Chemoheterotrophy Flashcards
1
Q
What is fermentation
A
- a type of chemoheterotrophy
- Anaerobic
- no need for external TEA
- end products still have usable energy (alcohol)
- glucose –> alcohol + CO2
2
Q
What is respiration?
A
- can be aerobic or anaerobic
- the production of energy
3
Q
Describe aerobic chemoheterotrophy
A
- aka respiration
- glucose is catabolism, releasing carbon dioxide and water as the bi products, to derive energy
C6H12O6 + 6O2 –> ^COO2 + H2O - organic C is oxidised (by O2), forming CO2
- oxygen is reduced (by organic C) forming H2O
- produces more energy than fermentation
4
Q
Why is respiration better than fermentation?
A
- yields more energy per oxidised substrate than fermentation
- has a greater different in electrode potential between the PED and TEA, so more redox reactions, conserves heat and more energy produced
5
Q
Why is fermentation better than respiration?
A
- fermentation products still have energy that is able to be derived
- fermentation does not need an external TEA so does not depend on microbes environmental conditions as much
6
Q
List the forms of anaerobic chemoheterotrophy (from most to least thermodynamically favourable)
A
- diss. nitrate reduction
- diss. manganese reduction
- diss. iron reduction
- diss. reduction of other metals and metalloids
- diss. sulfate reduction
- methanogenesis
PED is organic C
TEA is NOT O2
Need a species in its oxidised form that can accept electrons and become reduced
7
Q
where do dissimilatory reduction happen?
A
In the cell membrane
8
Q
What is dissimilatory nitrate reduction
A
- most energetically favourable
- PED = organic C
- TEA = nitrate (NO3-)
- important in soils and freshwater subject too agricultural pollution or sewage
- denitrification: NO3- –> NO2- –> NO –> N2O –> N2
- not all denitrifying bacteria reduce NO3- completely to N2
- nitrate ammonification: NO3- –> NO2- –> NH3