs Controls to Convince Critics • In the morning, Boyle observed that the mouse was very much alive. • However, as soon as Boyle evacuated the air, the mouse started to die, showing that lack of air, and not the lack of “creature comforts” was necessary for life. Air is Taken Up By The Lungs Robert Hooke (1726), an assistant of Boyle’s and all around genius, showed that the air was taken up by the lungs by demonstrating that a dog whose diaphragm was not working could be kept alive if air was continuously blown with a bellows through the lungs, but not through other parts of the body. Oxygen is the Vital Part of the Air • Joseph Priestley (1774) furthered the work of • Boyle and Hooke when he showed that animals took up the part of the air that was necessary for a candle to burn. Thus oxygen was the vital part of the air that was taken up by the respiration of animals. Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann Antoine Lavoisier Showed that the Combustion of Food during Respiration is Chemically Like the Burning of Wood • Also in the 1770s, Antoine • • Lavoisier, the founder of modern chemistry, determined that combustion results from the combination of oxygen with carbon and hydrogen. Lavoisier believed that respiration and combustion were analogous reactions. Lavoisier used analogy to discover new phenomena. “In respiration, as in combustion, it is the atmospheric air which furnished oxygen…; but since in respiration it is…the blood, which furnishes the combustion matter, if animals did not regularly replace by means of food…that which they lose by respiration, the lamp would soon lack oil, and the animal would perish as a lamp is extinguished when it lacks nourishment.” “The proofs of this identity of effects in respiration and combustion are immediately deducible from experiment. Indeed, upon leaving the lung, the air that has been used for respiration no longer contains the same amount of oxygen; it contains not only carbonic acid gas but also much more water than it contained before it had been inspired.” Formula for Combustion and Respiration C(H2O) + O2 CO2 + H2O + heat • Respiration was defined as a combustion • • process and measured by the uptake of O2 and the expulsion of CO2 and H2O. Using a melting ice calorimeter, Lavoisier and Pierre Simon de Laplace found that for equal outputs of CO2, approximately the same amount of ice was melted by the respiration of a guinea pig and the burning of charcoal. Lavoisier believed that the heat provided the energy necessary for the processes we associate with life. Political Correctness and Science • Like Priestley, Lavoisier never finished his experiments on respiration because he was “politically incorrect”. • Lavoisier, who was a tax collector, lost his head in a guillotine during the French Revolution. Lectures on Respiration for Children faraday (Almost) All Cells Respire • Scientists disagreed as to where the conversion of O2 to CO2 took place. Was it the lungs or was it the blood? • This was a false dichotomy. The conversion occurred in both places, as well as in (almost) every other part of the organism, as Lazzaro Measure oxygen uptake (↑) Spallanzani (1803) showed when he or carbon dioxide evolution (↓). isolated various tissues and demonstrated that all tissues were capable of consuming O2 and giving off CO2. The Crucial Secret…Respiration is a Cellular Process Common to All Cells Many biologists still did not believe that respiration occurred outside the blood. Eduard Pflüger (1872) removed the blood of a frog and replaced it with saline and found that this frog respired just like a normal frog. He also mentioned that insects and plants that have no blood respire too. Pflüger concluded, "Here lies, and I want to state this once and for all, the crucial secret of the regulation of the total oxygen consumption by the organism, a gravity which is entirely determined by the cell itself....“ The Scientific Method: A Critical Attitude is Clearly Required… According to Thomas Gold (1989), “New ideas in science are not always right just because they are new. Nor are the old ideas always wrong just because they are old. A critical attitude is clearly required of every scientist….. Whenever the established ideas are accepted uncritically, but conflicting new evidence is brushed aside and not reported because it does not fit, then that particular science is in deep trouble—and it has happened quite often in the historical past.” Be Aware of Cow Dung Conventional Wisdom of the Dominant Group Always Be Skeptical: Even Babe Ruth Only Got it Right at Bat 34% of the Time Babe Ruth’s Lifetime Batting Average: 0.342 The Mitochondrion is the Organelle Involved in Respiration • By the end of the nineteenth century, it became clear that respiration was a cellular process that took place in almost • • each and every cell. Soon after, centrifugation showed that the uptake of oxygen