Title: Cellular Respiration
1Cellular Respiration
- How do living things release energy???
- Quick Review
- Most energy used thru conversion of ATP molecules
into ADP molecules - Thus cells must continually convert ADP molecules
back into ATP molecules - This process is known as.
- CELLULAR RESPIRATION
2Lesson Objectives
- Name the three stages of cellular respiration.
- Give an overview of glycolysis.
- Explain why glycolysis probably evolved before
the other stages of aerobic respiration. - Describe the structure of the mitochondrion and
its role in aerobic respiration. - List the steps of the Krebs cycle, and identify
its products. - Explain how electron transport results in many
molecules of ATP. - Describe how chemiosmotic gradients in
mitochondria store energy to produce ATP. - State the possible number of ATP molecules that
can result from aerobic respiration. - Define fermentation.
- Describe lactic acid fermentation and alcoholic
fermentation. - Compare the advantages of aerobic and anaerobic
respiration. - Compare cellular respiration to photosynthesis
3Breathing versus Cellular Respiration
- Breathing physical process that allows animals
and humans to come into contact with gases in the
air - Cellular respiration chemical process that
releases energy from organic compounds (food),
gradually converting it into energy that is
stored in ATP molecules
4Correlation between a campfire and Cellular
Respiration
- Analyzing a campfire can clarify your
understanding of cellular respiration. - A campfire breaks chemical bonds in wood,
releasing stored energy as light and heat - Cellular respiration breaks chemical bonds in
glucose, releasing stored energy and transferring
some to 38 ATP some energy is lost - as heat.
5Chemical Pathways
- Food is the raw material that provides the
- energy for your body to function
- Cells use food to synthesize new molecules
- to carry out their life processes
6- Cells do not BURN glucose, they slowly release
energy from it and other food compounds through
several pathways (processes) - 1st pathway ? glycolysis releases only a small
amount of energy (2 net ATP) - If oxygen present, it will lead to two other
pathways that release a lot of energy Krebs
cycle Electron Transport Chain - If oxygen absent glycolysis is followed by a
different pathway Alcoholic Fermentation or
Lactic Acid Fermentation
7Overview of Cellular Respiration
- In presence of oxygen (aerobic) glycolysis is
followed by ______________ - ______________
Krebs Cycle
Electron Transport Chain
8- All three combined make up Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis Krebs Cycle Electron Transport
Chain - Process that releases energy by breaking down
food molecules in the presence of oxygen
Equation for cellular respiration 6O2
C6H12O6 -------? 6CO2 6H2O energy
(ATP) oxygen glucose -----? carbon
dioxide water energy
1
2
3
Each of these 3 stages captures some of the
chemical energy available in food molecules and
uses it to produce ATP
9- What is the process of
- glycolysis????
10Glycolysis
- Process takes place in the cytosol of the
cytoplasm outside of mitochondria coverts
glucose with the help of 2 ATP molecules and
eventually releases 4 ATP molecules for a net
gain of 2 ATP molecules.
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12ATP NADH production in Glycolysis
2 ATP used up become 2 ADP
2 NADH 2 H produced
4 ATP produced Net gain 2 ATP
Step 1 breaks 1 molecule of glucose in half,
producing 2 molecules of pyruvic acid (a
3-carbon compound) Step 2 2 NAD electron
carrier accepts 4 high-energy electrons
transfers them to 2 NADH molecules and 2 H thus
passing the energy stored in the glucose Step
3 4 ADP added producing 4 ATP Step 4 2
remaining pyruvic acids enter Krebs Cycle in
presence of oxygen IF no oxygen another pathway
is followed
NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide)
13- Glycolysis is a fast process
- Cells produce thousands of ATP molecules in a few
milliseconds - Glycolysis alone DOES NOT require oxygen
- It can supply chemical energy to cells when
oxygen is NOT available - However if a cell generates large amounts of ATP
from glycolysis it can run into problems - a. the cells available NAD molecules
become filled - up with electrons
- b. glycolysis shuts down, cannot proceed
without - available NAD molecules
- c. ATP production stops
14Anaerobic to Aerobic Respiration
- Glycolysis evolved before the other stages of
cellular respiration other stages need oxygen - No oxygen in Earths atmosphere when life first
evolved about 3.5 to 4 b.y.a. - Without oxygen ? anaerobic respiration
- 2 or 3 billion years ago, oxygen was gradually
added to the atmosphere by early photosynthetic
bacteria period the oxygen catastrophe
?aerobic organisms
15Lets look at the pathway that follows gycolysis
with the presence of oxygen.. aerobic
respiration
16BUT FIRSTMitochondrion Structure
- Mitochondrion has two separate membranes inner
and outer membrane. - Three compartments intermembrane space, cristae
space, and matrix
17AEROBIC RESPIRATIONThe Krebs Cycle and Electron
Transport
- End of glycolysis? 90 of chemical energy from
glucose still unused, locked in high-energy
electrons of pyruvic acid - Extracted by worlds most powerful electron
receptor? - Krebs and Electron Transport require oxygen thus
they are aerobic processes
OXYGEN
18The Krebs Cycle
- 1. 2nd stage of cellular respiration
- 2. Named after Hans Krebs, British
- biochemist in 1937
- 3. Here pyruvic acid is broken down
- into carbon dioxide in a series
of - energy-extracting reactions
- 4. Citric acid is the 1st compound
- formed in this series of
reactions, - so Krebs is sometimes called the
- Citric or Citric Acid Cycle.
