1 / 59

Ch 9 Cellular Respiration

Ch 9 Cellular Respiration. What is Cellular Respiration? The Big Picture. ATP. FERMENTATION. OXYGEN. Catabolic Pathways and Production of _____ _________________- catabolic process that is a partial degradation of sugars that occurs without the use of ____________.

Download Presentation

Ch 9 Cellular Respiration

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. Ch 9Cellular Respiration

  2. What is Cellular Respiration?The Big Picture

  3. ATP FERMENTATION OXYGEN • Catabolic Pathways and Production of _____ • _________________- catabolic process that is a partial degradation of sugars that occurs without the use of ____________. • _____________________- catabolic pathway that is the most efficient and prevalent. ______________ is consumed as a reaction with organic fuel. In eukaryotic cells, _________________ is the location. • Formula of Cell Respiration CELLULAR RESPIRATION OXYGEN MITOCHONDRION C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + ENERGY

  4. Redox Reactions: • Why do catabolic pathways that decompose glucose and other organic fuels yield energy? • The relocation of electrons released energy stored in organic molecules and is used to synthesize ATP. • Na + Cl  Na+ + Cl- • A redox reaction that relocates electrons (very electronegative) closer to oxygen _____________ chemical energy that can be put to work. • Example with Cellular Respiration Formula RELEASES Pg 162

  5. GLUCOSE • Energy Harvest via NAD+ and the Electron Transport chain • Cellular respiration breaks down ____________ and other fuels in a series of steps that strip electrons from glucose (creating sources of energy). • For each electron, a hydrogen atom (proton) is present. The hydrogen atoms are not transferred directly to oxygen but pass to an enzyme called ________ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) • The enzyme __________________ removes a pair of hydrogen atoms (2 e- 2 protons) from the substrate. The enzyme delivers the two electrons along with one proton to its coenzyme, NAD+. The proton is released as an H+ into the surrounding solution. • Formula NAD+ DEHYDROGENASE Pg 162

  6. REDUCED FALL ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN • NAD+ is ______________ to NADH. Each NADH molecule formed during respiration represents stored energy that can be tapped to make ATP when the electrons complete their “________” down an energy gradient from NADH to oxygen • Respiration uses an ____________________________ to break the fall of electrons to oxygen into several energy-releasing steps. • Summary: FoodNADH ETC Oxygen

  7. GLYCOLYSIS GLUCOSE INVESTMENT • ______________ (the first metabolic stage of respiration) • Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing ___________ to pyruvate. • Two Phases • Energy ______________ phase: cell spends ATP • Formula: • Energy ______________ Phase: ATP is produced by substrate-level ___________________ and NAD+ reduction to NADH by electrons released from oxidation of glucose. • Formula: • Net energy yield from glycolysis per glucose is ___ ATP and __ NADH • Glycolysis releases less than a quarter of the chemical energy stored in glucose while the rest remains in the two molecules of pyruvate. • Diagram: • Basic overviewawesome glycolysis • step by stepGlycolysis 2 ATP  2 ADP + 2 P PAYOFF PHOSPHORYLATION 2 NAD+ + 4 e- + 4 H+ 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 2 Pg 166-167 fig 9.9

  8. PRESENT PYRUVATE OXIDATION • The Citric Acid/ Krebs Cycle- occurs when oxygen is ______________ • ______________ enters the mitochondrion via active transport where the enzymes of the citric acid cycle complete the ______________. • Steps of Citric Acid Cycle (p.169 Figure 9.12) • 1. Pyruvate is converted to a compound called acetyl coenzyme A or _________________. • During this step, pyruvate’s carboxyl group which is already fully oxidized is removed and given off as ______ because it has little energy. • The remaining two-carbon fragment is oxidized forming acetate. An enzyme transfers the extracted electrons to NAD+, storing energy as _________. • Coenzyme A is attached to acetate by an unstable bond making the acetyl group very reactive. This results in ______________ and is ready for its acetyl group to be oxidized. ACETYL CoA CO2 NADH ACETYL CoA

