Biochemistry of respiration

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Biochemistry of respiration

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Biochemistry of respiration. Raw materials…. Any organic molecule Carbohydrate Lipid Protein. They contain…. …too much chemical energy. So, respiration involves…. …breaking down large complex organic molecules to produce a molecule that contains a small amount of energy. ATP. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Biochemistry of respiration

Page 1: Biochemistry of respiration

Biochemistry of respiration

Page 2: Biochemistry of respiration

Raw materials…

Any organic molecule

Carbohydrate

Lipid

Protein

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They contain…

…too much chemical energy

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So, respiration involves…

…breaking down large complex organic molecules to produce a molecule that contains a small amount of energy

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ATP

ATP is an immediate source of energy because:-

Only one step is necessary to release the energy

The amount of energy released is small enough to be useful.

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Aim of respiration

Synthesis of ATP

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Carbohydrate is the major substrate for respiration

Soluble carbohydrates exist – so they can easily be transported

Insoluble carbohydrates exist – so they can be easily stored

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Overview

Four stages:-

1. Glycolysis2. Link reaction3. Krebs cycle4. Hydrogen / electron carrier system

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GLYCOLYSIS

Occurs in cytoplasm

Starts with Glucose

6 carbon compound

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GLYCOLYSIS

Ends with Pyruvate

3 carbon compound

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Glucose to TP

2 molecules of ATP are invested

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TP to Pyruvate

Triose phosphate is converted to pyruvate

(there are a number of intermediate stages)

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Energy is recovered…

ATP is made

Hydrogen is released and NAD is reduced

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Over all…

Net production of 2 ATP molecules from each molecule of glucose

and

2 reduced NAD molecules

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Pyruvate moves into the mitochondria

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Precisely…

Into the matrix

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LINK REACTION

Pyruvate is converted into

acetyl coenzyme A

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Pyruvate

3 carbon compound

Acetyl coenzyme A

2 carbon compound

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Oxidative … but no oxygen is involved

Hydrogen is removed Combines with NAD Producing reduced NAD

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KREBS CYCLE

Acetyl Co A (2 carbon compound) Combines with a 4 carbon compound Producing a 6 carbon compound

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In a number of steps…

6 carbon compound breaks down to form the same 4 carbon compound that combined with acetyl co A

Hence the Krebs CYCLE

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What is released?

Carbon – in the form of carbon dioxide

Hydrogen – combining with NAD and another coenzyme, FAD to form

reduced NAD and reduced FAD

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Anything else?

There is enough energy released in one of the steps to join ADP and Phosphate to make ATP

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ELECTRON / HYDROGEN CARRIER SYSTEM

Carriers are in the inner membrane

Cristae

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Hydrogen atoms

From hydrogen carriers –

reduced NAD and reduced FAD

Accepted by the carriers in the membrane

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Hydrogen atoms break down to electrons and hydrogen ions (protons)

Protons build up between the two membranes of the mitochondria

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Protons move back into the matrix

Through an enzyme – ATP synthetase

ADP and phosphate join forming ATP

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The protons rejoin with electrons and oxygen to form water

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Oxidative phosphorylation

Phosphate is added to ADP –

phosphorylation

The energy for the process is the result of the removal of hydrogen – oxidation

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Role of oxygen

Oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor in the electron carrier system

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‘Oxidation’

Oxidation occurs more than once in respiration

BUT In glycolysis the link reaction Krebs cycle

It is the removal of hydrogen

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‘Oxidation’

Only in the electron carrier system is oxygen needed

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Aerobic and anaerobic respiration

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Fermentation

Anaerobic respiration

Occurs when oxygen is limited

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NAD is oxidised

Hydrogen combines with pyruvate

Forming :-

lactate in animals

ethanol in plants / fungi

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Glycolysis can continue…

Producing some ATP

Forming 2 ATP per glucose molecule

Compared with 38 ATP per glucose molecule with aerobic respiration