Topic 14: Respiration Flashcards
Where does glycolysis occur?
cytoplasm
What stage of respiration is glycolysis?
first stage of aerobic AND anaerobic respiration
What are the four main stages of glycolysis?
- phosphorylation of glucose - glucose is phosphorylated to** glucose phosphate **by 2x ATP (ATP hydrolysis supplies Pi) - lower activation energy for enzyme activity
- Splitting of phosphorylated glucose - glucose phospate splits into 2x triose phosphase
- Oxidation - two hydrogens removed from each triose phosphate and transfered to 2 NAD - forms 2x pyruvate - two molecule of ATP per pyruvate are regenerated from ADP
**NET GAIN: 2 reduced NAD and 2 ATP **
How does pyruvate from glycolysis enter the mitochondria?
active transport
What are the two main stages of the link reaction?
- Oxidation - 3C pyruvate is oxidised to 2C acetate - Pyruvate loses 1x CO2 and 2H - 2H are accepted by NAD to form reduced NAD and one H+
- Acetate combines with coenzyme A to produce acetlycoenzyme A
Summary equation for the link reaction
Pyruvate + NAD + CoA = Acetyl - CoA + reduced NAD + CO2
What are the main stages of the Krebs cycle?
- Acetyl portion of Acetyl-CoA combines with 4C oxalacetate to produce 6C citrate - CoA carrier is released
- Series of further reactions - Citrate loses CO2 and hydrogen - results in a n**ew 4 carbon molecule and one molecule of ATP **(substrate level phosphorylation)
substrate level phosphorylation - Production of ATP from ADP via the transfer of a phosphate group from a short lived, highly reactive intermediate (different from oxidative as there is no electron transport chain)
What is the electron transport chain
a series of carrier proteins embedded in the membrane of the CRISTAE in the mitochondria - produces ATP through oxidative phosphorylation via chemiosmosis (during aerobic respiration)
What happens in the electron transport chain?
- electrons released from REDUCED NAD and FAD are accepted by proton carriers in the ETC
- electrons pass along the ETC - successive REDOX reactions
- energy released maintains the proton gradient
- oxygen acts as a final electron acceptor - protons, electrons and oxygen combine to form water
Oxidative phosphorylation - How is a protein concentration gradient established during chemiosmosis?
energy released from ATP is coupled to the active transport of H+ ions from the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space
Oxidative phosphorylation - How does chemiosmosis result in ATP formation
H+ ions move DOWN their concentration gradient from the intermbrane space to the matrix via the channel protein ATP synthase
- This catalyses ADP + Pi = ATP
Role of oxygen in aerobic respiration
final electron acceptor in the electron transfer chain - produces water as a byproduct
Why is the electron tranfer chain preferable to a single reaction?
energy is released gradually and less energy is released as heat
How can lipids act as alternative respiratory substrate?
lipids = glycerol + fatty acids
* phosphorylation of glycerol produces triose phosphate for glycolysis
* fatty acids can be converted into acetate which is converted into acetyl-coenzyme A
How can amino acids act as an alternative respiratory substrate?
Deamination (amino group is removed)
* 3C carbon compounds are converted to pyruvate
* 4C and 5C carbon compounds to intermediates in the Krebs cycle