  9. DECOMPOSE • 2. Acetyl CoA adds its two-carbon acetyl group to oxaloacetate producing citrate • The next seven steps ______________ the citrate back to oxaloacetate. • 3. Citrate is converted to its isomer isocitrate by the ______________ of one water molecule and the addition of another. • 4. Citrate loses a CO2 molecule and its result is ______________, reducing NAD+ to NADH • 5. Another CO2 is lost, and the result is oxidized, reducing NAD+ to NADH. The remaining molecule is attached to coenzyme A by an ______________ bond. REMOVAL OXIDIZED UNSTABLE

  10. PHOSPHATE SUBSTRATE HYDROGENS • 6. CoA is displaced by a ______________ group, which is transferred to GDP, forming GTP, and then to ADP, forming ATP (__________-level phosphorylation) • 7. Two ______________ are transferred to FAD, forming FADH2 and oxidizing succinate. • 8. Addition of a ______________ molecule rearranges bonds in the substrate. • 9. The substrate is oxidized, reducing NAD+ to NADH and ______________ oxaloacetate. • Krebs animation 1 • Krebs Cycle WATER REGENERATING

  11. INNER MEMBRANE • Electron Transport Chain • The ETC is a collection of molecules embedded in the ____________________ of the mitochondrion. The folding of the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. • Since the cristae contains many folds, it provides space for ______________ of copies of the chain in each mitochondrion. • Sequence of electron carriers (p. 171 Figure 9.13) • Electron carriers alternate between ______________ and oxidized states as they accept and donate electrons. • Each component of the chain becomes reduced when it accepts electrons from its “uphill” neighbor which is less ________________and returns to its oxidized form as it passes electrons to its “______________,” more electronegative neighbor. THOUSANDS REDUCED ELECTRONEGATIVE DOWNHILL

  12. FLAVOPROTEIN ELECTRONS • Steps of the ETC • The first molecule is a ______________ because it has a prosthetic group called flavin mononucleotide (FMN) • The flavoprotein returns to its oxidized form as it passes ______________ to an iron-sulfur protein (Fe*S). • The iron-sulfur protein then passes electrons to a compound called ubiquinone. Ubiquinone is ________within the membrane rather than residing in a complex. • Most of the remaining electron carriers between ubiquinone and oxygen are proteins called ______________. • Cytochromes have a prosthetic ______ group which has an iron atom that accepts and donates electrons. • Each of the cytochromes in the ETC has a ______________ electron-carrying heme group. • FADH2, another reduced product of the citric acid cycle is another source of electrons for the ETC. FADH2 adds its electrons to the ETC at complex II at a ______________ energy level than NADH does. MOBILE CYTOCHROMES HEME DIFFERENT LOWER

  13. DIRECTLY EASE • Function of the ETC • The ETC makes no ATP ______________. • The function is to _____ the fall of electrons from food to oxygen to break a large free energy drop into a series of smaller steps that release energy in ______________ amounts. • _________________- The Energy Coupling Mechanism • ATP synthase is an ______________ located in the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. • ATP synthase makes ATP from ADP and inorganic ______________ • ATP synthase works like an ion pump in ______________. • Uses energy of an existing ion ______________ to power ATP synthesis by phosphorylation. • The power source is the proton gradient and therefore is the difference in ______________ of H+ on opposite sides of the membrane. MANAGEABLE CHEMIOSMOSIS ENZYME PHOSPHATE REVERSE GRADIENT CONCENTRATION

  14. ACROSS • Chemiosmosis: The process where energy is stored in the form of an H+ gradient ______________ a membrane being used to drive cellular work. (Do not confuse with osmosis) • P 171 Figure 9.14 4 Parts to ATP synthase • How does inner mitochondrial membrane generate and keep the H+ gradient? • Electron transport chain purpose is to _______ the H+ gradient. • The ETC pumps electrons across the membrane (from the mitochondrial ________ to the intermembrane space). • H+ has a tendency to move _______ across the membrane so ions pass through a channel in ATP synthase to drive the phosphorylation of ADP. • The energy stored in an H+ gradient across a membrane couples the redox reactions of the ETC to ATP synthesis: an example of chemiosmosis. • This H+ gradient is referred to as ________-motive force: capacity to do work CREATE MATRIX BACK PROTON

