Chapter 7 Flashcards

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1
Q

Autotrophs

A

Produce their own organic molecules through photosynthesis

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2
Q

Heterotrophs

A

Eat organic compounds produced by other organisms

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3
Q

Cellular (Aerobic) Respiration 666 Equation

A

C6 H12 O6 +6 O2 = 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy
Glucose. Oxygen = Carbon deioxide. Water Heat and ATP.
Change in G = -686 kcal/mol of glucose

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4
Q

Cellular respiration (definition)

A

Cellular respiration is a series of redox reactions (Many small steps, slow release of energy)

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4
Q

Dehydrogenation

A

Lost electrons are accompanied by protons (Hydrogen). Hydrogen atom is lost (1 electron, 1 proton)

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5
Q

Electron Carriers in cell respiration

A

NAD+. Oxidized form NAD+ (ready to accept electron)
NADH. Reduced form (accepted an electron)

FAD+ Oxidized form (ready to accept electron)
FADH2 . Reduced form (accepted an electron)

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6
Q

Final acceptor of electron in cell respiration

A

Oxygen. When O2 accepts electron it produces H2O

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7
Q

Final electron acceptor in other forms of energy creation

A

Aerobic respiration = Oxygen
Anaerobic respiration = Final electron acceptor is an inorganic molecule (not O2)
Fermentation = Final e- acceptor is an organic molecule, converted into lactic acid or ethanol+CO2

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8
Q

2 mechanisms for synthesis of ATP

A

1 Substrate-level phosphorylation. Transfer phosphate group directly to ADP. Uses an enzyme directly to transfer P group to ADP. During glycolysis and Krebs cycle.
2. Oxidative phosphorylation. ATP synthase uses energy from a proton gradient. During Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmosis

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9
Q

Glycolysis and oxygen availability

A

Step 1) Occurs in cytoplasm. Converts 1 Glucose (6 carbons) to 2 Pyruvate (3 carbons). 10 step biochemical pathway. End products: 2 pyruvates, 4 total ATP (net of 2 ATP), 2 NADH.

For glycolysis to continue NADH must be recycled to NAD+ by either
1. Aerobic respiration- O2 is available and final electron acceptor (Produces significant amount of ATP)
2. Fermentation- O2 unavailable. Organic molecule final e- acceptor

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10
Q

Pyruvate Oxidation

A

Step 2) Occurs in the mitochondria in eukaryotes. Plasma membrane in prokaryotes. Start with 2 pyruvates. Each pyruvate is oxidized, looses e- collected by NAD+. Pyruvate oxidize to Acetyl CoA. NAD+ reduced to NADH
End products: 2 Acetyl-CoA. 2 NADH. 2 CO2

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11
Q

Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle)

A

Step 3) Occurs in matrix of mitochondria. Oxidizes acetyl group from pyruvate. Biochemical pathway in 9 steps and 3 segments. 1 acetyl-CoA + oxaloacetate= citrate. 2. citrate rearrangement and decarboxylation. 3. regeneration of oxaloacetate.

For each Acetyl-CoA entering: Release of 2 molecules of CO2, reduce 3 NAD+ to 3 NADH, Reduce 1 FAD to FADH2, Produce 1 ATP regenerate oxaloacetate.
Multiply by 2 since there are 2 Acetyl-CoA

At this point 6 CO2, 4 ATP, 10 NADH, 2 FADH2

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12
Q

Electron Transport Chain (ETC) and Chemiosmosis

A

Step 4) Located in mitochondrial membrane (cristae) in eukaryotes, plasma membrane of prokaryotes. Electron carriers from previous step “drop-off” electrons (NADH, FADH2). Used to pump H+ out of cell, creates gradient for next step, chemiosmosis. Driven by oxygen.
ETC is a series of membrane-bound electron carriers embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane (Cristae). Electrons from NADH and FADH2 are transferred to complexes of the ETC.
Each complex has a proton pump creating proton gradient, transfers electrons to the next carrier, Electrons end up at oxygen (reduced to H2O).
Chemiosmosis- accumulation of protons in the intermembrane space drives protons into the matrix via diffusion (membrane relatively impermeable to ions) most protons can only reenter matrix through ATP synthase [rotor] (uses energy of gradient to make ATP from ATP +P i)

End products: 32 ATPs, H2O, NAD+, FAD+

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13
Q

Energy yield of respiration

A

Theoretical energy yield - 36-38 ATP per glucose
Actual yield: 30 ATP per glucose in eukaryotes
32 ATP per glucose in prokaryotes
(reduced yield due to leaky membrane use of proton gradient for purposes other than ATP synthesis)

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14
Q

Fermentation

A

Reduces organic molecules in order to regenerate NAD+ for glycolysis.
1 Ethanol fermentation occurs in yeast. CO2, ethanol and NAD+ are produced
2 Lactic acid fermentation occurs is animal cells (especially muscles) electrons are transferred to NADH to pyruvate to produce lactic acid

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15
Q

Alcohol fermentation in yeast

A

No O2 present for NADH produced in glycolysis has no ETC to drop-off e- and become NAD+ again. NADH drop e- off at acetaldehyde and becomes NAD+ again.
End Product : CO2 (waste), Ethanol (waste), NAD+ (purpose)

16
Q

Catabolism of protein

A

Amino acid undergo deamination to remove the amino group. Remainder of the amino acid is converted to a molecule that enters glycolysis or the Krebs cycle

16
Q

Catabolism of Fat

A

Fats are broken down to fatty acids and glycerol (use hydrolysis to break glycerol from fatty acids)
Fatty acids are converted to acetyl groups by beta-oxidation.Acetyl group joins with CoA to make Acetyl-CoA which can enter Krebs cycle
The respiration of a 6-carbon fatty acid yields 20% more energy than 6-carbon glucose.

16
Q

Alcohol fermentation in Muscle cells

A

No O2 present for NADH produced in glycolysis has no ETC to drop-off e- and become NAD+ again. NADH drop e- off at pyruvate and becomes NAD+ again.
End Product : CO2 (waste), lactate (waste), NAD+ (purpose)

17
Q

Glycolysis start and end product

A

Glucose and NAD+

2 Pyruvate, net 2 ATP, 2 NADH

18
Q

Pyruvate oxidation start and end product

A

2 pyruvate

2 Acetyl-CoA, 2 NADH, 2 CO2

19
Q

Krebs Cycle start and end product

A

2 Acetyl- CoA

6NADH, 2 FADH2, 2 ATP, 4 CO2

20
Q

ETC and chemiosmosis start and end product

A

NADH, FADH2, O2, ATP synthase

32 ATP, H20, NAD+, FAD+