19Pyruvic acid enters from glycolysis One carbon
removed CO2 formed NAD again changed to
NADH CoA joins remaining 2 carbons
Acetyl-CoA Acetyl-CoA added to 4 carbon
Compound Citric acid (6-C) Citric acid broken
down to 5-carbon then 4 carbon more CO2
released Along the way more NADH and FADH2
formed One molecule of ATP also made 2 turns
2 pyruvic acid (from glycolysis) yield 10 NADH
(2 from glycolysis) 2 FADH2 4 ATP (2 from
glycolysis) Cycle starts anew
20Uses for the products of the Krebs Cycle
- Carbon dioxide is exhaled (waste product)
- ATP can be used for cellular activities
- High-energy electrons (stored in NADH FADH2)
can be used to make huge amounts of ATP in the
presence of oxygen
21- Electrons from Krebs cycle are passed to electron
transport chain by NADH FADH2 - At end of the chain an enzyme combines electrons
from the electron chain with H ions and oxygen
to form water - Each time 2 high-energy electrons transport down
the electron chain, their energy is used to
transport H ions across the membrane - H ions build up in intermembrane space it is now
positively charged, other side of membrane
negatively charged (DISPLAY) - Electrochemical gradient (chemiosmotic gradient)
created for ATP synthase to work (OFF) - ATP synthase converts ADP into ATP (DISPLAY)
22The Total ATP production of Aerobic CR
- How much chemical energy comes from one molecule
of glucose?? - Absence of oxygen
- Only 2 ATP molecules from glycolysis
- Presence of oxygen
- 2 net ATP molecules from glycolysis
- 36 more ATP molecules from Krebs Cycle and
electron transport - These 38 ATP molecules represent 38 of the total
energy of glucose, remaining 62 is released as
heat, thus your body feels warmer after vigorous
exercise and does not freeze in winter.
23Lets look at the pathway that follows gycolysis
without the presence of oxygen.. anaerobic
respiration
24Anaerobic Respiration Fermentation
- This occurs after glycolysis when oxygen absent,
thus anaerobic process - Fermentation releases energy from food molecules
in absence of oxygen - In this process cells convert NADH to NAD by
passing high-energy electrons back to pyruvic
acid - Now glycolysis has NAD and can continue
producing ATP - There are 2 types of fermentation
- Alcoholic fermentation
- Lactic acid fermentation
25- Anaerobic and aerobic respiration share the
glycolysis pathway. If oxygen is absent,
fermentation may take place, producing lactic
acid or ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Products of fermentation still contain chemical
energy, and are used widely to make foods and
fuels.