was associated with particles and subsequent structural studies showed that the mitochondrion was the respiratory organelle. Mitos is Greek for thread, and chondrin is Greek for small grain. The German Dye Industry Mitochondria Can Be Stained With Fabric Dyes • At the suggestion of Paul Ehrlich, • Leonor Michaelis (1900) tested the ability of the various newlyinvented fabric dyes to stain living tissue. Michaelis showed that the mitochondria in pancreatic exocrine cells could be selectively and vitally stained with a dilute solution of one of these dyes, Janus green. Staining is only transient because the mitochondria reduce the dye and render it colorless. The ability of mitochondria to oxidize and reduce various dyes was what led Kingbury (1912) to propose that the mitochondria may be involved in cellular respiration. Glucose: A Condensation of Six Formaldehydes (CH20) The Discovery of Glycolysis Glyco-lysis: the Breakdown of Sugar Fermentation has been used as a Food Processing Technique throughout the World to Preserve and Flavor Food for Thousands of Years • • • • • • • • • • Alcohol Wine Vinegar Olives Corned Beef Bread Sourdough Sauerkraut Natto Soy Sauce •Tea •Sake •Beer •Cheese •Pickles •Kimchi •Kefir •Salami •Prosciutto •Yogurt Louis Pasteur Guessed that Fermentation is Respiration without Air, and it Required Living Organisms "I am of the opinion that alcoholic fermentation never occurs without simultaneous organization, development and multiplication of cells.... If asked, in what consists the chemical act whereby the sugar is decomposed ... I am completely ignorant of it." Pasteur Had Trouble Convincing People that Fermentation was a Complex Process “Ah, you insist on thinking of alcoholic fermentation as a simple breaking up of sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid! Undeceive yourselves…. Ah! So you are bound to ignore the yeast in this phenomenon, or at the most will concede to it only the role of initiator! Very well! Learn that this yeast always borrows something from the sugar, and makes a part of its own tissues out of this food. Learn also that it is only on the condition of keeping a little of the sugar for itself, that it consents to give you the rest in the form of alcohol.” Louis Pasteur Did Not Get Everything Right • Whole yeast could • • ferment a sugar solution. Louis Pasteur (1879) tried but was unable to get ground up yeast to ferment a sugar solution. He declared that fermentation was a vital action that required living cells. Fermentation Can Occur in vitro • Eduard Buchner (1897) using a German beer yeast instead of a French wine yeast was able to obtain fermentation in vitro when • he added sugar to a yeast extract. Actually this was a lucky find, since Buchner had no interest in glycolysis. He was making a health tonic, and only added the sugar as a preservative, when the other antiseptics failed to keep the extract sterile. Origin of the Word: Enzyme • Buchner named the • extract zymase, from zyme, the Greek word for yeast, and diastasis, the Greek word for break apart. Willy Kühne named all biocatalysts, enzymes, from the Greek words, en zyme, which mean “in yeast”. Fermentation in Yeast Involves Many Steps • Unlike the burning of wood, the cellular oxidation of glucose that occurs at ambient temperatures • depends on the intervention of enzymes and takes place in about a dozen sequential steps. This leads to the production of many intermediates and thus cellular respiration is also known as intermediary metabolism. Fermentation and Glycolysis in Muscle are Almost Identical Processes It was astonishing for the biochemists studying fermentation in yeast and bacteria or glycolysis in muscle that the chemistry of these seemingly diverse processes, which take place in different kingdoms, were almost identical. Discovering Biochemical Pathways • The studies of glycolysis and fermentation opened up an entirely new way of doing chemistry. Prior to these studies, chemicals were isolated from cells but attempts to define their relationship in the cell were rebuked with the words, “More matter with less art.” • Feeling that it was time to say, “Enough matter, more art”, biochemists, including Arthur Harden, Gustav Embden, Otto Myerhof (1924) and Jacob Parnas (1910) began to piece together the biochemical pathways that occur in living cells. Elucidating a Biochemical Pathway • How could they determine the • • • components and sequence of the pathway in the days before radioactive isotopes? They found poisons that were inhibitors of CO2 evolution. Then they determined which intermediates accumulated after treatment with the inhibitor. The chemical whose concentration increased, after treatment with an inhibitor, was presumably the intermediate produced just prior to the step blocked by the inhibitor. Elucidating a Biochemical Pathway A→B→C→D→E→F→G Which intermediate would build up first if I added a chemical that inhibited the enzyme that converts E to F? Figure 6.7C Details of glycolysis Steps 1– 3 A fuel molecule is energized, using ATP. PREPARATORY PHASE Glucose ATP (energy investment) Step 1 ADP P Glucose-6-phosphate P Fructose-6-phosphate P Fructose-1,6-diphosphate 2 ATP 3 ADP P Step 4 A six-carbon intermediate splits into two threecarbon intermediates. 