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CP BIO Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration How Cells Harvest Chemical Energy CP BIO: Ch. 9 Cell Respiration All life activities need energy a. Maintain homeostasis; do life functions breathe, circulate blood active transport, synthesize molecules regulate temperature, etc. b. Physical and mental activity c. Cells use energy in ATP molecules Food energy is measured in calories calorie = energy needed to raise the temperature of one mL water 1 degree Celsius Food labels: Calorie (Kcal) = 1000 calories Basics of Cellular Respiration • Breaks down glucose in many small steps • a biochemical pathway • Energy released is stored in molecules of ATP – Each ATP has enough energy for one cell task • One glucose molecule yields 36 ATP Cells use ATP for energy ATP - adenosine triphosphate High-energy bond between phosphate groups - breaks easily, bond energy is released Energy is used by cell to do work Phosphorylate - add a phosphate group to a molecule - transfers energy to new molecule When cell needs energy for work, 3rd phosphate comes off ATP and attaches to molecule doing work 7 ATP – ADP Cycle • ATP breakdown products (ADP + P) stay in cell • used again to make more ATP when needed ATP made in cell respiration ATP used for cellular work Very fast!! 10 million ATP/second in a cell 8 All organisms do respiration • Need oxygen - aerobic • No oxygen - anaerobic Energy flow is one-way - sun plants ATP Chemicals recycle Oxygen and Energy Aerobic respiration harvests the most ATP from glucose Aerobic Breaks down glucose completely Anaerobic Glucose partly broken down Yields max amount of ATP Yields only 2 ATP/glucose Most organisms Only a few microorganisms Products: CO2 , H2O Products: depends 3 stages of breakdown Glycolysis Kreb’s cycle Electron Transport Chain 2 stages of breakdown Glycolysis Fermentation Mitochondria – “power house” Compartments - for different stages • Matrix – Space enclosed by inner membrane • Inner membrane – Deeply folded, more surface – Many reactions at the same time • Cristae - folds in membrane • Intermembrane space – Between inner and outer membrane Gas exchange is by diffusion In the lungs: Oxygen from air - diffuses into blood - carried to body cells Carbon dioxide from blood - diffuses into air sacs - removed from body Cells need oxygen for respiration In cells: - oxygen diffuses IN - CO2 goes OUT Electron Acceptors • Help in reaction pathway, re-used • 2 in respiration: NAD and FAD • Accept hydrogen ions and electrons from glucose as it breaks down • Transfer them to another molecule later in pathway –makes ATP Stages of Cell Respiration 1. Glycolysis • In cytoplasm • Splits glucose in half 2. Kreb’s Cycle • In mitochondria • Finishes glucose breakdown 3. Electron Transport Chain • In mitochondria • Generates the most ATP Glycolysis 1st stage in cell respiration Glycolysis = “sugar splits” Glucose two smaller molecules small amount of energy released Need 2 ATP to start a. Two ATP attach to glucose b. glucose splits in two c. 3-carbon PGAL forms d. PGAL goes through several more reactions e. PGAL becomes pyruvic acid Glycolysis breakdown 1) Each PGAL loses hydrogen to NAD+ a) makes NADH b) PGAL changes to pyruvic acid 2) 4 ATP are produced, but net yield is 2 Products of glycolysis: 1) 2 ATP 2) 2 NADH 3) 2 pyruvic acid All organisms do glycolysis • Need no oxygen or special organelles • Probably evolved very early in history of life • Can meet energy needs of some simple organisms Sir Hans Krebs 1900-1981 • German chemist, 1930s • Described the cycle of reactions that make energy in cells • Received Nobel in 1953 • “Krebs Cycle” or “Citric Acid Cycle” Pyruvic Acid Breakdown PREPARES pyruvic acid for Kreb’s cycle NOT a separate stage 1) Hydrogen removed NADH 3) Acetyl-CoA forms 2) Carbon removed CO2 4) Ready for Kreb’s cycle Kreb’s Citric Acid Cycle Stage 2 in aerobic respiration In MATRIX Completes breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide Makes many molecules of NADH and FADH2 (make energy later) Products of Kreb’s Cycle 1. 