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Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy
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Is this a process of turning food into energy?
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Rs - Equation C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6 O 2 6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O and energy The energy is released from the chemical bonds in the complex organic molecules.
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Respiration - Preview u The process of releasing Energy from food. u Food - Stored Energy in chemical bonds. u ATP - Useable Energy for cell work.
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Focus of Chapter 1. Purpose - what is the reaction suppose to do? 2. Location - where is it at? 3. Requirements - what is needed to make it run? 4. Products - what does it produce?
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Oxidation - definitions u Loss of electrons. u Loss of energy. u Loss of Hydrogens from Carbons.
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Reduction - definitions u Gain of electrons. u Gain of energy. u Gain of Hydrogens to Carbons. Comment - be careful not to use “reduction” in lay terms.
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Redox reactions
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u Reactions are usually paired or linked together. u Look for these links as we study Rs. u Many of the reactions will be done by phosphorylation
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Phosphorylation u Adding a phosphate group to a molecule. u The phosphate group adds “energy” to the molecule for chemical reactions.
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Phosphorylation
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Cell Respiration - parts 1. Glycolysis 2. Krebs Cycle 3. Electron Transport Chain
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Glycolysis u Glyco- glucose. u -lysis: to split u Universal step in all Rs types. u Likely to earliest type of cell energy processes.
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Glycolysis u Function - To split glucose and produce NADH and ATP. u Location - Cytoplasm.
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Electron Carrier Compounds u Molecules that transport or shuttle electrons within the cell. u Exist it two forms: u Oxidized (ox) u Reduced (red)
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NAD u Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide NAD + + 2 e - NADH NAD + = oxidized form NADH = reduced form
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Glycolysis -Requirements u Glucose u 2 ATP u 4 ADP u 2 NAD +
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Glycolysis - Products u 2 Pyruvic Acids (a 3C acid) u 2 ADP u 4 ATP u 2 NADH
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Net Result u 2 ATP per glucose u 2 NADH
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Movie
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Energy Investment Phase
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Energy Harvest Phase
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Krebs Cycle u Also called: u Citric Acid Cycle u Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle
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Krebs Cycle u Function: Oxidize pyruvic acid to CO 2 u Produce NADH and FADH 2 u Location: Mitochondria matrix
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Movie
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Formation of Acetyl CoA
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Krebs Cycle -Requirements u Pyruvic acid (3C acid) u Coenzyme A u 4 NAD + u 1 ADP u 1 FAD u Double this list for each glucose.
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Krebs Cycle - Products u 3 CO 2 u Acetyl CoA u 4 NADH u 1 ATP u 1 FADH 2 u Double this list for each glucose.
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Krebs Cycle u Produces most of the cell's energy in the form of NADH and FADH 2 u Does NOT require O 2
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Comment u The ATPs produced directly in Krebs Cycle and in Glycolysis are by: u Substrate-level phosphorylation u The Pi group is transferred from a substrate to ADP.
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Electron Transport Chain u ETC or Electron Transport System (ETS). u A collection of proteins that are structurally linked into units.
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ETC u Uses sets of Cytochromes, Fe containing proteins to pass electrons. u The Cytochromes alternate between RED and OX forms and pass electrons down to O 2
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ETC u Function: Convert NADH and FADH 2 into ATP. u Location: Mitochondria cristae.
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ETC - Requirements u NADH or FADH 2 u ADP uO2uO2
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ETC - Products u NAD + and FAD u ATP uH2OuH2O
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Movie
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ETC - ATP Yields u Each NADH -- 3 ATP u Each FADH 2 -- 2 ATP
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Chemiosmotic Hypothesis u ETC energy is used to move H + (protons) across the cristae membrane. u ATP is generated as the H + diffuse back into the matrix.
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ATP Synthase u Uses the flow of H + to make ATP. u Works like an ion pump in reverse, or like a waterwheel under the flow of H + “water”.
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Alcoholic Fermentation u Done by yeast, a kind of fungus.
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Movie
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Alcoholic Fermentation u Uses only Glycolysis. u An incomplete oxidation - energy is still left in the products (alcohol). u Does NOT require O 2 u Produces ATP when O 2 is not available.
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Lactic Acid Fermentation u Uses only Glycolysis. u An incomplete oxidation - energy is still left in the products (lactic acid). u Does NOT require O 2 u Produces ATP when O 2 is not available.
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Movie
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Lactic Acid Fermentation u Done by human muscle cells under oxygen debt. u Lactic Acid is a toxin and causes soreness and stiffness in muscles.
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Fermentation - Summary u Way of using up NADH so Glycolysis can still run. u Provides ATP to a cell even when O 2 is absent.
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Aerobic vs Anaerobic u Aerobic - Rs with O 2 u Anaerobic - Rs without O 2 u Aerobic - All three Rs steps. u Anaerobic - Glycolysis only.
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Strict vs. Facultative u Strict - can only do Rs this one way. u Facultative - can switch Rs types depending on O 2 availability. Ex - yeast
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Question u Since yeast can do both aerobic and anaerobic Rs, which is the better process if given a choice? u Check the ATP yields from both processes.
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ATP yields by Rs type u Anaerobic - Glycolysis only Gets 2 ATPs per glucose. u Aerobic - Glycolysis, Krebs, and ETC. Generates many more ATPs per glucose.
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Aerobic ATP yield u Glycolysis - 2 ATPS, 2 NADHs u Krebs - 2 ATPS, 8 NADHs, 2 FADH 2 u Each NADH = 3 ATP u Each FADH 2 = 2 ATP
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ATP Sum u 10 NADH x 3 = 30 ATPs u 2 FADH 2 x 2 = 4 ATPs u 2 ATPs (Gly) = 2 ATPs u 2 ATPs (Krebs) = 2 ATPs u Max = 38 ATPs per glucose
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However... u Some energy is used in shuttling the NADH from Glycolysis into the mitochondria. u Actual ATP yield ~ 36/glucose
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Yeast u Would rather do aerobic Rs; it has 18x more energy per glucose. u But, anaerobic will keep you alive if oxygen is not present.
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Importance of Rs u Convert food to ATP. u Provides materials for use in other cellular pathways.
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Other Importances of Respiration u Alcohol Industry - almost every society has a fermented beverage. u Baking Industry - many breads use yeast to provide bubbles to raise the dough.
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Matching Sugar Cane Gin Barley Saki Grapes Tequila Juniper Cones Vodka Agave Leaves Beer Rice Wine Potatoes Rum
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Question u Why is the alcohol content of wine always around 12-14%? u Alcohol is toxic and kills the yeast at high concentrations.
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Swiss Cheese u Holes are bubbles of CO 2 from fermentation.
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Summary u Know the 3 main reactions of Rs and the 4 required items for each. u Appreciate the importances of Rs.
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Rs Lab Report u Use data sheet for the three temperatures to make the graph. Show changes as mmHg. This will give you a positive slope.
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Lab Report u Answer the 9 questions. u On #5, use the entire 30 minutes for calculating the rate.
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Osmosis Lab Report u Table 1 & 7 questions u Graph dialysis bag results u Use class data set u Use a best-fit line or a trendline u Answer the 4 questions
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u Graph potato results u Use class data set u Use a best-fit line or a trendline u Answer the 7 questions u Assume the temperature was 22 o C
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