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Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy
Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy
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Overview: Life Is Work Living cells require energy from outside sources Some animals, such as the giant panda, obtain energy by eating plants; others feed on organisms that eat plants
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Energy flows into an ecosystem as sunlight and leaves as heat
Photosynthesis generates oxygen and organic molecules, which are used in cellular respiration Cells use chemical energy stored in organic molecules to regenerate ATP, which powers work
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LE 9-2 Light energy ECOSYSTEM Photosynthesis in chloroplasts CO2 + H2O
Organic molecules + O2 Cellular respiration in mitochondria ATP powers most cellular work Heat energy
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Concept 9.1: Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing organic fuels
Several processes are central to cellular respiration and related pathways
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Catabolic Pathways and Production of ATP
The breakdown of organic molecules is exergonic Fermentation is a partial degradation of sugars that occurs without oxygen Cellular respiration consumes oxygen and organic molecules and yields ATP Although carbohydrates, fats, and proteins are all consumed as fuel, it is helpful to trace cellular respiration with the sugar glucose: C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (ATP + heat)
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Redox Reactions: Oxidation and Reduction
The transfer of electrons during chemical reactions releases energy stored in organic molecules This released energy is ultimately used to synthesize ATP
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The Principle of Redox Chemical reactions that transfer electrons between reactants are called oxidation-reduction reactions, or redox reactions In oxidation, a substance loses electrons, or is oxidized In reduction, a substance gains electrons, or is reduced (the amount of positive charge is reduced) Xe Y X Ye- becomes oxidized (loses electron) becomes reduced (gains electron)
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The electron donor is called the reducing agent
The electron receptor is called the oxidizing agent
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Some redox reactions do not transfer electrons but change the electron sharing in covalent bonds
An example is the reaction between methane and oxygen
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Methane (reducing agent) Oxygen (oxidizing agent) Carbon dioxide Water
LE 9-3 Reactants Products becomes oxidized CH4 + 2 O2 CO2 + Energy + 2 H2O becomes reduced H H C H O O O C O H O H H Methane (reducing agent) Oxygen (oxidizing agent) Carbon dioxide Water
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What are the macromolecules that cellular respiration can start with?
What is an oxidation reaction? What is a reduction reacion? What is an oxidizing agent? What is a reducing agent? Where does ATP synthesis get its energy from?
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Oxidation of Organic Fuel Molecules During Cellular Respiration
During cellular respiration, the fuel (such as glucose) is oxidized and oxygen is reduced: C6H12O6 + 6O CO2 + 6H2O + Energy becomes oxidized becomes reduced
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Stepwise Energy Harvest via NAD+ and the Electron Transport Chain
In cellular respiration, glucose and other organic molecules are broken down in a series of steps Electrons from organic compounds are usually first transferred to NAD+, a coenzyme As an electron acceptor, NAD+ functions as an oxidizing agent during cellular respiration Each NADH (the reduced form of NAD+) represents stored energy that is tapped to synthesize ATP
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At key steps, electrons are stripped from the glucose
Glucose is broken down in a series of steps, each one catalyzed by an enzyme At key steps, electrons are stripped from the glucose Each electron travels with a proton (in this case, H+) Hydrogen atoms not transferred directly to oxygen Pass through the coenzyme NAD+
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How does NAD+ trap electrons?
