EN: Respiration and Anaerobic Respiration COPY Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the difference between aerobic and anaerobic respiration?

A

Aerobic = requires oxygen, produces ATP.

Anaerobic = doesn’t require oxygen, produces less ATP than aerobic.

Both start with glycolysis.

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2
Q

Briefly describe the process of glycolysis:

A

A molecule of glucose is split into two smaller molecules of pyruvate.

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3
Q

Where does glycolysis occur?

A

In the cytoplasm.

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4
Q

Does glycolysis take place in aerobic or anaerobic respiration?

A

The first stage in both.

It doesn’t need oxygen to take place though - so it’s an anaerobic process.

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5
Q

What are the two stages in glycolysis?

A

Phosphorylation and oxidation.

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6
Q

In glycolysis, what is there an overall net gain of?

A

2 ATP and 2 reduced NAD

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7
Q

Describe the first stage of glycolysis:

A

Phosphorylation

  • Glucose is phosphorylated using phosphate from ATP - creates 1 molecule of glucose phosphate and 1 molecule of ADP.
  • ATP is then used to add another phosphate - hexose bisphosphate forms.
  • Hexose bisphosphate is then split into 2 molecules of triose phosphate.
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8
Q

Describe the second stage of glycolysis:

A

Oxidation

  • Triose phosphate is oxidised (loses hydrogen) - 2 molecules of pyruvate form.
  • NAD collects hydrogen ions, forming 2 reduced NAD.
  • 4 ATP are produced, but 2 were used up in stage 1, so there’s a net gain of 2.
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9
Q

Draw a diagram of glycolysis:

A
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10
Q

In aerobic respiration, what happens to the:

  • two molecules of reduced NAD?
  • two molecules of pyruvate?
A
  • Reduced NAD - go to oxidative phosphorylation.
  • Pyruvate - actively transported into the matrix of mitochondria for the link reaction.
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11
Q

In anaerobic respiration, what is the pyruvate produced in glycolysis converted to?

What aids this?

A

Ethanol (in plants and yeast) or lactate (in animal cells and some bacteria).

Reduced NAD facilitates this.

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12
Q

The production of ethanol or lactate in anaerobic respiration does what?

What does this mean?

A

Regenerates oxidised NAD.

This means glycolysis can continue even when there isn’t much oxygen around, so a small amount of ATP can still be produced to keep biological processes going.

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13
Q

Draw a diagram for alcohol fermentation:

A

Pyruvate conversion in anaerobic respiration in plants.

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14
Q

Draw a diagram of lactate fermentation:

A

Pyruvate conversion in anaerobic respiration in animals.

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15
Q

How many molecules of ATP does glycolysis yield per molecule of glucose?

A

2

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16
Q

Why is pyruvate reduced in the anaerobic respiration of both plants and animals?

A

To regenerate NAD in its oxidised state.

17
Q

Draw a diagram representing the anaerobic respiration of animals:

A
  • Pyruvate is redcued to lactate, regenerating oxidised NAD.
18
Q

What happens if there is a build up of lactate in the body?

What needs to happen to combat this?

A

The muscle can cramp.

So, lactate needs to be oxidised back to pyruvate when oxygen is available. The extra oxygen needed for this is known as oxygen debt.

19
Q

Draw a diagram representing the anaerobic respiration of plants and microorganisms:

A
20
Q

Why does the pH of muscles fall during strenuous exercise?

A

The cells begin to respire anaerobically, which produces lactate.

This is acidic and so lowers the pH of the muscle.

21
Q

Once oxygen debt has been repaird and all the lactate has been oxidised to pyruvate, what can happen to the pyruvate?

A

It could go into the link reaction or it can be stored as glycogen.

22
Q

What happens to the ethanol produced during the anaerobic respiration of plants?

A

It is disposed of as a waste product.