26Alcoholic Fermentation
- Yeast and a few other microorganisms use
alcoholic fermentation, forming ethyl alcohol and
carbon dioxide as wastes - Equation for alcoholic fermentation
- pyruvic acid NADH ? ethyl alcohol CO2
NAD
27Lactic Acid Fermentation
- Many cells convert accumulated pyruvic acid from
gycolysis to lactic acid lactic acid
fermentation regenerates NAD so glycolysis can
continue - Equation for lactic acid fermentation
- pyruvic acid NADH ? lactic acid NAD
- 4. When your body cannot supply enough oxygen
to muscle tissues during exercise, this is
produced - 5. Without oxygen the body is unable to
produce all the ATP it requires, so lactic acid
fermentation takes over
28- Running, swimming, or riding a bike as fast as
you can large muscles in your legs and arms
that quickly run out of oxygenmuscles begin to
rapidly produce ATP by lactic acid fermentation. - The buildup of lactic acid fermentation causes a
painful burning sensation making your - muscles feel sore
- How do you stop it?????
- NEED TO INTAKE OXYGEN
29Energy and Exercise
- Initially body uses ATP which is already
available in muscles - Then new ATP made by Lactic Acid Fermentation and
Cellular Respiration - Eventually energy supply runs out
- A. Quick Energy
- 1. ATP in muscles only lasts a few
seconds - 2. ATP from lactic acid fermentation
lasts - about 90 seconds
- - this then creates a by-product
(lactic acid) - which the body must get rid of, the
body - releases it by panting heavily
(intake of oxygen)
30- B. Long-Term Energy
- - exercise lasting longer than 90 seconds
utilizes - cellular respiration to generate a
continuous supply - of ATP
- - cellular respiration releases energy slower
than - fermentation, thus athletes can pace
themselves - - body stores energy in muscles and tissues
in the - form of glycogen (carbohydrate)
- -- stores of glycogen usually lasts for
15-20 minutes - of activity, then the body starts to
break down - other molecules like fat for energy
- HOW LONG DO YOU NEED TO ACTIVE BEFORE YOU START
TO BURN FAT?????
17-22 minutes
31Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Respiration A Comparison
- Advantages of Aerobic Respiration
- Major advantage ? more energy released
- Enough energy to produce up to 38 ATP
- Advantages of Anaerobic Respiration
- Lets organisms live in places where there is
little or no oxygen - Quickly produces ATP
32Relationship between Cellular Respiration and
Photosynthesis
Equation for Cellular Respiration 6O2
C6H12O6 ? 6CO2 6H2O energy
(ATP) Equation for Photosynthesis 6CO2
6H2O energy (sunlight) ? 6O2 C6H12O6
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34LETS REVIEW
- How many stages does cellular respiration have?
____________ - What are the stages of cellular respiration?
__________________________________________________
______________________ - Where does glycolysis take place?
- ____________________________________
- Where does the Krebs cycle take place?
___________________________________
3
GLYCOLYSIS, KREBS CYCLE, AND ELECTRON TRANSPORT
CHAIN
CYTOSOL OF THE CYTOPLASM OF MITOCHONDRIA
IN THE MATRIX OF MITOCHONDRIA
35- Where is the Electron Transport Chain located?
__________________________________ - What do high-energy electrons help the cells
build? ___________________________________________
_________________________ - What are the stage(s) of aerobic respiration?
__________________________________________________
__________________
INNER MEMBRANE OF MITOCHONDRIA
MOLECULES LIKE GLUCOSE ATP
GLYCOLYSIS, KREBS CYCLE, AND ELECTRON TRANSPORT
CHAIN
36- What are the stage(s) of anaerobic respiration?
__________________________________________________
__________________ - What are the two types of fermentation?
__________________________________________________
__________________ - Which fermentation process do humans use?
__________________________________
GLYCOLYSIS, FOLLOWED BY FERMENTATION
ALCOHOLIC FERMENTATION AND LACTIC ACID
FERMENTATION
LACTIC ACID FERMENTATION
37Lesson Summary
- In the two to three billion years since
photosynthesis added oxygen to - earths atmosphere, life has become mostly
aerobic. Some organisms - and types of cells retain the older, anaerobic
pathways for making ATP - these pathways comprise anaerobic respiration or
fermentation. - Muscle cells can continue to produce ATP when O2
runs low using lactic acid fermentation, but
muscle fatigue and pain may result. - Both alcoholic and lactic acid fermentation
pathways change pyruvate in order to continue
producing ATP by glycolysis. - Aerobic respiration is far more energy-efficient
than anaerobic respiration. - Aerobic processes produce up to 38 ATP per
glucose. Anaerobic processes yield only 2 ATP per
glucose.