Enzymes remove a pair of hydrogen atoms (2 protons and 2 electrons) from the substrate (ex: glucose) Enzyme delivers the 2 electrons but only 1 proton to NAD+ Other H+ is released to surrounding solution By receiving two negatively charged electrons but only positively charged proton, NAD+ has its charged neutralized when reduced to NADH
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LE 9-4 NADH NAD+ 2 e– + 2 H+ 2 e– + H+ H+ Dehydrogenase + 2[H] + H+
(from food) + H+ Nicotinamide (reduced form) Nicotinamide (oxidized form)
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NADH passes the electrons to the electron transport chain
Unlike an uncontrolled reaction, the electron transport chain passes electrons in a series of steps instead of one explosive reaction Oxygen pulls electrons down the chain in an energy-yielding tumble The energy yielded is used to regenerate ATP
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Electron transport chain
+ 1/2 O2 2 H + 1/2 O2 (from food via NADH) Controlled release of energy for synthesis of ATP 2 H+ + 2 e– ATP Explosive release of heat and light energy ATP Free energy, G Free energy, G Electron transport chain ATP 2 e– 1/2 O2 2 H+ H2O H2O Uncontrolled reaction Cellular respiration
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The Stages of Cellular Respiration: A Preview
Cellular respiration has three stages: Glycolysis (breaks down glucose into two molecules of pyruvate) The citric acid cycle (completes the breakdown of glucose) Oxidative phosphorylation (accounts for most of the ATP synthesis) The process that generates most of the ATP is called oxidative phosphorylation because it is powered by redox reactions [Animation listed on slide following figure]
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Chemiosmosis: the processes together that carry out oxidative phosphorylation
For each molecule of glucose degraded to carbon dioxide and water by respiration, the cell makes up to 38 molecules of ATP, each with 7.3 kcal/mol
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LE 9-6_1 Glycolysis Glucose Pyruvate Cytosol Mitochondrion ATP
Substrate-level phosphorylation
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LE 9-6_2 Glycolysis Citric acid cycle Glucose Pyruvate Cytosol
Mitochondrion ATP ATP Substrate-level phosphorylation Substrate-level phosphorylation
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LE 9-6_3 Electrons carried via NADH Electrons carried via NADH and
FADH2 Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis Glycolysis Citric acid cycle Glucose Pyruvate Cytosol Mitochondrion ATP ATP ATP Substrate-level phosphorylation Substrate-level phosphorylation Oxidative phosphorylation
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Animation: Cell Respiration Overview
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Oxidative phosphorylation accounts for almost 90% of the ATP generated by cellular respiration
A small amount of ATP is formed in glycolysis and the citric acid cycle by substrate-level phosphorylation
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LE 9-7 Enzyme Enzyme ADP P Substrate + ATP Product
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Substrate-level phosphorylation Oxidation Fermentation NAD+
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Reduction Electron transport chain Phosphorylation Glycolysis
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Citric acid cycle Oxidizing agent Electronegativity Products of cellular respiration
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Reducing agent Reactants of cellular respiration ATP synthesis Oxidative phosphorylation
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Animation: Glycolysis
Concept 9.2: Glycolysis harvests energy by oxidizing glucose to pyruvate Glycolysis (“splitting of sugar”) breaks down glucose into two molecules of pyruvate Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm and has two major phases: Energy investment phase Energy payoff phase Animation: Glycolysis
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LE 9-8 Energy investment phase Glucose 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP used
Glycolysis Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation Energy payoff phase ATP ATP ATP 4 ADP + 4 P 4 ATP formed 2 NAD+ + 4 e– + 4 H+ 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 Pyruvate + 2 H2O Net Glucose 2 Pyruvate + 2 H2O 4 ATP formed – 2 ATP used 2 ATP 2 NAD+ + 4 e– + 4 H+ 2 NADH + 2 H+
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LE 9-9a_1 Glucose ATP Hexokinase ADP Glucose-6-phosphate Glycolysis
Citric acid cycle phosphorylation Oxidation Glucose ATP ATP ATP ATP Hexokinase ADP Glucose-6-phosphate
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LE 9-9a_2 Glucose ATP Hexokinase ADP Glucose-6-phosphate