  15. CHLOROPLASTS PROKARYOTES • Other examples of chemiosmosis • ______________ use to generate ATP during photosynthesis (light drives ETC) • ______________ generate H+ gradients across their plasma membrane, then tap the proton-motive force to make ATP and pump nutrients and waste across the membrane, and to rotate their flagella. • Electron Transport • ETC and ATP Synthesis • CR Overview (long) • ETC

  16. Total ATP Production by Cellular Respiration • Energy flow: glucose NADH ETCproton motive force ATP • Three main parts of cell respiration • Glycolysis (substrate-level phosphorylation): __ ATP, __ pyruvate, __ NADH • Citric Acid Cycle (_________ Cycle) substrate level phos.: __ ATP, __ NADH, __ FADH2 • Electron Transport chain (oxidative phosphorylation): __ or __ ATP • Totals: __ or __ ATP 2 2 2 KREBS 2 6 2 32 34 36 38

  17. REGENERATE • Fermentation • Fermentation consists of glycolysis and reactions that ______________ NAD+ by transferring electrons from NADH to pyruvate or derivative of pyruvate. • The NAD+ can be reused to oxidize sugar by glycolysis resulting in two (net) ATP. • Two types of Fermentation • ______________ Fermentation Steps: • Pyruvate is converted to ethanol (ethyl alcohol) in two steps. The first step releases CO2 from the pyruvate which is converted to the two-carbon compound acetaldehyde. • In the second step, acetaldehyde is reduced by NADH to ethanol. This regenerates the supply of NAD+ needed to continue glycolysis. • Examples: : ALCOHOLIC bacteria: yeast, humans use it to brew beer, make wine, and bread.

  18. LACTIC ACID • ______________ acid fermentation Steps: • Pyruvate is reduced directly to NADH to form lactate as an end product with no release of CO2. (Lactate is the ionized form of lactic acid) • Examples of Lactic acid fermentation: • Microbial fermentation produce acetone and methanol • ____________________________ make ATP by lactic acid fermentation when oxygen is scarce. • Strenuous exercise when sugar catabolism for ATP production outpaces the muscles supply of oxygen from the blood. • This build up of lactate causes muscle fatigue and pain. • fermentation 1 • Evolutionary Significance of Glycolysis • Both ______________ and ______________ use ______________ to generate _____. HUMAN MUSCLE CELLS PROKARYOTES EUKARYOTES GLYCOLYSIS ATP

  19. ENERGY PHOTOSYNTHESIS CHLOROPLASTS SUGAR Chapter 10- Photosynthesis • Sunlight: the main source of ____________ on Earth • ________________: process by which light energy from the sun is captured by ________________and is converted to chemical energy stored in _________ and other organic molecules. • ________________are “producers”: produce their food from CO2 and other inorganic raw materials obtained from the environment. • The main source of organic compounds for all ________________ organisms. • Almost all plants are autotrophs, specifically ___________________since they use light as a source of energy to synthesize organic compounds. • Examples: p.182 Figure 10.2 • ________________are “consumers”: obtain their organic material by consuming compounds produced by other organisms. • Almost all heterotrophs are dependent on __________________ for food and oxygen AUTOTROPHS NONAUTOTROPHIC PHOTOAUTOTROPHS HETEROTROPHS PHOTOAUTOTROPHS

  20. 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + LIGHT  C6H12O6 + 6 O2 • Introduction to Photosynthesis • Formula (LEARN): • Plant structure: p. 183 Figure 10.3

  21. CHLOROPHYLL PIGMENT ABSORBED MESOPHYLL • ________________gives a plant or leaf its green color as it is a green ________________located within chloroplasts. It is the light energy ________________by chlorophyll that drives the synthesis of organic molecules • Chloroplasts are found in the cells of the ________________, the tissue in the interior of a leaf • Carbon dioxide enters the leaf and oxygen exits by the ________________which are tiny pores. • An envelope of two membranes encloses the ________________, the dense fluid within the chloroplast. • The ___________ are a system of interconnected membranous sacs that segregate the stroma from the thylakoid space. • Thylakoids can be stacked in columns called _____________. • Chlorophyll is located in the thylakoid ________________. STOMATA STROMA THYLAKOIDS GRANA MEMBRANE

