Cellular Respiration Flashcards

1
Q

prep reaction

A
  • pyruvate oxidized to acteyl coenzyme a and carbon dioxide is removed
  • occurs twice because glycolysis produces 2 pyruvates
  • produces molecule that will enter the citric acid cycle
  • 2 acteyl CoA’s
  • 2 NADH
  • 2 carbon dioxide
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2
Q

citric acid / kreb cycle

A
  • c2 acteyl group from prep reaction combines with c4 molecule (oxaloacctate) to produce c6 citrate (citric acid)
  • oxidation of citrate by removal of hydrogens
  • produces 3 NADH and 1 FADH2
  • produces 1 ATP by direct substrate phosphorylation
  • CYCLE TURNS TWICE PER GLUCOSE
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3
Q

glycolysis

A
  • breakdown of glucose (6C) and 2 molecules of pyruvate (3C)
  • oxidation by removal of hydrogen releases energy to make ATP
  • makes 2 pyruvate
  • 2 ATP
  • 2 NADH
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4
Q

citric cycle / kreb products per glucose

A
  • 6 NADH
  • 2 FADH2
  • 4 CO2
  • 2 ATP
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5
Q

etc

A
  • final electron acceptor is oxygen
  • after receiving electrons oxygen combines with hydrogen ions to form water as an end product
  • NAD &FAD recycle back to pick up more electrons from glycolysis, prep reaction, and citric acid cycle
  • as the electrons move from a higher energy state to a lower one, energy is released to make ATP
  • under aerobic conditions 36-38 ATP per glucose molecules can be produced
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6
Q

etc products

A
  • 32-34 ATP (chemiosmosis)

- H2O

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7
Q

2 laws of thermodynamics

A
  • energy cannot be created or destroyed -> can be changed from one fork to another
  • energy cannot be changed from one for, to another without a loss of usable energy
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8
Q

kinetic energy

A
  • energy of motion
  • mechanical energy is a form of kinetic energy
    ex) ball rolling/muscle contracting
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9
Q

potential energy

A
  • stored energy

- food we eat (also a form of chemical energy)

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10
Q

coupled reactions

A

-energy released by an exergonic reaction is used to drive an endergonic reaction

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11
Q

structure of ATP (nucleotide)

A
  • adenine (nitrogen containing base)
  • ribose (5 carbon sugar)
  • 3 phosphate groups
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12
Q

substrate concentration

A
  • enzyme activity increases as substrate concentration increases because there are more collisions between substrate and enzyme
  • max rate is achieved when all active sites of an enzyme are filled continuously with substrate
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13
Q

temp

A
  • enzyme activity as temp rises
  • higher temp causes more effective collision between enzymes and substrates
  • high temp may denature an enzyme
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14
Q

ph

A
  • has optimal ph
  • enzyme structure is ph dependent
  • extremes of ph may denature an enzyme by altering its structure
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15
Q

enzyme activation/concentration

A
  • cell regulates metabolism by regulating which enzymes are active
  • genes producing enzymes can be turned on/off to regulate enzyme concentrations
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16
Q

enzyme inhibition

A
  • enzyme cannot bind its substrate
  • activity of cell enzymes is regulated by feedback inhibitors
    ex) when product is abundant it binds to the enzymes active site and blocks further production
  • when product is used up its removed from the active site
  • poisons are often enzyme inhibitors
    ex) cyanide is an inhibitor of an essential enzyme (cytochrome c oxidase) which is essential in the process of ATP production -> if enzyme is inhibited cell death will occur
17
Q

enzyme cofactors

A
  • molecules which help enzymes function
  • may be organic non proteins (coenzymes) or inorganic ion (cofactors) helpers
  • vitamins are small organic molecules that are required in our diets for the synthesis of coenzymes
    ex) niacin (vitamin) integral component of 2 important enzymes, specifically NAD vitamin B12 is important for the coenzyme FAD