P1 Respiration Flashcards
What is the first stage of aerobic and anaerobic respiration and where does it take place?
Glycolysis, in the cytoplasm
What is the first step of glycolysis?
- Phosphorylation: two phosphate groups are added to glucose to form hexose bisphosphate (6C).
- These two phosphate groups come from two ATP molecules, which are broken down to ADP.
What is the second step of glycolysis?
- Hexose bisphosphate (6C) is broken down into two molecules of triose phosphate (3C).
What is the third step of glycolysis?
- Two triose phosphate molecules (3C) are broken down into two pyruvate molecules (3C).
- A breakdown of one triose phosphate molecule releases two molecules of ATP (so the breakdown of two triose phosphate molecules releases 4 ATP molecules).
- During this reaction triose phosphate is oxidised - it looses a hydrogen which binds to NAD to form NADH.
During glycolysis, for a single molecule of glucose, what is the overall yield of ATP?
2 ATP molecules
Why is glucose converted to hexose bisphosphate (adding two phosphate groups) in the first stage of glycolysis?
- Because hexose bisphosphate cannot travel through the same transport proteins as glucose.
- Glucose enters the cell by facilitated diffusion, however if the concentration of glucose is higher inside the cell than outside, glucose could end up leaving again. But converting glucose to hexose bisphosphate prevents this.
What is the second stage of aerobic respiration and where does it take place?
- The link reaction, in the mitochondrial matrix.
- Pyruvate is moved from the cytoplasm to the mitochondrial matrix by co-transport, facilitated by active transport - therefore it requires a transport protein and energy.
What is the first step of the link reaction?
- Pyruvate (3C) is converted to acetate (2C), and looses a carbon atom in the form of carbon dioxide, which is then exhaled (decarboxylation).
- Pyruvate is also oxidised, it looses a hydrogen atom which bonds to NAD, forming NADH (NAD is a coenzyme).
What is the second step of the link reaction?
- Coenzyme A is added to acetate (2C) to form acetyl-CoA/acetyl coenzyme A (2C).
What is the net yield of ATP molecules in the link reaction?
0 ATP molecules
What is the third stage of aerobic respiration?
The Krebs cycle (also in the mitochondrial matrix), it is a cycle that produces 3 important molecules.
Describe the steps of the Krebs cycle
- Acetyl CoA (2C) reacts with oxaloacetate (4C) to form citrate (6C), and looses Coenzyme A in this reaction.
- Citrate (6C) is then converted back to oxaloacetate (4C), the two carbon atoms are lost in the form of 2 carbon dioxide molecules (decarboxylation).
- During an intermediate reaction ADP reacts with a phosphate to form ATP. This is substrate level phosphorylation (as is ATP production in glycolysis) because it requires a molecule that contains a phosphate group (to donate to ADP) and an enzyme to catalyse the reaction.
- When citrate is converted to oxaloacetate, it looses H atoms and is oxidised (dehydrogenation), which are transferred to NAD molecules to form NADH. In total 3 NAD molecules react with hydrogen to form 3 NADH molecules.
- Other hydrogens are transferred to FAD (another coenzyme) to form FADH2.
What is the overall yield of ATP in the Krebs cycle?
2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule/ 1 ATP molecule per turn of the Krebs cycle.
What is the function of Coenzyme A?
The reaction of oxaloacetate with acetyl CoA is catalysed by an enzyme, which requires a coenzyme (Coenzyme A) to function properly and ensure the Krebs cycle can take place.
What is the fourth stage of aerobic respiration and where does it take place?
Oxidative phosphorylation - it takes place in the inner mitochondrial membrane, between the matrix and the intermembrane space.