Chapter 7 Flashcards
Autotrophs
Produce their own organic molecules through photosynthesis
Heterotrophs
Eat organic compounds produced by other organisms
Cellular (Aerobic) Respiration 666 Equation
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
Cellular respiration (definition)
Cellular respiration is a series of redox reactions (Many small steps, slow release of energy)
Dehydrogenation
Lost electrons are accompanied by protons (Hydrogen). Hydrogen atom is lost (1 electron, 1 proton)
Electron Carriers in cell respiration
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)
Final acceptor of electron in cell respiration
Oxygen. When O2 accepts electron it produces H2O
Final electron acceptor in other forms of energy creation
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
2 mechanisms for synthesis of ATP
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
Glycolysis and oxygen availability
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
Pyruvate Oxidation
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
Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle)
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
Electron Transport Chain (ETC) and Chemiosmosis
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+
Energy yield of respiration
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)
Fermentation
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