2 ATP/glucose molecule (one each “turn”) 2. Several molecules of NADH and FADH2 – These will yield energy in stage 3 3. Last carbons in glucose form CO2 and diffuse out of cell Electron Transport Chain Stage 3 in aerobic respiration • SAME AS ETC IN PHOTOSYNTHESIS • Chain of proteins in inner membrane • Take electrons from NADH, FADH • Electron energy makes ATP MOST ATP made in this stage ETC in Respiration Only happens if oxygen is available to take electrons at end of chain and form WATER O + 2 H+ + 2 e- H2O Chemiosmosis and ATP • ATP Synthase – enzymes in cristae • Electron energy creates H+ concentration • H+ ions diffuse through ATP synthase • activate synthase enzyme • make (synthesize) ATP ADP + P ATP 2)Electron energy pumps H+ across membrane - Forms H+ gradient 1)Starting molecules NADH, FADH2 release H+ and electrons 3) H+ ions diffuse through ATP synthase (chemiosmosis) 5) Final electron acceptor is oxygen 4) ADP + P ATP O + H+ + e- H2O Electrons power ATP synthase enzyme makes ATP Total ATP yield per glucose: Glycolysis – 2 ATP Krebs – 2 ATP ETC - 32 ATP Total = 36 ATP Summary of Aerobic Respiration Pathway Glycolysis Reactants Glucose + Products # ATP Location 2 cytoplasm CO2 NADH FADH2 2 Mitochondrial H2O 32 Pyruvic Acid NADH Krebs Cycle Acetyl CoA Electron Transport Chain NADH, FADH2 O2 matrix Mitochondrial cristae Total ATP 36-38 Anaerobic Respiration FERMENTATION follows glycolysis – Needs no oxygen – Makes no additional ATP after glycolysis – NAD+ is reused – Pyruvic acid is changed into a final product Fermentation: two kinds Alcohol lactic acid Alcohol Fermentation Some yeasts • pyruvic acid ethyl alcohol + CO2 •Baking, brewing beer and wine • CO2 gas makes bread dough rise, bubbles in beer and champagne No more ATP made Lactic Acid Fermentation • Pyruvic acid lactic acid • Anaerobic bacteria -make lactic (and other) acids • Commercial uses: cheese, yogurt, soy products, sauerkraut, vinegars • Muscle cells – can do fermentation only temporarily • lactic acids builds up “oxygen debt” • Muscles fatigue, cramp • With fresh oxygen: Lactic acid blood liver, changed back to pyruvic acid Kreb’s cycle Other foods in respiration Carbs are #1 choice for cell energy: 4 cal/g Fats: twice the calorie store: 9cal/g Proteins: LAST choice: – needed for many important roles 4 cal/g -Fats and proteins are also broken down in many small steps -Amount of ATP depends on molecule Photosynthesis and Respiration Photosynthesis – makes food Light energy chemical energy 6 H2O + 6 CO2 C6 H12 O6 + 6 O2 Respiration – breaks down food for cell energy C6 H12 O6 + 6 O2 6 H2O + 6 CO2 Energy in food energy in ATP Breathing supplies oxygen to cells 1) Breathing brings oxygen into the body 6) Blood carries CO2 back to lungs - exhaled 2) Oxygen in lungs diffuses into blood 5) CO2 diffuses out of cells into blood 4) Oxygen is used in cell respiration. 3) Blood delivers oxygen to all body cells 1) Pyruvic acid is broken down to CO2 and acetyl (2-C) -- joins to coenzyme A 2) starting molecule – acetyl CoA 4. Carbon “fixed” 6 C citric acid 3) 4-C compound in matrix 8) 4-C compound recycled 5) two carbons CO2 7) hydrogens removed - NAD, FADH reduced 6) one ATP forms