Glycolysis Citric acid cycle Oxidation phosphorylation Glucose ATP ATP ATP ATP Hexokinase ADP Glucose-6-phosphate Phosphoglucoisomerase Fructose-6-phosphate ATP Phosphofructokinase ADP Fructose- 1, 6-bisphosphate Aldolase Isomerase Dihydroxyacetone phosphate Glyceraldehyde- 3-phosphate
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LE 9-9b_1 2 NAD+ Triose phosphate dehydrogenase 2 NADH + 2 H+
1, 3-Bisphosphoglycerate 2 ADP Phosphoglycerokinase 2 ATP 3-Phosphoglycerate Phosphoglyceromutase 2-Phosphoglycerate
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LE 9-9b_2 2 NAD+ Triose phosphate dehydrogenase 2 NADH + 2 H+
1, 3-Bisphosphoglycerate 2 ADP Phosphoglycerokinase 2 ATP 3-Phosphoglycerate Phosphoglyceromutase 2-Phosphoglycerate Enolase 2 H2O Phosphoenolpyruvate 2 ADP Pyruvate kinase 2 ATP Pyruvate
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Concept 9.3: The citric acid cycle completes the energy-yielding oxidation of organic molecules
Before the citric acid cycle can begin, pyruvate must be converted to acetyl CoA, which links the cycle to glycolysis
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LE 9-10 CYTOSOL MITOCHONDRION NAD+ NADH + H+ Acetyl Co A Pyruvate CO2 Coenzyme A Transport protein
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Animation: Electron Transport
The citric acid cycle, also called the Krebs cycle, takes place within the mitochondrial matrix The cycle oxidizes organic fuel derived from pyruvate, generating one ATP, 3 NADH, and 1 FADH2 per turn Animation: Electron Transport
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LE 9-11 Pyruvate (from glycolysis, 2 molecules per glucose) CO2 NAD+
Citric acid cycle Oxidation phosphorylation NAD+ CoA NADH ATP ATP ATP + H+ Acetyl CoA CoA CoA Citric acid cycle 2 CO2 FADH2 3 NAD+ FAD 3 NADH + 3 H+ ADP + P i ATP
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The citric acid cycle has eight steps, each catalyzed by a specific enzyme
The acetyl group of acetyl CoA joins the cycle by combining with oxaloacetate, forming citrate The next seven steps decompose the citrate back to oxaloacetate, making the process a cycle The NADH and FADH2 produced by the cycle relay electrons extracted from food to the electron transport chain
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LE 9-12_1 Acetyl CoA Citric acid H2O cycle Oxaloacetate Citrate
Glycolysis ATP Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle H2O Oxaloacetate Citrate Isocitrate
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LE 9-12_2 Citric acid cycle
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LE 9-12_3 Fumarate ATP
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LE 9-12_4 H2O Citrate i
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Concept 9.4: During oxidative phosphorylation, chemiosmosis couples electron transport to ATP synthesis Following glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, NADH and FADH2 account for most of the energy extracted from food These two electron carriers donate electrons to the electron transport chain, which powers ATP synthesis via oxidative phosphorylation
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The Pathway of Electron Transport
The electron transport chain is in the cristae of the mitochondrion Most of the chain’s components are proteins, which exist in multiprotein complexes The carriers alternate reduced and oxidized states as they accept and donate electrons Electrons drop in free energy as they go down the chain and are finally passed to O2, forming water
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LE 9-13 NADH 50 FADH2 Multiprotein complexes 40 I FMN FAD Fe•S Fe•S II
Q III Cyt b Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis Glycolysis Citric acid cycle Fe•S 30 Cyt c1 Free energy (G) relative to O2 (kcal/mol) IV Cyt c Cyt a ATP ATP ATP Cyt a3 20 10 2 H+ + 1/2 O2 H2O
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The electron transport chain generates no ATP
The chain’s function is to break the large free- energy drop from food to O2 into smaller steps that release energy in manageable amounts
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Chemiosmosis: The Energy-Coupling Mechanism
Electron transfer in the electron transport chain causes proteins to pump H+ from the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space H+ then moves back across the membrane, passing through channels in ATP synthase ATP synthase uses the exergonic flow of H+ to drive phosphorylation of ATP This is an example of chemiosmosis, the use of energy in a H+ gradient to drive cellular work
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LE 9-14 INTERMEMBRANE SPACE H+
