Metabolic Processes - Aerobic Cellular Respiration Flashcards
What is the difference between substrate-level phosphorylation and oxidative phosphorylation? (which produces more ATP)
- Substrate-level phosphorylation: an enzyme catalyzes a reaction between a substrate and an ADP (phosphate group from substrate is transferred to the ADP to produce ATP)
- Oxidative phosphorylation: NADH and FADH2 are oxidized to provide energy to phosphorylate ADP to make ATP (oxidation performed by ETC and phosphorylation performed by chemiosmosis)
What happens during the energy investment stage of glycolysis?
- Activation of glucose
- Rearranging and phosphorylation
- Cleavage of F-1,6-BP
** 2 ATP are used **
What happens during the energy generation stage of glycolysis?
- Oxidation and phosphorylation of G3P
- ATP synthesis from BPG
- Dehydration of 2PG
- ATP synthesis from PEP
** 4 ATP produced per glucose molecule (2 ATP x2 because glucose is split in two) **
What are the other sources of Acetyl-CoA and what happens if excess Acetyl-CoA is produced during pyruvate oxidation?
- Other sources: proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates can be converted to Acetyl-CoA (allows for their stored energy to be used in citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation)
- Excess can be used to produce lipids to store energy as fat
What is the role of oxaloacetate in the citric acid cycle?
- Oxaloacetate is a receptor molecule in the citric acid cycle
- It starts the series of reactions in the cycle an must be regenerated by the end to start the cycle again
How is the free energy of electrons used by the electron transport chain? How does this differ when reduced by NADH vs FADH2?
- Free energy of the electrons is used pump H+ into the intermembrane space to create a concentration gradient
- This electrochemical gradient is used to phosphorylate ADP to ATP using ATP synthase
- NADH = 3 ATP produced
- FADH2 = 2 ATP produced
Why do electrons move “down” the ETC? Why is oxygen required to keep electrons flowing?
- Each complex is slightly more electronegative than the last which pulls electrons from the complex before it
- If oxygen (one of the most electronegative elements) is not available, the ETC stops because electrons cannot be received so new electrons cannot enter
What is the proton motive force and how is it produced?
- Proton motive force: a force that moves protons through an ATP synthase as a result of the free energy stored in the electrochemical gradient of protons across a biological membrane
- The electrochemical gradient is produced by the pumping of H+ into the intermembrane space
How is the proton motive force is used to power chemiosmosis? What protein complex is needed for chemiosmosis to occur?
- Proton motive force pumps protons through ATP synthase which phosphorylates ADP to ATP
- ATP synthase is needed for chemiosmosis to occur