EN: Aerobic Respiration COPY Flashcards

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1
Q

Link reaction.

A

Stage after glycolysis which converts pyruvate to acetyl coenzyme A.

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2
Q

Stage after glycolysis which converts pyruvate to acetyl coenzyme A.

A

Link reaction.

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3
Q

Where does the link reaction occur?

A

In the mitochondrial matrix.

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4
Q

Pyruvate is decarboxylated - what does this mean?

A

One carbon atom is removed from pyruvate in the form of CO2.

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5
Q

Briefly describe the stages of the link reaction:

A
  • Pyruvate is decarboxylated - carbon is removed in form of CO2.
  • Pyruvate is oxidised to form acetate and NAD is reduced to form reduced NAD.
  • Acetate is combined with coenzyme A (CoA) to form acetyl coenzyme A.

No ATP is produced.

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6
Q

Is ATP produced in the Link reaction?

A

No, none is produced.

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7
Q

Draw a diagram to represent the link reaction:

A
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8
Q

Briefly describe the stages of aerobic respiration:

A
  • Glycolysis
  • Link reaction
  • Krebs cycle
  • Oxidative phosphorylation
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9
Q

How many pyruvate molecules are made for every glucose molecule that enters glycolysis?

What does this mean?

A

2

Means for each glucose molecule:

  • 2 molecules of acetyl coenzyme A go into the Krebs cycle.
  • 2 CO2 molecules are released as waste products.
  • 2 molecules of reduced NAD are formed and go to oxidative phosphorylation.
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10
Q

Where does the Krebs cycle occur?

A

Mitochondrial matrix

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11
Q

What does the Krebs cycle produce?

A

Reduced coenzymes and ATP

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12
Q

Briefly, what does the Krebs cycle involve?

A

A series of oxidation-reduction reactions

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13
Q

How many times does the Krebs cycle happen for pyruvate molecules?

How many times does it happen for glucose molecules?

A

Pyruvate = once

Glucose = twice

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14
Q

What happens in the first part of the Krebs cycle?

A
  • Acetyl CoA from link reaction combines with 4C molecule (oxaloacetate) to form a 6C molecule (citrate).
  • Coenzyme A goes back to link reaction.
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15
Q

What happens in the second part of the Krebs cycle?

A
  • 6C citrate molecule is converted to 5C molecule.
  • Decarboxylation occurs - CO2 removed.
  • Dehydrogenation occurs.
  • Hydrogen is used to produce reduced NAD from NAD.
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16
Q

What happens in the third stage of the Krebs cycle?

A
  • 5C molecule is converted to 4C.
  • Decarboxylation and dehydrogenation - produce 1 molecule of reduced FAD and 2 reduced NAD.
  • ATP produced by direct transfer of a phosphate group from an intermediate compound to ADP - substrate-level phosphorylation.
  • Citrate converts to oxaloacete.
17
Q

Substrate-level phosphorylation

A

A phosphate group is directly transferred from one molecule to another.

18
Q

A phosphate group is directly transferred from one molecule to another.

A

Substrate-level phosphorylation

19
Q

Draw a diagram to represent the Krebs cycle:

A
20
Q

What are all the products of one Krebs cycle?

Where does each go?

A

1 coenzyme A = reused in the next link reaction.

Oxaloacetate = regenerated for use in the next Krebs cycle.

2CO2 = released as waste product.

1 ATP = used for energy.

3 reduced NAD = oxidative phosphorylation.

1 reduced FAD = oxidative phosphorylation.

21
Q

Relavatively speaking, how much ATP does oxidative phosphorylation produce?

A

Lots.

22
Q

Oxidative phosphorylation.

A

The process where the energy carried by electrons, from reduced coenzymes (FAD and NAD), is used to make ATP.

23
Q

The process where the energy carried by electrons, from reduced coenzymes (FAD and NAD), is used to make ATP.

A

Oxidative phosphorylation.

24
Q

What is the point of glycolysis, the Link reaction and the Krebs cycle?

A

To make reduced NAD and reduced FAD for the final stage - oxidative phosphorylation.

25
Q

Describe the process of oxidative phosphorylation.

A
  • H atoms are released from reduced NAD and FAD when they are oxidised.
  • H atom splits to H+ and e-
  • e- move down electron transport chain, losing energy at each carrier.
  • Energy is used to pump protons from mitochondrial matrix to intermembrane space.
  • Concentration of H+ is higher in intermembrane space than in mitochondrial matrix - electrochemical graident forms.
  • Protons move back to matrix through ATP synthase - drives the synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi - chemiosmosis.
  • At the end of ETC, protons, electrons and O2 combine to form water - oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor.
26
Q

Why do protons diffuse through ATP synthase?

A

It is the only part of the inner mitochondiral membrane permeable to them.

27
Q

What happens to the regenrated coenzymes (FAD and NAD) made in oxidative phosphorylation?

A

They are reused in the Krebs cycle.

28
Q

In oxidative phosphorylation, where do protons move to and from?

A

From mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space and back again.

29
Q

How many ATP molecules are made from each molecule of reduced NAD?

How many ATP molecules are made from each molecule of reduced FAD?

A

Reduced NAD = 2.5 ATP

Reduced FAD = 1.5 ATP

30
Q

Draw a table to demonstrate the total amount of ATP produced in aerobic respiration:

A
31
Q

What can ATP production be affected by?

A

Mitochondrial diseases.

32
Q

How can mitochondrial diseases affect ATP production?

A
  • Affect mitondria - can affect how proteins involved inn oxidative phosphorylation or Krebs cycle function, so reducing ATP production.
  • May cause anaerobic respiration to increase to make up for ATP shortage.
  • Lots of lactate is produced - can cause fatigue and weakness.
  • Lactate can also diffuse into bloodstream, leading to high lactate concentrations.