  22. H2O CO2 H O • The oxygen released from photosynthesis is due to the splitting of ____ and not _____. • The _______ is incorporated into sugar and ____ is released as waste. • Photosynthesis is a _________ process • Water is split, and electrons are transferred along with H+ ions from the __________ to CO2, reducing it to a sugar. • Since electrons __________ in potential energy as they move from water to sugar, this requires energy which is provided by ___________. REDOX WATER INCREASE LIGHT

  23. 2 DEPENDENT CHEMICAL ATP NADPH • Photosynthesis is broken up into ____ phases: • The light-________________reactions (photo): • Solar energy is converted to __________ energy (____ and ______) • Light absorbed by chlorophyll drives a transfer of electrons and Hydrogen from water to an acceptor called ____________. • Water is ______ and releases oxygen. • Solar power is used to reduce NADP+ to NADPH by adding a pair of ________________along with a hydrogen nucleus or H+ • ATP is generated by chemiosmosis by ________________________. • Two products: NADPH and ATP NADP+ SPLIT ELECTRONS PHOTOPHOSPHORYLATION

  24. CO2 FIXATION • Calvin cycle (synthesis): Light independent reactions (sort of) • _______ from the air is incorporated into organic molecules already present in chloroplast. This process is called carbon ________________. • Next, the fixed carbon is reduced to ________________ by the addition of electrons. Reducing power is provided by ________________. • To convert CO2 to carbohydrate, the Calvin cycle also requires ________________ energy in the form of ATP. • Dark reactions because it does not require light directly but needs the products of the light reactions. • Products: Sugar (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate then ________________) CARBOHYDRATE NADPH CHEMICAL GLUCOSE

  25. WAVES DISTANCE • Sunlight and the light Spectrum • Light is a form of energy known as electromagnetic energy and travels in rhythmic _________. • Wavelength: the ________________ between crests of waves • Electromagnetic spectrum: the entire spectrum of ________________ ranging in wavelength from _______ a nanometer (gamma rays) to _______ a kilometer (radio waves). RADIATION < >

  26. VISIBLE PHOTONS INVERSELY • ____________ Light: From 380 nm to 750 nm. • ___________: discrete particles that act like objects with a fixed quantity of energy. • Energy of photons is ________________ related to the wavelength of the light; shorter wavelength, the ________________ the energy. • The sun radiates the full spectrum but the atmosphere only ________________ visible light to pass through. • Visible light drives ________________. GREATER ALLOWS PHOTOSYNTHESIS

  27. PIGMENT WAVELENGTHS • ______________- substance that absorbs visible light. • Different pigments absorb (and reflect) light of different ________________and cause the absorbed wavelengths to disappear. • The color we see is the color that is the most ______________ by the pigment. • Example: seeing green or black, or white. • ____________________- instrument that can measure the ability of a pigment to absorb various wavelengths of light. • It directs beams of light of different wavelengths through a solution of pigment to measure the ________________ of light transmitted at each wavelength. • ________________Spectrum- graph plotting a pigment’s absorption v. wavelength. • Pg 187 Figure 10.9 REFLECTED SPECTROPHOTOMETER FRACTION ABSORPTION

  28. EFFECTIVENESS ACTION • Significance: By analyzing absorption spectra of chloroplast pigments, scientists can compare the relative ________________ of different wavelengths for driving photosynthesis. (How do we know which wavelength is most effective?) • ________________ spectrum- graph plotting the rate of photosynthesis (____ release or ____ consumption) v. wavelength • ________________- the main photosynthetic pigment • Chlorophyll a v. Chlorophyll b-Chlorophyll b is an accessory pigment that has a slight structural difference which allows them to absorb slightly different colors (and have different colors). • ________________- yellow and orange hydrocarbons that absorb violet and blue-green light. • These can broaden the spectrum of photosynthesis and provide __________________: ability to absorb and rid excessive light energy that would damage chlorophyll or interact with oxygen. O2 CO2 CHLOROPHYLL CAROTENOIDS PHOTOPROTECTION

