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Learn how cells convert glucose to energy through aerobic respiration. Understand the process of glycolysis, formation of acetyl CoA, citric acid cycle, and electron transport chain. Discover the key concepts and energy capture mechanisms in each stage.
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Learning Objective 1 • In aerobic respiration, which reactant is oxidized and which is reduced?
Aerobic Respiration • A catabolic process • fuel (glucose) broken down to carbon dioxide and water • Redox reactions • transfer electrons from glucose (oxidized) • to oxygen (reduced) • Energy released • produces 36 to 38 ATP per glucose
KEY CONCEPTS • Aerobic respiration is an exergonic redox process in which glucose becomes oxidized, oxygen becomes reduced, and energy is captured to make ATP
Learning Objective 2 • What are the four stages of aerobic respiration?
4 Stages of Aerobic Respiration • Glycolysis • Formation of acetyl CoA • Citric acid cycle • Electron transport chain and chemiosmosis
Glycolysis • 1 molecule of glucose degraded • to 2 molecules pyruvate • 2 ATP molecules (net) produced • by substrate-level phosphorylation • 4 hydrogen atoms removed • to produce 2 NADH
Electron transport and chemiosmosis Glycolysis Formation of acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Glucose Pyruvate 32 ATP 2 ATP 2 ATP Fig. 8-3, p. 175
GLYCOLYSIS Energy investment phase and splitting of glucose Two ATPs invested per glucose Glucose 2 ATP 3 steps 2 ADP Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate P P Glyceraldehyde phosphate (G3P) Glyceraldehyde phosphate (G3P) P P Fig. 8-3, p. 175
Energy capture phase Four ATPs and two NADH produced per glucose P P (G3P) (G3P) NAD+ NAD+ NADH NADH 5 steps 2 ADP 2 ADP 2 ATP 2 ATP Pyruvate Pyruvate Net yield per glucose: Two ATPs and two NADH Fig. 8-3, p. 175
Formation of Acetyl CoA • 1 pyruvate molecule • loses 1 molecule of carbon dioxide • Acetyl group + coenzyme A • produce acetyl CoA • 1 NADH produced per pyruvate
Glycolysis Formation of acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Electron transport and chemiosmosis Glucose Pyruvate 32 ATP 2 ATP 2 ATP Fig. 8-5, p. 178
Carbon dioxide CO2 Pyruvate NAD+ Coenzyme A NADH Acetyl coenzyme A Fig. 8-5, p. 178
Citric Acid Cycle • 1 acetyl CoA enters cycle • combines with 4-C oxaloacetate • forms 6-C citrate • 2 C enter as acetyl CoA • 2 leave as CO2 • 1 acetyl CoA • transfers H atoms to 3 NAD+, 1 FAD • 1 ATP produced
Formation of acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Electron transport and chemiosmosis Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate 2 ATP 2 ATP 32 ATP Fig. 8-6, p. 179
Coenzyme A Acetyl coenzyme A Citrate Oxaloacetate NADH NAD+ NAD+ C I T R I C A C I D C Y C L E H2O NADH CO2 FADH2 5-carbon compound FAD NADH GTP GDP CO2 4-carbon compound ADP ATP Fig. 8-6, p. 179
Electron Transport Chain • H atoms (or electrons) transfer • from one electron acceptor to another • in mitochondrial inner membrane • Electrons reduce molecular oxygen • forming water
Cytosol Outer mitochondrial membrane Intermembrane space Complex IV: Cytochrome c oxidase Complex I: NADH–ubiquinone oxidoreductase Complex III: Ubiquinone– cytochrome c oxidoreductase Complex II: Succinate– ubiquinone reductase Inner mitochondrial membrane Matrix of mitochondrion FADH2 FAD 2 H+ H2O 1/2 O2 NAD+ NADH Fig. 8-8, p. 181
Oxidative Phosphorylation • Redox reactions in ETC are coupled to ATP synthesis through chemiosmosis
KEY CONCEPTS • Aerobic respiration consists of four stages: glycolysis, formation of acetyl coenzyme A, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis
Learning Objective 3 • Where in a eukaryotic cell does each stage of aerobic respiration take place?
