Chapter 7 Flashcards
What is cellular respiration?
The release of energy from molecules such as glucose.
What is glucose?
A high energy molecule that as it is broken down, energy is released. The energy released is used to make ATP.
What do the different pathways of cellular respiration do?
Allow energy within a glucose molecule to be released slowly for ATP synthesis.
What does cellular respiration involve?
Many individual reactions which each require its own enzyme.
What is co-enzyme?
Specific molecules that help certain enzymes like NAD+ and FAD.
What does each coenzyme carry?
2 electrons and 2 hydrogen atoms.
What do coenzymes do at specific enzymatic reactions?
Pick up electrons and carry them to the electron transport chain then eventually lose electrons at electron transport chain, lots of energy is released as a result.
What happens when NAD+ is loaded.
It becomes reduced and becomes NADH + H+
What happens when FAD is reduced?
It becomes FADH2.
What are the different phases of cellular respiration?
Glycolysis, preparatory reaction, citric acid cycle, and electron transport chain.
What is glycolysis?
The breakdown of glucose into 2 molecules of pyruvate. This breakdown causes removal of electrons and H+ and provides energy for 2 ATP. Occurs if there is oxygen or not.
Describe the process of glycolysis
First step is to break 6 glucose into 2 G3P molecules at the cost of 2 ATP into ADP. The G3P molecules have a phosphate group attached. Then, a further reaction where G3P molecules each become a pyruvate molecule.
Describe Glycolysis if Oxygen is present.
It occurs in cytoplasm, made a net gain of 2 ATP molecules and 2 NADH molecules. With oxygen present, pyruvate goes to mitochondria and becomes aerobic cellular respiration. The NADH made in glycolysis also goes to mitochondria.
Describe Glycolysis if oxygen is not present.
It stays in the cytoplasm, will undergo fermentation.
What are the inputs of glycolysis?
6C glucose, 2 NAD+, 2 ATP, 4 ADP + 4P