AP Biology - The stages of cellular respiration, Ch. 7
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Nov 04, 2015
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About This Presentation
The stages of cellular respiration
Size: 2.21 MB
Language: en
Added: Nov 04, 2015
Slides: 46 pages
Slide Content
The Stages The Stages
of Cellular of Cellular
RespirationRespiration
Let’s put up the Glycolysis
Poster
Your Goal
•For each stage:
•Know what goes in
•Know what comes out
The 3 Stages
Stage 1 –
GlycolysisGlycolysis –
occurs in the
cytosol
Stage 2 – The The
Citric Acid Citric Acid
CycleCycle (aka
Kreb’s Cycle)
– occurs in
the matrix of
the
mitochondria
Stage 3 – Oxidative Oxidative
phosphorylationphosphorylation – the electron
transport chain and
chemiosmosis – occurs in the
cristae of the mitochondria
Glycolysis
•Glyco = sugar
•Lysis = break
Glycolysis is the first step
This step occurs in the cytosol
In this step, 6-carbon glucose is broken apart
into two 3-carbon molecules called
pyruvate
Glycolysis
Actually a series of 10 reactions that occur
No oxygen is required
No CO
2 is released
Glycolysis
•Step 1 - the endergonic, energy investment
phase
–glucose is take in to cytosol
–2 ATP are used to “kick off” the reaction by
phosphorylating the glucose
–Once the 2 phosphate groups are attached at
either end, the glucose molecule is ready to be
split in ½
Go to your diagram
Glycolysis
•Step 2 – the exergonic, energy payoff phase
–The 3 carbon sugar is oxidized and NADH is formed
•2 Pyruvate molecules are what remains from the original glucose
Go to
your
diagram
Glycolysis Summary
1 glucose 2 pyruvate + 2 water
2 ATP used + 4 ATP formed net gain of 2
ATP
2NAD
+
+ 4 e
-
+ 4 H
+
2 NADH + 2 H
+
Aerobic Glycolysis
•NAD
+
gains a hydrogen and an electron
and becomes NADH
•NADH = an NADH = an electron carrier
‑
electron carrier
‑
•Energy from 1 NADH is enough to make 3
ATP
Glycolysis Summary
•Glycolysis only released a
small amount of the
energy in glucose
•Lots of energy still in the
pyruvate molecules
•If O
2
is available, the
pyruvate will enter the
mitochondria and aerobic
respiration will continue
Can you explain it?
•Where?
•What goes in?
•What is produced?
Let’s put up the formation of
Acetyl-CoA poster
Formation of Acetyl CoA, the linking step Formation of Acetyl CoA, the linking step
between glycolysis and the citric acid cyclebetween glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
•Pyruvate enters the
mitochondria via
active transport
•One CO
2
is broken off
of the pyruvate
•2-carbon compound
that remains is
oxidized to form
acetate, and the
electron released is
used to form NADH
•Coenzyme A is attached to
the acetate by an unstable
bond to form acetyl CoA,
which will enter the citric acid
cycle
Go to
your
diagram
Can you explain it?
•Where?
•What goes in?
•What is produced?
Let’s put up the Citric Acid cycle
poster
The Citric Acid Cycle
•8 steps
•Overall, from each molecule
of pyruvate:
–3 CO
2
released (1 from
conversion of pyruvate to
acetyl CoA, 2 from the citric
acid cycle)
–4 NADH produced (1 from
conversion of pyruvate to
acetyl CoA, 3 from the citric
acid cycle)
–1 FADH
2
produced
–1 ATP produced
The Citric Acid Cycle
For each turn of the cycle, 2 carbons enter
on acetyl CoA, and 2 carbons leave as
CO
2
The Citric Acid Cycle
•The acetyl group of
acetyl CoA joins with
oxaloacetate to form
citrate (the ionized
form of citric acid)
•The next steps break
down citrate back to
oxaloacetate
+
=
Go to
your
diagram
The Citric Acid Cycle Summary
•Each turn of the cycle produces 2 CO
2
, 3
NADH, 1 FADH
2
, 1 ATP
•So for 1 molecule of glucose, it would be 4
CO
2
, 6 NADH, 2 FADH
2
, and 2 ATP
What do we have so far?
For each molecule of glucose take in:
•2 pyruvate
•2 water
•2 ATP
•2 NADH
•2 CO
2
•2 NADH
•4 CO
2
•6 NADH
•2 FADH
2
•2 ATP
•TOTAL energy
yield so far:
•4 ATP
•10 NADH
•2 FADH
2
glycolysis
conversion of
pyruvate to
acetyl CoA
Citric acid
cycle
Powerful
electron
carriers that
will shuttle
the
electrons to
the electron
transport
chain
Oxidative Phosphorylation – the
electron transport chain and
chemiosmosis
•Occurs in the inner
membrane of the
mitochondria –Inner membrane
highly folded into
cristae to make
lots of surface
area for lots of
chemical
reactions
Let’s put up the ETC poster
The Electron Transport Chain
•Made up mostly of
proteins in the
mitochondrial membrane
•Electrons delivered to
the chain by NADH
(delivers electrons to
the top of the chain)
and FADH2 (delivers
electrons to a slightly
lower step on the
chain)
The Electron
Transport Chain
•Electrons are
shuttled down the
chain from one
electron carrier to
the next
•When the electron
carrier accepts
electrons, it is
reduced
•It then becomes
oxidized when it
passes those
electrons to its
neighbor lower down
the chain, which is
more electronegative
and has a greater
affinity for electrons
The Electron Transport Chain
Summary
•No ATPNo ATP produced directly
from the electron transport
chain
•It functions in controlling
the drop in free energy
when electrons “fall” from
glucose to oxygen
•The released energy is
then used to create ATP
through chemiosmosis
Let’s put up the Chemiosmosis
Poster
Chemiosmosis
•All throughout the inner membrane of the
mitochondria are proteins called ATP
synthase
Chemiosmosis
•H+ ions accumulate
during the electron
transport chain
•This creates an ion
gradient across the
membrane
•This ion gradient
provides the energy
to drive the formation
of ATP from ADP by
the enzyme ATP
synthase
Chemiosmosis
•So chemiosmosis = the energy from a
hydrogen ion gradient is used to drive
cellular work, such as the formation of
ATP from ADP
Chemiosmosis
•As hydrogen ions
flow down their
gradient through
the ATP synthase
protein, parts of the
protein spin,
creating energy
that
phosphorylates
ADP to make ATP
Chemiosmosis
•The hydrogen ion
gradient is
maintained by the
electron transport
chain
•The electron
transport chain uses
the energy released
from moving
electrons down the
chain to pump H+
across the
membrane
•This creates a proton-motive
force- potential energy stored
in the ion gradient
•The hydrogen ions then move
back down their gradient,
through the only door open to
them, ATP synthase
Very slow animation Very slow animation
Go to
your
diagram
Cellular Respiration Summary
•1 glucose molecule
30 ATP by NADH
4 ATP by FADH
2
2 ATP by Citric Acid
Cycle
2 ATP by Glycolysis
Total 38 ATP
Cellular Respiration Summary
But…36-38 ATP is the actual total
Slightly less because
1.Ratio of NADH to ATP not a whole number
2.ATP yield varies depending on electron carrier
(FADH used more in brain, NADH used more
in heart & liver)
3.Proton-motive force used to drive other
reactions besides formation of ATP (like pulling
in pyruvate
Cellular Respiration Summary
•Cellular Respiration is ~ 40% efficient at
storing energy from glucose in ATP
•Best efficiency on cars is 25%