  29. ABSORBS EXCITED • Chlorophyll and Light • When a molecule ________________a photon of light, one of the molecule’s electrons is elevated to an orbital where it has more potential energy (from ground state to ___________ state). • A compound absorbs only photons that have specific wavelengths which is why each pigment has its ________________ absorption spectrum. • The electron ________________ stay in an excited state so will drop to its ground state which releases excess energy as _____________. • Chlorophyll in isolation will also release light (_____________) as well as heat. • P. 189 Fig. 10.11 • Example: Car roof on a hot day (which is coolest?) UNIQUE CANNOT HEAT FLUORESCENCE

  30. PHOTOSYSTEM PIGMENT PROTEINS • ________________: Reaction Center associated with Light-Harvesting Complexes • Photosystems are composed of reaction centers surrounded by a number of light-harvesting complexes that consist of ____________ molecules bound to particular ___________. • The number and variety of pigment molecules allow a photosystem to harvest light over a ________________ surface of the spectrum. • Picture: LARGER

  31. SPECIAL • Reaction Center- protein complex that includes two ________________chlorophyll a molecules and a molecule called the primary electron acceptor. • These chlorophyll a molecules, because of their environment enable them to use the energy from light to boost one of their electrons to a ________________ energy level. • First step of the light reactions: ___________-powered transfer an electron from the special chlorophyll a molecule to the primary electron acceptor (_________ reaction). • Photosystems convert light energy to chemical energy to be used to ________________ sugar. • The ________________membrane contains two types of photosystems that cooperate in the light reactions. • Photosystem II (PSII) [first] (Chlorophyll a- ______) Photosystem I (PSI) (Chlorophyll a- ______) HIGHER SOLAR REDOX SYNTHESIZE THYLAKOID p680 p700

  32. PIGMENT • Reactions in the Photosystem- Noncyclic electron flow pg190 • Photon of light hits a ________________ in a light harvesting complex and is moved to other pigment molecules until it reaches a P680 molecule in PS II. It excites one of the two P680 molecules. • The electron is then ________________by the primary electron acceptor. • An enzyme splits a water molecule into two electrons, two H+ ions and ½ O2. Electrons are supplied one by one to the ________ replacing an electron ______ to the primary electron acceptor. Oxygen combines with another oxygen to form O2. • Each excited electron passes from the primary electron acceptor of PS II to PS I by an ________________________________. CAPTURED p680 LOST ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN

  33. FALL ATP • TRANSFERRED • The exergonic “______” of electrons to a lower energy level provides energy for _____ synthesis. • At the same time, light energy was ________________by a light harvesting complex to the PS I reaction center, exciting an electron of a P700 molecule. The excited electron is then captured by PS I primary electron acceptor, creating an electron “hole” in P700. Hole is filled by an electron that reaches the bottom of the electron transport chain from _________. • Excited electrons are passed from PS I’s ________________________________ down a electron transport chain through the protein ________________ (Fd). • The enzyme NADP+ reductase transfers electrons from Fd to NADP+. Two electrons are required for its ________________ to NADPH. • Summary: Light reactions use solar power to generate ATP (chemical energy) and NADPH (reducing power) which will fuel the ________________. • non cyclic- good! PS II PRIMARY ELECTRON ACCEPTOR FERRODOXIN REDUCTION CALVIN CYCLE

  34. CYCLIC I II CYCLE • Reactions in the Photosystem- _____________ electron flow • Under certain conditions, photoexcited electrons can take a cyclic electron flow which uses photosystem ___ but not photosystem ___. • Electrons ______ back from ferredoxin (Fd) to the cytochromes complex and back from there on to a P700 in the PS I reaction center. • ATP is ______________. • There is no production of ________________ and no release of ________________. • Why use cyclic electron flow? • Noncyclic electron flow generates an ________________ amount of ATP and NADPH but the Calvin cycle uses _________ ATP than NADPH so cyclic electron flow can provide more ATP. • A rise in NADPH can result in shift to cyclic electron flow which allows ATP to catch up to NADPH (_____________________). GENERATED NADPH OXYGEN EQUAL MORE SUPPLY & DEMAND Cyclic & noncyclic

More Related