1 / 26

Chapter 9

Cellular Respiration – Harvesting Chemical Energy. Chapter 9. Overview. Cellular Respiration is the process by which mitochondria break down glucose to make ATP C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2  6CO 2 + 6H 2 O + Energy (ATP + heat) Catabolic Process ( exergonic ). Energy. Energy Released.

locke
Download Presentation

Chapter 9

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cellular Respiration – Harvesting Chemical Energy Chapter 9

  2. Overview • Cellular Respiration is the process by which mitochondria break down glucose to make ATP • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (ATP + heat) • Catabolic Process (exergonic)

  3. Energy • Energy Released • Cells are open systems • Require outside energy to perform cellular work

  4. ATP Review • ATP: nucleotide, high energy P bonds, drives endergonicrxns • ATP + H2O  ADP + Pi + Energy • Terminal phosphate gets enzymatically transferred to another compound • “Phosphorylates” the compound making it reactive • Phosphorylated compound can remove Pi to provide energy • Cell Respiration provides the energy required to regenerate ATP from ADP

  5. Phosphorylation • Substrate-Level • ATP produced • ADP + Pi = ATP • Direct transfer of Pifrom intermediate to ADP • Oxidative • ATP Produced • ADP + Pi= ATP • Exergonic transfer of electrons • Produces 90% of ATP

  6. becomes oxidized(loses electron) Xe- + Y X + Ye- becomes reduced(gains electron) Transfer of Electrons: REDOX rxns • Oxidation-Reduction (Redox) Reactions- chemical rxns that involve transfer of electrons • Oxidation: loss of electrons (more +) • Reduction: gain of electrons (more -) • As electrons move, they “carry energy” with them • Move as a part of a H atom

  7. becomes oxidized C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy becomes reduced Putting into Cell Respiration… • Carbs and Fats are great energy stores because they have a lot of C-H bonds 

  8. NAD+ • H’s stripped from glucose are not transferred directly to O2 – passed to a special electron acceptor – NAD+ • Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide • Functions as a coenzyme • Small nonprotein organic molecule that is required for certain enzymes to function • Assists enzymes in electron transfer during metabolism • Dehydrogenases– remove 2H and 2e- from substrate • Deliver 2e- and 1 H to NAD+  Becomes NADH • Other H is released to solution

  9. 2 e– + 2 H+ 2e–+ H+ H+ NADH NAD+ Dehydrogenase + 2[H] (from food) H+ + Nicotinamide (reduced form) Nicotinamide (oxidized form) LE 9-4

  10. NADH • Passes electrons down an electron transport chain • Series of steps instead of 1 big reaction • Oxygen pulls electrons down chain (due to electronegativity) • Yields energy to make ATP Oxidative Phosphorylation

  11. Cell Respiration – a Preview

  12. Glycolysis – “glyco” = sugar, “lysis” = split • Catabolic, 6-C glucose is split into two 3-C sugars which are then oxidized and rearranged into 2 Pyruvate molecules • Occurs with or without oxygen • Energy Investment Phase: • Cell uses ATP to phosphorylate intermediates • Energy Yielding Phase: • 2 ATPs per glucose are produced

  13. 2 ATPs USED MAKES AN ISOMER (FRUCTOSE)

  14. 4 ATP made NADH Substrate Level Phosphorylation

  15. Net 2 ATP

  16. We’re not done….  • IF Oxygen is present, pyruvate molecules enter the Mitochondria • Buttttttttt before it can do that, pyruvate has to be changed into a coenzyme called Acetyl CoA

  17. Krebs Cycle • Occurs in the mitochondrial matrix • Series of 8 enzyme-controlled steps • New electron “carrier” – FAD • Another coenzyme • Accepts 2e- and 2H to become FADH2 • New energy molecule – GTP (guanosinetriphosphate)

  18. Takes 2 turns to complete the oxidation of glucose

  19. Alright.. Where are we? • We have moved glucose from the cytosol into the mitochondria.. • We have made 2 ATP from glycolysis • And 2 ATP from the Krebs Cycle • These ATP have all been made by substrate level phosphorylation… not enough to keep you alive! • WE NEED OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION! • We have produced a lot of electron carriers.. NADH + FADH…. Let’s put them to work!!

  20. Electron Transport Chain • Occurs in the inner membrane of the mitochondria along cristae*only in the presence of O2* • A series of proteins are embedded in membrane • H pumps create concentration gradient • Yields ~34 ATP… that’s more like it..

  21. Animation ETC IN: 10 NADH 2 FADH2 ETC OUT: 32-34 ATP 6 H2O On average, 3 ATP are made per carrier

  22. OK, back to the beginning…. • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy 6 ETC AIR FOOD 2 ATP Glycolysis 2 ATP Krebs 32-34 ATP ETC 2 Krebs Prep 4 Krebs

  23. So… what happens if.. • You don’t have oxygen? • No ultimate electron acceptor • NADH and FADH2 cannot unload H’s • ATP production ceases • Cells run out of energy • You die.  • And just for fun: Cell Respiration Song

More Related