Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Cellular Respiration. 2005-2006 How do we harvest energy from fuels? Digest large molecules into smaller ones – break bonds & move electrons from one.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Cellular Respiration. 2005-2006 How do we harvest energy from fuels? Digest large molecules into smaller ones – break bonds & move electrons from one."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cellular Respiration

2 2005-2006 How do we harvest energy from fuels? Digest large molecules into smaller ones – break bonds & move electrons from one molecule to another as electrons move they carry energy with them that energy is stored in another bond, released as heat, or harvested to make ATP + e-e- + e-e- +– loses e-gains e-oxidizedreduced oxidationreduction

3 2005-2006 How do we move electrons in biology? Moving electrons – in living systems, electrons do not move alone electrons move as part of H atom + H + H +– loses e-gains e-oxidizedreduced oxidationreduction C 6 H 12 O 6 6O 2 6CO 2 6H 2 OATP  +++ oxidation reduction H

4 2005-2006 Moving electrons in respiration Electron carriers move electrons by shuttling H atoms around – NAD +  NADH (reduced) – FAD +2  FADH 2 (reduced) + H reduction oxidation P O–O– O–O– O –O–O P O–O– O–O– O –O–O C C O NH 2 N+N+ H adenine ribose sugar phosphates NAD nicotinamide Vitamin B3 P O–O– O–O– O –O–O P O–O– O–O– O –O–O C C O NH 2 N+N+ H H NADH stores energy as a reduced molecule reducing power!

5 2005-2006 Coupling oxidation & reduction Redox reactions in respiration – release energy as breakdown molecules break C-C bonds strip off electrons from C-H bonds by removing H atoms – C 6 H 12 O 6  CO 2 = fuel has been oxidized electrons attracted to more electronegative atoms – in biology, the most electronegative atom? – O 2  H 2 O = oxygen has been reduced release energy to synthesize ATP C 6 H 12 O 6 6O 2 6CO 2 6H 2 OATP  +++ oxidation reduction  O2 O2

6 Oxidation & reduction Oxidation – adding O – removing H – loss of electrons – releases energy – exergonic Reduction – removing O – adding H – gain of electrons – stores energy – endergonic C 6 H 12 O 6 6O 2 6CO 2 6H 2 OATP  +++ oxidation reduction

7 Cellular Respiration Overview

8 Three Parts 1. Glycolysis 2. Krebs Cycle 3. Electron Transport Chain (Oxidative Phosphorylation)

9 Glycolysis In glycolysis, a glucose molecule is broken in half to produce 2 pyruvate molecules This process actually needs energy and 2 ATPs are used 4 ATPs are made by breaking the bonds in glucose so we have a net gain of 2 ATPs

10 Glycolysis Glycolysis happens in the cytoplasm It is the most ancient form of energy capture It is the starting point for cellular respiration

11 Glycolysis Input: Glucose Output: 2 Pyruvates, 2 ATPs

12 Pyruvate is a branching point Pyruvate O2O2 O2O2 Kreb’s cycle mitochondria fermentation

13 For today… we are going to focus on what happens when oxygen is present This is called aerobic respiration

14 Krebs Cycle Pyruvate is oxidized into Acetyl-CoA Acetyl-CoA is a 2 carbon molecule that then goes through the Krebs cycle and is converted into multiple other compounds – The first compound made is citrate As these new carbon compounds are made CO2 is released, NADH is made, and FADH2 is made At the end of the cycle oxaloacetate is made which can then combine with pyruvate to create another molecule of citrate starting the cycle again

15 Krebs Cycle

16 Input: Pyruvate Output: NADH, FADH2, CO2, ATP

17 So why the Krebs cycle? If the yield is only 2 ATP, then why? – value of NADH & FADH 2 electron carriers reduced molecules store energy! to be used in the Electron Transport Chain

18 ATP accounting so far… Glycolysis  2 ATP Kreb’s cycle  2 ATP Life takes a lot of energy to run, need to extract more energy than 4 ATP! Why stop here…

19 Electron Transport Chain

20 2005-2006 PGAL Glycolysis Kreb’s cycle 2 NADH 8 NADH 2 FADH 2 Remember the NADH?

21 Electron Transport Chain or Chemiosmosis NADH passes electrons to ETC – H cleaved off NADH & FADH 2 – electrons stripped from H atoms  H + (H ions) – electrons passed from one electron carrier to next in mitochondrial membrane (ETC) – transport proteins in membrane pump H + across inner membrane to intermembrane space

22 2005-2006 Electrons flow downhill Electrons move in steps from carrier to carrier downhill to O 2 – each carrier more electronegative – controlled oxidation – controlled release of energy

23 2005-2006 Why the build up H + ? ATP synthase – enzyme in inner membrane of mitochondria ADP + P i  ATP – only channel permeable to H + – H + flow down concentration gradient = provides energy for ATP synthesis molecular power generator! flow like water over water wheel flowing H+ cause change in shape of ATP synthase enzyme powers bonding of P i to ADP “proton-motive” force

24 2005-2006 Cellular respiration

25 Summary of cellular respiration Where did the glucose come from? Where did the O 2 come from? Where did the CO 2 come from? Where did the H 2 O come from? Where did the ATP come from? What else is produced that is not listed in this equation? Why do we breathe? C 6 H 12 O 6 6O 2 6CO 2 6H 2 O~36 ATP  +++

26 Taking it beyond… What is the final electron acceptor in electron transport chain? O2O2  So what happens if O 2 unavailable?  ETC backs up  ATP production ceases  cells run out of energy  and you die!


Download ppt "Cellular Respiration. 2005-2006 How do we harvest energy from fuels? Digest large molecules into smaller ones – break bonds & move electrons from one."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google