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Respiration. Respiration. Respiration the process by which food molecules are broken down Food molecules are 6-carbons sugars You take in food which is digested and broken down into 6-carbon sugars Plants can’t “eat” so they make 6-carbon sugars with photosynthesis
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Respiration • Respiration the process by which food molecules are broken down • Food molecules are 6-carbons sugars • You take in food which is digested and broken down into 6-carbon sugars • Plants can’t “eat” so they make 6-carbon sugars with photosynthesis • Mitochondria then transform the “food energy” into chemical energy
Respiration • A 6-carbon sugar contains an enormous amount of energy (for a cell) • Mitochondria “make change” energetically • Take the energy in a sugar and convert it into more conveniently-sized packages
Respiration C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy Carbohydrate Oxygen Carbon dioxide Water
Respiration • Aerobic respiration: processes that require oxygen in order to take place • Anaerobic respiration: processes that do not require oxygen
Aerobic Respiration • Step 1: Glycolysis • Step 2:Breakdown of pyruvic acid • Step 3: Citric acid cycle • Step 4: Electron transport chain
Respiration CYTOPLASM: Glycolysis Outer membrane MATRIX: Breakdown of pyruvic acid, Citric acid cycle INNER MEMBRANE: Electron transport chain
Step 1: Glycolysis • Occurs in cytoplasm • Does not require oxygen • Involves splitting a glucose (6-carbon sugar) into 2 3-carbon molecules: pyruvic acid
Step 1: Glycolysis • Also produces H+ ions and energizes electrons which are captured by NAD+, forming NADH + H+
Step 1: Glycolysis Glucose
Step 1: Glycolysis 2 ATP 2 ADP Glucose
Step 1: Glycolysis 2 ATP 2 ADP P Glucose P 2 PGAL
Step 1: Glycolysis 2 ATP 2 ADP 4ADP + 4 Pi 4ATP P Glucose 2NADH + 2H+ 2 NAD+ P 2 PGAL
Step 1: Glycolysis 2 ATP 2 ADP 4ADP + 4 Pi 4ATP P Glucose 2 Pyruvic acid 2NADH + 2H+ 2 NAD+ P 2 PGAL
Step 1: Glycolysis • Net yeild • 2 ATP (uses 2, produces 4) • 2 NADH • 2 pyruvic acid
Aerobic Respiration • Step 1: Glycolysis • Step 2:Breakdown of pyruvic acid • Step 3: Citric acid cycle • Step 4: Electron transport chain
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid • Occurs when pyruvic acid (from glycolysis) enters the mitochondrial matrix • Requires oxygen • If there is no oxygen present pyruvic acid enters fermentation
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid • Involves breaking CO2 off pyruvic acid • Remaining portion of pyruvic acid combines with coenzyme A to form acetyl-CoA
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid • Also produces H+ and energizes electrons which are captured by NAD+, to form NADH + H+
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid Mitochondrial membrane To citric acid cycle “Exhaled”
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid • Net yeild • 2 NADH • Acetyl-CoA
Aerobic Respiration • Step 1: Glycolysis • Step 2:Breakdown of pyruvic acid • Step 3: Citric acid cycle • Step 4: Electron transport chain
Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle • Occurs in mitochondrial matrix • Acetyl-CoA is transformed into citric acid through a series of reactions
Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle • More ATP and CO2 are produced • More H+ are produced and electrons are energized • NAD+ and FAD capture them to form NADH + H+ and FADH
Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle 4C 6C – Citric acid CITRIC ACID CYCLE 5C
Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle • Net yield • 2 ATP • 6 NADH • 2 FADH2
Aerobic Respiration • Step 1: Glycolysis • Step 2:Breakdown of pyruvic acid • Step 3: Citric acid cycle • Step 4: Electron transport chain
Step 4: Electron Transport Chain • Happens on inner membrane of mitochondria • Occurs only if oxygen is present • Oxygen is final electron acceptor • If no oxygen is present reaction stops
Step 4: Electron Transport Chain • Electrons come from NADH and FADH molecules which gathered them during glycolysis and CTA • Energy from electrons is used to add Pi to ADP, forming ATP • At the end of the chain, oxygen accepts the electrons and combines with 2 H+ ions to form water
Step 4: Electron Transport Chain Outer mitochondrial membrane Electron transport chain Cytochromes Inter- membrane space Cytochromes Inner mitochondrial membrane
Step 4: Electron Transport Chain • Net yeild • 32 ATP
Aerobic Respiration • Step 1: Glycolysis • Step 2:Breakdown of pyruvic acid • Step 3: Citric acid cycle • Step 4: Electron transport chain
Aerobic Respiration ATP Glycolysis 2 ATP Citric acid cycle 2 ATP Electron transport chain **32 **Makes ATP from electrons carried to it from the first 3 steps
Aerobic Respiration ATP Makes 36
Anaerobic Respiration • Pyruvic acid molecules are still formed through glycolysis • Broken down differently: • No ATP is produced after glycolysis • NAD+ is regenerated so glycolysis can continue
Anaerobic Respiration • 2 types: • Lactic acid fermentation • Alcoholic fermentation
Lactic Acid Fermentation • Lactic acid is end product • Occurs when muscles require energy at a faster rate than it can be supplied through aerobic respiration • Causes burning sensation in muscles
Lactic Acid Fermentation Glycolysis Glycolysis
Lactic Acid Fermentation • Net yield • 2 ATP
Alcoholic Fermentation • Ethyl alcohol and CO2 are end products • Occurs in organisms that live in environments lacking oxygen • Source of bubbles in beer and champagne and causes baking bread to rise
Alcoholic Fermentation Glycolysis Glycolysis
Alcoholic Fermentation Glycolysis 2 CO2 2 Ethanol
How many ATP does aerobic respiration produce? How many ATP does fermentation produce? Comparison of Aerobic Respriation and Fermentation 36 ATP 2 ATP
Step 1: Glycolysis 2 ATP 2 ADP 4ADP + 4 Pi P Glucose 2 Pyruvic acid 2 NAD+ P 2 PGAL
Step 2: Breakdown of Pyruvic Acid To citric acid cycle “Exhaled”
Step 3: Citric Acid Cycle 4C 6C – Citric acid CITRIC ACID CYCLE 4C 5C
Step 4: Electron Transport Chain Outer mitochondrial membrane Electron transport chain Cytochromes Inter- membrane space Cytochromes Inner mitochondrial membrane
Lactic Acid Fermentation Glycolysis