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Page 1: Inroduction to Cellular Respiration

Inroduction to Cellular Respiration

• Open systems need energy from outside sources.

• Living organisms are open systems

• Photoautotrophs(plants) capture the suns energy and convert it to chemical energy in the form of organic molecules through anabolic reactions.

Page 2: Inroduction to Cellular Respiration

Organic Molecules• Organic molecules are

burned in the presence of O2.

• Some of the chemical energy is used to make ATP which is utilized for cellular work.

• For example, the oxidation of glucose (a catabolic reaction) provides the energy to produce ATP.

Page 3: Inroduction to Cellular Respiration

Cellular Respiration

• The the break down of glucose to CO2 and H2O

• The energy released is trapped in the form of ATP for use in all energy consuming activities of the cell

• This process occurs in two phases

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Glycolysis • The first phase is called

glycolysis• Occurs in the cytoplasm• Is an anaerobic

process• Involves the breakdown

of glucose to pyruvic acid.

• The intermediates are oxidized.

• Two ATPs produced by substrate level phosphorylation

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Krebs Cycle

• Occurs in the mitochondrial matrix• Intermediate step between glycolysis and Krebs

cycle removes a carboxyl group from pyruvic acid to produce aceytl CoA.

• Acetyl CoA then enters the Krebs cycle to be oxidized to CO2 and H2O.

• The electrons transferred from the intermediates in the Krebs cycle go the the ETC to make most of the ATP in cellular rerspiration.

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Page 7: Inroduction to Cellular Respiration

Fermentation• Pyruvic acid will only be

converted to acetyl CoA if oxygen is present.

• I f there is no oxygen pyruvate does not enter the mitochondria.

• Fermemtation occurs and pyruvate is either reduced to lactic acid or ethanol.

• The function of fermentation is restore the oxidized form of NAD+.

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ATP• Energy yielded from

hydrolysis of ATP is used to transfer phosphates from one molecule to another through enzymes.

• The phosphorylated molecule does work for the cell.

• ATP is replenished through cellular respiration.

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ATP Made in Two Ways• Oxidative

Phosphorylation• Uses electron

transport chain to create a proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane.

• Substrate Level Phosphorylation

• Transfer of a phosphate group from an intermediate to ADP to make ATP

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Complexes function in cellular respiration

• NADH Dehydrogenase pumps protons into the inner membrane space to create a gradient.

• Succinate Dehydrogenase oxidizes succinate.

• Cytochrome c redcutase transfers electrons to cytochrome c oxidase.

• Cytochrome c oxidase transfers electrons to 1/2O2 to form H2O.

• ATP Synthase phosphorylates ADP to ATP as protons diffuse back across the inner mitochondrial membrane

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Chemiosomosis• The coupling of the

exorgonic flow of electrons from the oxidation of food to endergonic ATP production.

• Proton gradient is created across the inner mitochondrial membrane

• As protons diffuse back across the membrane ADP is phosphorylated to ATP

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Oxidative Phosphorylation a Closer Look• Highly

electronegative O2 pulls e- down the ETC towards a lower energy state.

• The e- are harvested from glycolysis and the Krebs cycle.

• This exorgonic slide of e- is coupled to ATP synthesis

• For each molecule of glucose oxidized to CO2 and H2O, 36-38 ATPs are made.

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REDOX REACTIONS• Oxidation-reduction

reactions invovle the partial or complete transfer of e- from one reactant to another.

• Oxidation is the complete or partial loss of e-.

• Reduction is the partial or complete gain of e-

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Redox Reactions

• Electron transfer requires both a donor and and an acceptor.

• Not all redox reactions involve the complete transfer of e-, but instead , may change the degree of sharing.

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Respiration and redox Reactions

• Valence e- of carbon and hydrogen lsoe potential energy as they shift toward electronegative oxygen.

• Released energy is used to make ATP• Organic molecules rich in carbon-

hydrogen bonds are excellent fuels.• A mole of glucose yields 686 Kcal when

burned• In cellular respiration, glucose is

graduallly oxidized in a series of enzyme controlled steps during glycolysis and the Krebs cycle.

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NAD+and FAD• Hydrogens stripped from glucose are not passed directly to

oxygen.• They are first passed to NAD+ or FAD.• NAD+ and FAD act as odidizing agents trapping energy rich e-

from food molecules.• These reactions are catalyzed by dehydrogenases.• XH2 + NAD+ --------------X + NADH + H+ • Dehydrogenases take 2 hydrogen atoms molecule being

oxidized.• Two e- and 1 proton are delivered to NAD+ to produce NADH.

The extra proton is released into the sourounding solution.

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NAD+ and the ETC• NADH then drops off

electrons to the ETC which regenerates NAD+.

• FAD picks up 2 hydrogen atoms to become FADH2.

• For every NADH that makes a trip to the ETC 3 ATP’s are made through chemiosomosis.

• For every FADH2 that makes a trip to the ETC 2 ATP’s are made through chemiosomosis