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Published byHoward Poole Modified over 9 years ago
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Cellular Respiration Energy Conversion
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Why? Convert energy to forms usable by cells – Chemical bond energy ATP energy – ATP via chemiosmosis; NADH via redox reaction – Electron transport – Electrochemical proton concentration gradient Have store of ATP & NADH molecules available Drive cellular processes – Transportation of metabolites, organelles, etc… – Locomotion of cell – Synthesizing complex molecules
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ATP = adenosine triphosphate Adenosine – Adenine = nitrogenous purine base – Ribose = a cyclic 5-carbon sugar Triphosphate – Phosphate is negatively charged polyatomic ion – Placing phosphates near each other requires work – Energy of electrostatic repulsion is stored in bond – Broken bond releases energy for doing work
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Who? Aerobic bacteria All aerobic eukaryotic organisms – 1000 to 2000 mitochondria in each liver cell – Mitochondria associated with microtubules – May move in cytoplasm or be fixed in location Concentrated in areas of high energy demands Form long chains with each other Wrapped around flagellum Packed between cardiac myofibrils
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Where? Mitochondrion is site of oxidative respiration Mitochondria have double membranes – Inner vs. outer membrane Outer membrane has transport proteins & large pores Inner membrane is selectively permeable; forms cristae Membranes create 2 internal compartments – Matrix is inside organelle Enzyme-rich mixture, mDNA, ribosomes, tRNA, etc… – Intermembrane space is between membranes. Site of ATP synthesis
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When? Begins when large amounts of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA)are produced in the matrix space Major fuel is acetyl CoA from pyruvate usually Stores of fatty acids & glycogen fuel process – Fats are stored in adipose tissue (fuel for 1 month) – Glycogen/ glucose is stored in liver (fuel for 1 day) – Glucose via glycolysis yields pyruvate
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When else? Fats can be broken down into fatty acids and glycerol – Glycerol broken down in glycolysis to pyruvate – Fatty acids broken down into 2-C fragment Proteins can be broken down into amino acids – Certain amino acids can lose NH 3 to form pyruvate – Some amino acids minus NH 3 form 2-C fragment Pyruvate/2-C fragment (acetyl CoA) enters mitochondria for citric acid cycle
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How? Glycolysis – Sugar is broken down into pyruvic acid + 2 ATP Citric acid cycle (Kreb’s cycle) – Acetyl CoA from pyruvate enters cycle – H 2 O supplies extra O 2 & H + – 2 CO 2 + 2 NADH + FADH 2 + 2 GTP exit Electron transport chain – Electrons from NADH move down chain – 26 ATP formed via ATP synthase
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Anaerobic: Step 1 Glycolysis C 6 H 12 O 6 2 C 3 H 3 O 3 - + 2 ATP + 2 NADH (net) Glucose via 9 steps is broken down into 2 pyruvates 3-C Pyruvate 2-C acetyl CoA + CO 2
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Citric Acid Cycle: Step 2 Citric acid cycle (Kreb’s cycle) in matrix Pyruvate Acetyl CoA + CO 2 + NADH Acetyl CoA enters Kreb’s cycle Kreb’s has 8 enzymatic reactions that harvest electrons NAD + accepts electrons NADH carries electrons CO 2 + electrons (NADH + FADH 2 ) + 2 ATP & H + movement are end products
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Electron Transport Chain Oxidative phosphorylation – In inner mitochondrial membrane – Electrons are delivered by NADH – Electrons move down chain of proteins – H + build up in mitochondrial intermembrane space due to movement of electrons ATP synthase is powered by H + movement across membrane 26 ATP are produced ½ O 2 + 2 H + H 2 O {oxygen is final electron acceptor)
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Final Count Glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + 38 ATP
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