A rotor within the membrane spins as shown when H+ flows past it down the H+ gradient. H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ A stator anchored in the membrane holds the knob stationary. A rod (or “stalk”) extending into the knob also spins, activating catalytic sites in the knob. H+ Three catalytic sites in the stationary knob join inorganic phosphate to ADP to make ATP. ADP + ATP P i MITOCHONDRAL MATRIX
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Animation: Fermentation Overview
The energy stored in a H+ gradient across a membrane couples the redox reactions of the electron transport chain to ATP synthesis The H+ gradient is referred to as a proton-motive force, emphasizing its capacity to do work Animation: Fermentation Overview
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LE 9-15 Inner mitochondrial membrane H+ H+ H+ H+ Protein complex
Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis Glycolysis ATP ATP ATP H+ H+ H+ H+ Protein complex of electron carriers Cyt c Intermembrane space Q IV I III ATP synthase Inner mitochondrial membrane II 2H+ + 1/2 O2 H2O FADH2 FAD NADH + H+ NAD+ ADP + P ATP i (carrying electrons from food) H+ Mitochondrial matrix Electron transport chain Electron transport and pumping of protons (H+), Which create an H+ gradient across the membrane Chemiosmosis ATP synthesis powered by the flow of H+ back across the membrane Oxidative phosphorylation
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An Accounting of ATP Production by Cellular Respiration
During cellular respiration, most energy flows in this sequence: glucose NADH electron transport chain proton-motive force ATP About 40% of the energy in a glucose molecule is transferred to ATP during cellular respiration, making about 38 ATP
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When respiration oxidizes a molecule of glucose, it produces 6 CO2
4 ATP produced by substrate-level phosphorylation 32 or 34 ATP produced by oxidative phosphorylation Each NADH that transfers a pair of electrons from food to the electron transport chain contributes enough to the proton-motive force to generate about 3 ATP
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Why is this number of ATP so inexact?
Phosphorylation and the redox reactions are not directly coupled, so the ratio of NADH molecules to amount of ATP molecules made is not a whole number (2.5 to 3.3 ATP) Yield varies depending on the type of shuttle used to transport electrons FAD = 2 ATP made NADH = 3 ATP made
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LE 9-16 CYTOSOL Electron shuttles span membrane MITOCHONDRION 2 NADH
or 2 FADH2 2 NADH 2 NADH 6 NADH 2 FADH2 Glycolysis Oxidative phosphorylation: electron transport and chemiosmosis 2 Pyruvate 2 Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle Glucose + 2 ATP + 2 ATP + about 32 or 34 ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation by substrate-level phosphorylation by oxidation phosphorylation, depending on which shuttle transports electrons form NADH in cytosol About 36 or 38 ATP Maximum per glucose:
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Draw the overall equation for cellular respiration. Label each molecule.
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Draw the process of substrate-level phosphorylation
Draw the process of substrate-level phosphorylation. Be sure to label the enzyme, substrates, product, and ATP.
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Draw the process of substrate-level phosphorylation
Draw the process of substrate-level phosphorylation. Be sure to label the enzyme, substrates, product, and ATP. Enzyme Enzyme ADP P Substrate + ATP Product
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What molecule generally starts the beginning of glycolysis?
What is the relationship between glycolysis and oxygen? Name everything that has to go into glycolysis. Name everything that comes out of glycolysis.
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If oxygen is present, where does pyruvate go?
If oxygen is absent, where does pyruvate go?
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What is pyruvate converted to before entering the Krebs cycle?
Draw how this process works.
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What is acetyl CoA combined with at the beginning of the Krebs cycle
What is acetyl CoA combined with at the beginning of the Krebs cycle? What does this produce? Name everything that goes into the citric acid cycle. Name everything that comes out of the citric acid cycle.
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Where do the NADHs and FADH2s from the citric acid cycle go after?
Draw the general outline of the electron transport chain. Be sure to include the path of electrons through the chain and the path of hydrogen ions. Where do these ions cross the membrane again?
