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Respiration How Is a Marathoner Different from a Sprinter? Aerobic vs. anaerobic Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Anaerobic pathways Aerobic pathways • Older • No O • In cytoplasm • • • • Newer Require O Start in cytoplasm Completed in mitochondria Food Sources • Autotrophs (producers) • Hetrotrophs (consumers) • Both make ATP Sunlight energy ECOSYSTEM Photosynthesis in chloroplasts Glucose CO2 + + H2O O2 Cellular respiration in mitochondria ATP (for cellular work) Heat energy Energy Consumption Why Breathe? O2 Breathing CO2 Lungs CO2 Bloodstream O2 Muscle cells carrying out Cellular Respiration Glucose + O2 CO2 + H2O + ATP Summary Equation for Aerobic Respiration C6H12O6 Glucose + 6 O2 Oxygen gas 6 CO2 Carbon dioxide + 6 H2O Water + ATPs Energy Electron Transfers • Oxidation - lose electron • Reduction - gain electron Loss of hydrogen atoms (oxidation) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + Glucose 6 H2O + Energy (ATP) Gain of hydrogen atoms (reduction) Coenzymes • NAD+ and FAD • NADH and FADH2 • Carry electrons and hydrogen Coenzymes Oxidation H O NAD+ O + 2H H Dehydrogenase Reduction NADH 2H + + 2H + 2e (carries 2 electrons) + H+ ETC NADH NAD + H + ATP 2e + Controlled release of energy for synthesis of ATP 2e 2 H 1 + 2 H2O O2 Overview NADH High-energy electrons carried by NADH NADH FADH2 and GLYCOLYSIS Glucose Pyruvate CITRIC ACID CYCLE OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis) Mitochondrion Cytoplasm ATP Substrate-level phosphorylation Figure 6.6 CO2 ATP CO2 Substrate-level phosphorylation ATP Oxidative phosphorylation Glucose • C6H12O6 In-text figure Page 136 Glycolysis glucose GLYCOLYSIS pyruvate animal cell (eukaryotic) plant cell (eukaryotic) bacterial cell (prokaryotic) Figure 8.4(1) Page 136 Slide 7 Glycolysis • Two stages • Energy-requiring steps – 2 ATP – Transfers P group • Energy-releasing steps – Splits activated glucose – Forms 2 pyruvate, 4 ATP and 2 NADH Glycolysis 2 NAD+ 2 NADH + 2 H+ Glucose 2 Pyruvate 2 ADP +2 P 2 ATP Figure 6.8_1 Figure 6.8_2 Figure 6.8_3 “Prep” Reaction Pyruvate is oxidized • 2 C acetyl-CoA • 3rd C released as CO2 • NAD+ -> NADH “Prep” Reaction NAD+ NADH + H+ CoA Pyruvate Acetyl CoA (acetyl coenzyme A) CO2 Figure 6.8 Coenzyme A Citric Acid Cycle Acetyl CoA CoA CoA CITRIC ACID CYCLE 2 CO2 3 NAD+ FADH2 3 NADH FAD + 3 H+ ATP ADP + P Citric Acid Cycle • Loads e- and H onto NAD+ and FAD • ATP by substrate-level Phos. Citric Acid Cycle •1 turn yields: – – – – – 2 CO2 1 ATP, 3 NADH 1 FADH2 Regenerates starting product CoA Acetyl CoA CoA 2 carbons enter cycle Oxaloacetate NADH Citrate + H+ NAD+ CO2 leaves cycle CITRIC ACID CYCLE NAD+ Malate NADH ADP FADH2 + + H+ P ATP Alpha-ketoglutarate FAD CO2 leaves cycle Succinate NADH Step Acetyl CoA stokes the furnace. Steps + H+ and NADH, ATP, and CO2 are generated during redox reactions. NAD+ Steps and Redox reactions generate FADH2 and NADH. Electron Transport • • • • • Coenzymes deliver electrons Pump H+ Forms H+ gradient H+ flows down gradient Powers ATP formation (ATP synthase) Figure 6.12a Importance of Oxygen H+ H+ H+ H+ + . H H+ Protein complex H+ Electron carrier Intermembrane space H+ H+ ATP synthase Inner mitochondrial membrane FADH2 Electron flow NADH FAD NAD+ + H Mitochondrial matrix 1O + 2 H+ 2 2 H+ H+ H2O Electron Transport Chain OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION Figure 6.10 ADP + P H+ ATP Chemiosmosis Summary of Energy Harvest (per molecule of glucose) • Glycolysis – 2 ATP • Citric acid and “prep” rxns – 2 ATP • ETC – 32 ATP formed FYI - Efficiency of Aerobic Respiration • 686 kcal of energy are released • 7.5 kcal are conserved in each ATP • When 36 ATP form, 270 kcal (36 X 7.5) are captured in ATP • Efficiency is 270 / 686 X 100 = 39 percent • Most energy is lost as heat Poisons •Block the movement of electrons (cyanide, CO) •Block the flow of H+ through ATP synthase (Oligomycin) Cyanide, carbon monoxide Rotenone H+ H+ H+ Oligomycin H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ ATP Synthase DNP FADH2 FAD 1 O2 + 2 H+ 2 NAD+ NADH H+ H+ H+ Electron Transport Chain Figure 6.11 H2O ADP + P ATP Chemiosmosis Anaerobic Pathways • Less ATP • Fermentation pathways Fermentation Pathways • Bacteria – Lactobacillus (cheese) • Animal cells Fermentation Pathways • Glycolysis • 2 ATP • Regenerate NAD+ Lactate Fermentation • Muscle cells FAST ATP • Lactic acid builds up 2 NAD+ 2 2 NADH NADH 2 NAD+ GLYCOLYSIS 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP 2 Pyruvate Glucose 2 Lactate Alcoholic Fermentation • Produces ethanol • Yeast 2 NAD+ 2 NADH 2 NADH 2 NAD+ GLYCOLYSIS 2 ADP + 2 P Glucose Figure 6.13B 2 2 ATP 2 Pyruvate CO2 released 2 Ethanol Figure 6.16 Question of the Day How does the insecticide rotenone work? Is it safe?