4 P Step 5 A redox reaction generates NADH. + P 5 NAD P NADH Steps 6– 9 ATP and pyruvate are produced. + 5 NAD +H+ Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) P NADH +H P ADP ENERGY PAYOFF PHASE P + P P 1,3-Diphosphoglycerate P 3-Phosphoglycerate ADP 6 6 ATP ATP P 7 7 P P 2-Phosphoglycerate 8 H2 O 8 H2 O P P ADP Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) ADP 9 ATP 9 ATP Pyruvate Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings In the Absence of Oxygen, the NADH Must Be Recycled or ATP Formation will not be Sustainable • In muscle, NADH is recycled to • NAD+ in the process of converting pyruvic acid to lactic acid. The net yield from the oxidation of each glucose is 2 ATP. In yeast, NADH is recycled to NAD+ in the process of converting pyruvic acid to ethanol. The net yield from the oxidation of each glucose is 2 ATP. Anaerobic Respiration in Muscle and Yeast The Discovery of the Citric Acid (Krebs) Cycle Aerobic Glycolysis In the presence of oxygen, glucose is eventually split (lysed) into two pyruvic acids, which means that only 2 out of 6 of the formaldehydes (HCOH) that make up the glucose were oxidized during glycolysis. Additional energy can be obtained by the oxidation of pyruvic acid. But how? How are the Pyruvic Acids Produced in Glycolysis Burned to Produce Additional Energy? After courageously escaping the Nazis with the help of Albert Szent-Gyorgyi in 1933, Hans Krebs tackled the problem of how pyruvate is oxidized to carbon dioxide and water and was prepared to look for a cycle. Cycles (in Life and Biology) Facilitate Regulation and Integration • While he was in • Germany, Hans Krebs had determined that in the liver, urea is synthesized from carbon dioxide and ammonia in a cyclic, not a linear reaction. Compared with a linear pathway, a cycle allows better regulation and integration with the whole cell. Krebs Showed Pyruvic Acid Was “Burned” in a Cycle Too • Krebs found that a • number of organic acids, including citric acid stimulated O2 uptake in muscle and liver. He also found that in the presence of NAD tiny (catalytic) amounts of these organic acids stimulated the oxidation of large quantities of pyruvic acid. Pyruvic acid Krebs Showed Pyruvic Acid Was “Burned” in a Cycle • The presence of • malonate, an inhibitor of succinic acid oxidation, results in the build up of succinic acid no matter which intermediate is added. These data indicated that the intermediates are arranged in a cycle. Krebs Showed Pyruvic Acid Was “Burned” in a Cycle • The presence of • malonate, an inhibitor of succinic acid oxidation, results in the build up of succinic acid no matter which intermediate is added. These data indicated that the intermediates are arranged in a cycle. The Establishment Usually Takes Time to Recognize the Work of a Prepared Mind • When Krebs first submitted his paper to the “premier journal” Nature, he got the following rejection letter: "The editor of NATURE presents his compliments to Dr. H. A. Krebs and regrets that as he has already sufficient letters to fill the correspondence column of NATURE for seven or eight weeks, it is undesirable to accept further letters at the present time…." • Krebs then submitted his paper to the “second class journal” Enzymologia where it was accepted in 1937 and in 1953 Krebs won the Nobel Prize in Physiology of Medicine for his work. nobelprize.org Hans Krebs on His Cycle Vitamins B1- and B3-dependent conversion of pyruvic acid to acetyl CoA A biochemical lesion results because the above step does not occur when Vitamins B1 or B3 are missing. Nutrition: The B vitamins are Necessary for Energy Metabolism • Every cell requires Niacin (vitamin B3), • • which is an essential component of NAD, a cofactor in anaerobic and aerobic energy metabolism. Cells that use aerobic energy metabolism also require Thiamine (vitamin B1), which is an essential part of a coenzyme required for aerobic energy metabolism. Some cells are more sensitive to a deficiency in a given nutrient than others, which is why diseases caused by nutrient deficiencies show up in a particular organ, tissue or cell type. Beriberi (Paralysis Due to Damaged Nerves) and Pellagra (4Ds: Dermatitis, Diarrhea, Dementia, and Early Death) Biochemical Lesion: Nature and Nurture • Pyruvic acid must be activated before it • • can enter the Krebs cycle. The enzyme that catalyzes this activation step requires thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP), a coenzyme derived from vitamin B1. A deficiency in vitamin B1 results