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Concept 9.5: Fermentation enables some cells to produce ATP without the use of oxygen
Cellular respiration requires O2 to produce ATP Glycolysis can produce ATP with or without O2 (in aerobic or anaerobic conditions) In the absence of O2, glycolysis couples with fermentation to produce ATP
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Types of Fermentation Fermentation consists of glycolysis plus reactions that regenerate NAD+, which can be reused by glycolysis Two common types are alcohol fermentation and lactic acid fermentation
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In alcohol fermentation, pyruvate is converted to ethanol in two steps, with the first releasing CO2
Alcohol fermentation by yeast is used in brewing, winemaking, and baking Play
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Alcohol fermentation 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP Glucose Glycolysis 2 Pyruvate
LE 9-17a 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP i Glucose Glycolysis 2 Pyruvate 2 NAD+ 2 NADH 2 CO2 + 2 H+ 2 Acetaldehyde 2 Ethanol Alcohol fermentation
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In lactic acid fermentation, pyruvate is reduced to NADH, forming lactate as an end product, with no release of CO2 Lactic acid fermentation by some fungi and bacteria is used to make cheese and yogurt Human muscle cells use lactic acid fermentation to generate ATP when O2 is scarce
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Lactic acid fermentation
LE 9-17b 2 ADP + 2 P 2 ATP i Glucose Glycolysis 2 NAD+ 2 NADH 2 CO2 + 2 H+ 2 Pyruvate 2 Lactate Lactic acid fermentation
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Fermentation and Cellular Respiration Compared
Both processes use glycolysis to oxidize glucose and other organic fuels to pyruvate The processes have different final electron acceptors: an organic molecule (such as pyruvate) in fermentation and O2 in cellular respiration Cellular respiration produces much more ATP
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Yeast and many bacteria are facultative anaerobes, meaning that they can survive using either fermentation or cellular respiration In a facultative anaerobe, pyruvate is a fork in the metabolic road that leads to two alternative catabolic routes
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LE 9-18 Glucose CYTOSOL Pyruvate No O2 present Fermentation O2 present Cellular respiration MITOCHONDRION Ethanol or lactate Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle
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The Evolutionary Significance of Glycolysis
Glycolysis occurs in nearly all organisms Glycolysis probably evolved in ancient prokaryotes before there was oxygen in the atmosphere
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Concept 9.6: Glycolysis and the citric acid cycle connect to many other metabolic pathways
Gycolysis and the citric acid cycle are major intersections to various catabolic and anabolic pathways
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The Versatility of Catabolism
Catabolic pathways funnel electrons from many kinds of organic molecules into cellular respiration Glycolysis accepts a wide range of carbohydrates Proteins must be digested to amino acids; amino groups can feed glycolysis or the citric acid cycle Fats are digested to glycerol (used in glycolysis) and fatty acids (used in generating acetyl CoA) An oxidized gram of fat produces more than twice as much ATP as an oxidized gram of carbohydrate
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LE 9-19 Carbohydrates Fats Amino acids Sugars Glycerol Fatty acids
Proteins Carbohydrates Fats Amino acids Sugars Glycerol Fatty acids Glycolysis Glucose Glyceraldehyde-3- P NH3 Pyruvate Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation
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Biosynthesis (Anabolic Pathways)
The body uses small molecules to build other substances These small molecules may come directly from food, from glycolysis, or from the citric acid cycle
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Regulation of Cellular Respiration via Feedback Mechanisms
Feedback inhibition is the most common mechanism for control If ATP concentration begins to drop, respiration speeds up; when there is plenty of ATP, respiration slows down Control of catabolism is based mainly on regulating the activity of enzymes at strategic points in the catabolic pathway
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Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate
LE 9-20 Glucose AMP Glycolysis Fructose-6-phosphate Stimulates + Phosphofructokinase – – Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate Inhibits Inhibits Pyruvate ATP Citrate Acetyl CoA Citric acid cycle Oxidative phosphorylation
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