anaerobic respiration Flashcards

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1
Q

give examples of microorganisms that carry out anaerobic respiration

A
  • yeast
  • some prokaryotes
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2
Q

give examples of animal tissues that might carry out anaerobic respiration

A

muscle tissue

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3
Q

in the absence of oxygen only glycolysis will occur. why?

A

oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor

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4
Q

how many ATP molecules are produced by anaerobic respiration and how?

A

2
- from substrate level phosphorylation

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5
Q

what does anaerobic respiration include?

A

anaerobic respiration involves the reoxidation of NAD, pyruvate acts as the hydrogen acceptor rather than oxygen

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6
Q

why can the link reaction and krebs cycle not occur?

A
  • reduced NAD cannot be oxidised
  • oxidative phosphorylation wont take place and so the yield of ATP decreases
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7
Q

summarise anaerobic respiration in animal cells, and yeast and higher plants

A

animal cells : pyruvate becomes reduced and accepts the hydrogen from reduced NAD forming lactate

yeast and higher plants : ethanal becomes reduced and accepts the hydrogen from reduced NAD to form ethanol

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8
Q

what is meant by the term respiratory substrate?

A

molecule that can be oxidised through respiration to fuel the synthesis of ATP

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9
Q

list some of the roles of lipids in living organisms

A
  • protection of vital organs
  • thermal insulation
  • metabolic water
  • buoyancy
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10
Q

list some of the roles of proteins in living organisms

A
  • enzymes
  • hormones
  • antibodies
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11
Q

describe lipids as a respiratory substance

A
  • used as an energy source when carbohydrate levels are low
  • contain twice as much energy per unit gram as carbohydrates
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12
Q

what is the name of the bond broken when lipids are hydrolysed?

A

ester

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13
Q

what happens to the products of lipid digestion?

A
  • glycerol is phosphorylated by ATP, dehydrogenated and converted into triose phosphate (3C). this is an intermediate of glycolysis so can then enter glycolysis
  • fatty acid chains : these long hydrocarbon chains are split into 2C acetate fragments. each of these fragments can enter the Krebs cycle as acetyl co-enzyme A
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14
Q

why does the precise number of ATP molecules produced depend upon the length of the hydrocarbon chain of the fatty acid?

A

length of hydrocarbon chain determines how many acetyl coenzyme A molecules are made, and therefore how many Krebs cycles occur

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15
Q

why are very large numbers of ATP produced as a result of using lipids as a respiratory substance?

A

each fatty acid produces many 2C fragments which means the Krebs cycle can go many time producing large numbers of reduced NAD and reduced FAD to fuel the ETC

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16
Q

when is protein used as a respiratory substance?

A

only used after reserves of carbohydrates and lipids have been used up (e.g a person suffering from starvation)

17
Q

how are proteins used as respiratory substances?

A
  • firstly, they are hydrolysed into amino acids (peptide bonds broken)
  • in the liver, the amine group is removed (deamination)
  • removed amine group is converted to ammonia and then combined with CO2 to produce urea which is excreted as urine

rest of amino acid forms a KETO ACID:
- some keto acids are fed into glycolysis
- some keto acids are converted into Krebs cycle intermediate (4C,5C,6C)

18
Q
A