Aerobic Respiration • Glycolysis occurs in the cytosol • All other stages in the mitochondria
1 2 3 4 Glycolysis Formation of acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Electron transport and chemiosmosis Glucose Mitochondrion Electron transport and chemiosmosis Acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Pyruvate 2 ATP 2 ATP 32 ATP Fig. 8-2, p. 173
Learning Objective 4 • Add up the energy captured (as ATP, NADH, and FADH2) in each stage of aerobic respiration
Energy Capture • Glycolysis • 1 glucose: 2 NADH, 2 ATP (net) • Conversion of 2 pyruvates to acetyl CoA • 2 NADH • Citric acid cycle • 2 acetyl CoA: 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, 2 ATP • Total: 4 ATP, 10 NADH, 2 FADH2
Energy Transfer • Electron transport chain (ETC) • 10 NADH and 2 FADH2 produce 32 to 34 ATP by chemiosmosis • 1 glucose molecule yields 36 to 38 ATP
Substrate-level phosphorylation Oxidative phosphorylation Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Total ATP from oxidative phosphorylation Total ATP from substrate-level phosphorylation Fig. 8-11, p. 185
Learning Objective 5 • Definechemiosmosis • How is a gradient of protons established across the inner mitochondrial membrane?
Chemiosmosis • Energy of electrons in ETC • pumps H+ across inner mitochondrial membrane • into intermembrane space • Protons (H+) accumulate in intermembrane space • lowering pH
Outer mitochondrial membrane Cytosol Inner mitochondrial membrane Intermembrane space — low pH Matrix — higher pH Fig. 8-9, p. 183
Learning Objective 6 • How does the proton gradient drive ATP synthesis in chemiosmosis?
ATP Synthase • Enzyme ATP synthase • forms channels through inner mitochondrial membrane • Diffusion of protons through channels provides energy to synthesize ATP
Cytosol Outer mitochondrial membrane Intermembrane space Complex V: ATP synthase Complex III Complex IV Complex I Inner mitochondrial membrane Complex II Matrix of mitochondrion FADH2 NAD+ 1 2 NADH Pi ADP ATP Fig. 8-10a, p. 184
Projections of ATP synthase 250 nm (b) This TEM shows hundreds of projections of ATP synthase complexes along the surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Fig. 8-10b, p. 184
Learning Objective 7 • How do the products of protein and lipid catabolism enter the same metabolic pathway that oxidizes glucose?
Amino Acids • Undergo deamination • Carbon skeletons converted • to intermediates of aerobic respiration
Lipids • Glycerol and fatty acids • both oxidized as fuel • Fatty acids • converted to acetyl CoA by β-oxidation
PROTEINS CARBOHYDRATES FATS Amino acids Fatty acids Glycerol Glycolysis Glucose G3P Pyruvate CO2 Acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Electron transport and chemiosmosis End products: H2O CO2 NH3 Fig. 8-12, p. 186
PROTEINS CARBOHYDRATES FATS Amino acids Glycerol Fatty acids Glycolysis Glucose G3P Pyruvate CO2 Acetyl coenzyme A Citric acid cycle Electron transport and chemiosmosis NH3 H2O CO2 Stepped Art End products: Fig. 8-12, p. 186
KEY CONCEPTS • Nutrients other than glucose, including many carbohydrates, lipids, and amino acids, can be oxidized by aerobic respiration
Learning Objective 8 • Compare the mechanism of ATP formation, final electron acceptor, and end products of anaerobic respiration and fermentation
Anaerobic Respiration • Electrons transferred • from fuel molecules to ETC • coupled to ATP synthesis (chemiosmosis) • Final electron acceptor • inorganic substance • nitrate or sulfate (not molecular oxygen)