in an “environmentally-induced” “biochemical lesion”, a term coined by Rudolph Peters (). • The inability to perform a certain step in a pathway may also be due to a deficiency in an enzyme involved in catalyzing that step. According to Archibald Garrod (), this may be due to an inborn error in metabolism, i.e. a genetic lesion. The Discovery of the Electron Transport Chain and Oxidative Phosphorylation The NADH Produced By the Krebs Cycle Must Be Oxidized • The Krebs cycle itself does not require • • • oxygen nor generate much energy in the form of ATP since the NADH contains much of the original energy of the glucose molecule. The NADH must be oxidized by the electron transport chain. At body temperature, oxygen does not directly attack NADH so how does the oxygen act? It seemed likely that the catalyst would contain iron, which has a high affinity for oxygen, and is able to bind it reversibly. Think of rust, which is iron oxide. Discovery of the Electron Transport Chain • In the mid 1800’s it was widely held • that the blood was involved in respiration and indeed an ironcontaining compound was present in the blood and is called hemoglobin. The concentration of iron in the blood is so high that the French nobility wore rings made from the iron extracted from the blood of their friends as a keepsake much like people wear a lock of a loved one’s hair in a ring around their finger or in a locket around their neck. Discovery of the Electron Transport Chain • In the 1850's Claude Bernard • • realized that the color of the blood depended on its state of oxygenation. George Gabriel Stokes (1864) concluded that hemoglobin exists in oxidized (bright reddish) and reduced states (muddy dark red), and these can be distinguished by their absorption spectra. A blood oxygen meter measures the color of blood. Oxygenated Blood Reflects Bright Red. Deoxygenated and Carbonmonoxide-containing Blood Reflects Blue and Red and Looks Dark Purplish. • Deoxygenated- and • • carbonmonoxy-hemoglobin absorb less and reflect more blue (400500 nm) and thus appears bluer than oxygenated hemoglobin. Deoxygenated- and carbonmonoxy- hemoglobin absorb more red (600-650 nm) and reflect less red which makes it appear less red than oxygenated hemoglobin. The bright blue color of the veins depends on the optical properties of the skin as well as the purplish color of the blood within them. Blue Green Red Discovery of Cytochromes • After the general acceptance that respiration was a cellular phenomenon and not one that occurred only in the blood, Charles MacMumm (1886) searched for respiratory pigments in many animal tissues. • He found a pigment whose absorption spectrum varied with its oxidation state—just like hemoglobin. • David Keilin (1925) showed that this pigment was really a mixture of 3 pigments which he named cytochromes a, b and c. Cytochrome means “cell color”. • But none of these cytochromes interacted directly with O2. The Discovery of the Iron-Containing Enzyme (Cytochrome Oxidase) that Binds Oxygen • Otto Warburg, Hans Krebs’ • teacher and a Jew who accepted Hitler’s invitation to stay in Germany as an honorary Aryan, discovered another cytochrome, called cytochrome oxidase that directly binds O2. Carbon monoxide and cyanide cause death by inhibiting the action of this protein. Discovery that the Mitochondrial Electron Transport Chain Converts the Energy in NADH into the Energy in ATP • Albert Lehninger showed • that ATP is formed when NADH is given to isolated mitochondria. The complete combustion of glucose in the presence of O2 yields approximately 38 ATPs (compared to 2 ATPs obtained by glycolysis in the absence of oxygen). Figure 6.10 Oxidative phosphorylation, using electron transport and chemiosmosis in the mitochondrion H+ Intermembrane space . H+ H+ H H+ Protein complex H+ + H+ H+ H+ Electron carrier ATP synthase Inner mitochondrial membrane FADH2 Electron flow NAD+ NADH Mitochondrial matrix FAD H+ 1 O 2 + 2 H+ 2 H+ H+ H2O Electron Transport Chain OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings ADP + ATP P H + Chemiosmosis A Summary of Cellular Respiration ATP is Used as an Energy Source for: • • • • • • Synthesizing carbohydrates (dehydrations) Synthesizing DNA and RNA (dehydrations) Synthesizing proteins (dehydrations) Synthesizing lipids (dehydrations) Synthesizing coenzymes (e.g. NAD) Transporting substances across membranes • Secretion • Cell motility: muscle movement • Nearly everything… Figure 6.3 Summary equation for cellular respiration C6H12O6 Glucose + 6 O2 Oxygen gas Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings 6 CO2 Carbon dioxide + 6 H2O Water + ATPs Energy When you eat and breathe, you make cellular respiration possible. O2 Breathing CO2 Lungs CO2 Bloodstream O2 Muscle cells carrying out Cellular Respiration Glucose + O2 CO2 + H2O + ATP Science Songs Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings