5.2 respiration Flashcards
Name the 4 main stages in aerobic respiration and where they occur
Glycolysis: cytoplasm
Link reaction: mitochondrial matrix
Krebs cycle: mitochondrial matrix
Oxidative Phosphorylation via electron transfer chain: membrane of cristae
Outline the stages of glycolysis
- Glucose is phosphorylated to glucose phosphate by 2X ATP
- Glucose phosphate splits into 2X triose phosphate (TP)
- 2X TP is oxidised to 2X pyruvate
Net gain of 2x reduced NAD & 2x ATP per glucose
How does pyruvate from glycolysis enter the mitochondria?
via active transport
What happens during the link reaction?
- Oxidative of pyruvate to acetate.
Per pyruvate molecule: net gain of 1xCO2 (decarboxylation) & 2H atoms ( used to reduce 1X NAD). - Acetate combines with coenzyme A to form acetylcoenzyme A
Summary equation for the link reaction
Pyruvate + NAD + coA –> acetyle coA + reduced NAD + co2
What happens in the krebs cycle?
series of redox equations produces:
. ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation
. Reduced coenzymes
. CO2 from decarboxylation
what is the electron transfer chain?
Series of carrier proteins embedded in membrane of the cristae of mitochondria.
Produces ATP through oxidative phosphorylation via chemiosmosis during aerobic respiration.
What happens in the electron transfer chain?
Electrons released from reduced NAD& FAD undergo successive redox reactions.
The energy released is coupled to maintaining proton gradient or released as as heat.
Oxygen acts as a final electron acceptor
How is the proton concentration gradient established during chemiosmosis in aerobic respiration?
Some energy released from the ETC is coupled to the active transport of H+ ions (protons) from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space.
How does the chemiosmosis produce ATP during aerobic respiration?
H+ ions (protons) move down their concentration gradient from the intermembrane space into the mitochondrial matrix via the channel protein ATP synthase.
ATP synthase catalyses ADP + Pi –> ATP
State the role of oxygen in aerobic respiration
Final electron acceptor in electron transfer chain.
(produces water as a by product)
What is the benefit of an electron transfer chain rather than a single reaction?
.energy is released gradually
.less energy is released as heat
Name 2 types of molecules that can be used as alternative respiratory substrates.
.(amino acids from) proteins
.(glycerol and fatty acids from) lipids
How can lipids act as an alternative respiratory substrate?
lipid –> glycerol + fatty acids
1. Phosphorylation of glycerol –> TP for glycolysis
2. Fatty acids –> acetate
3. acetate enters link reaction
4. H atoms produced for oxidative phosphorylation
How does amino acids act as an alternative respiratory substrate?
Deamination produces:
1. 3C compounds –> pyruvate for link reaction
2. 4C/5C compounds –> intermediates in Krebs cycle