aerobic respiration

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Aerobic Respiration SBI4U1

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Aerobic Respiration. SBI4U1. Aerobic Respiration : catabolic pathway that requires oxygen C 6 H 12 O 6 (s) + 6O 2 (g)  6CO 2 (g) + 6H 2 O (l) + energy Plants and animals rely on it to form ATP Obligate anaerobes (organisms that must have oxygen) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Aerobic Respiration

Aerobic RespirationSBI4U1

Page 2: Aerobic Respiration

Aerobic Respiration: catabolic pathway that requires oxygen

C6H12O6 (s) + 6O2 (g) 6CO2 (g) + 6H2O (l) + energy

• Plants and animals rely on it to form ATP– Obligate anaerobes (organisms that must have oxygen)

• Energy from food molecules is transferred to ATP

• Cells use ATP to power endergonic rxns

Page 3: Aerobic Respiration

Goals of Cellular Respiration

1. Break bonds b/t C-atoms in glucose to form 6CO2

2. Move H atom electrons from glucose to oxygen, to form 6H2O

3. Trap free energy released in the process in form of ATP

Page 4: Aerobic Respiration

C6H12O6 (s) + 6O2 (g) 6CO2 (g) + 6H2O (l) + energy

• Cellular respiration decreases potential energy and increases entropy

• Yields 2870kJ of free energy per mol of glucose

• ΔG = -2870 kJ per mol of glucose

Page 5: Aerobic Respiration

4 Steps in Cellular Respiration

1. Glycolysis (cytoplasm, 10 steps)

2. Pyruvate Oxidation (mitochondrial matrix, 1 step)

3. Krebs Cycle (mitochondrial matrix, 8 steps)

4. Oxidative Phosphorylation/Electron Transport Chain (cristae, most ATP generation)

Page 6: Aerobic Respiration

#1

#2#3

#4

Page 7: Aerobic Respiration

Glycolysis• glykos = sweet, lysis = splitting• Breaks down glucose into 2 molecules of

pyruvate • There are two stages (each w/ 5 steps, 10 total)• Does not require oxygen (essential anaerobic)

Animation: http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072507470/student_view0/chapter25/animation__how_glycolysis_works.html

Page 8: Aerobic Respiration

1st Stage: Glucose Split into Two1. Phosphorylation of

glucose by ATP2-3. Molecule is rearranged

and 2nd ATP phosphorylation

4-5. 6-C molecule split into two 3-C molecules• One glyceraldehyde 3-

phosphate (G3P) and one that will be converted later

Page 9: Aerobic Respiration

2nd Stage: Forms Pyruvate6. Oxidation then

phosphorylation to produce NADH to 2 BPG (NAD+ reduced)

7. 2 ADP removes high energy phosphates, leaving 2 3PG molecules

8-9. H2O removed leaving 2 PEP molecules

10. 2 ADP removes high energy phosphates, leaving 2 pyruvate molecules

Page 10: Aerobic Respiration

ReactantsC6H12O6

2 NAD+

2 ADP2 Pi

Products2 C3H4O3 (pyruvate)

2 NADH + H+

2 ATP (net)2 H2O

Net Reaction for Glycolysis:

Glucose + 2 NAD+ + 2 ADP + 2Pi 2 pyruvate + 2H2O + 2NADH + 2ATP

Animation (one more time!): http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072507470/student_view0/chapter25/animation__how_glycolysis_works.html

Page 11: Aerobic Respiration

Pyruvate Oxidation• Carboxyl group removed from pyruvate as CO2

• C2 fragment is oxidized into acetic acid (as NAD+ is reduced to NADH)

• Coenzyme A (a sulfur containing vitamin B derivative) forms an unstable bond with acetic acid

• Two molecules of Acetly-CoA and NADH produced

Page 12: Aerobic Respiration

Acetyl CoA• Acetyl CoA is a

pivotal molecule in cellular metabolism

• Most molecules used to provide an organism with energy are converted to acetyl CoA(reversible)

Page 13: Aerobic Respiration

Krebs Cycle

• A.k.a. Citric Acid Cycle• Cyclic metabolic pathway• Acetyl CoA is oxidized to CO2

• Regenerates compound that picks up more acetyl CoA

• Converts released energy to ATP, NADH, and FADH2

Page 14: Aerobic Respiration

For each turn of the cycle:– 2 C atoms enter as

acetyl group and 2 C leave as CO2

– much of acetyl group’s energy is transferred as high energy electrons to reduce 3NAD+ → 3NADH and 1 FAD → 1 FADH2

Page 15: Aerobic Respiration

– some of acetyl group’s energy is used in the substrate level phosphorylation of 1 ADP → 1ATP

– for each glucose molecule oxidized 2 acetyl CoA are produced

– there are 2 turns of the Kreb’s cycle for each 1 glucose

Page 16: Aerobic Respiration

Reactants2 acetyl CoA2 oxaloacetate6 NAD+

2 ADP2 FAD2 Pi

Products2 CoA4 CO2

2 oxaloacetate6 NADH 6 H+

2 FADH2

2 ATP (net)

Reactants and Products of the Krebs Cycle:

Animation:http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072507470/student_view0/chapter25/animation__how_the_krebs_cycle_works__quiz_1_.html

Page 17: Aerobic Respiration

Oxidative Phosphorylation• During glycolysis and 2 rounds of the Krebs

cycle carbon from glucose CO2

• Very few ATP molecules have been produced at this point

• Energy is in NADH and FADH2

• Oxygen is used here to produce majority of ATP

Animation: http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olcweb/cgi/pluginpop.cgi?it=swf::525::530::/sites/dl/free/0072464631/291136/electron_transport.swf::electron_transport.swf

Page 18: Aerobic Respiration

Electron Transport Chain (ETC)• System of enzymes

(with cofactors) embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane

• Enzymes pass electrons from NADH and FADH2 to O2 in a series of redox reactions

Page 19: Aerobic Respiration

• Each component of the ETC is more electronegative than the previous

• Final electron acceptor, O2, is one of the most electronegative substances on earth

Page 20: Aerobic Respiration

•Electron transfer from NADH to O2 is highly exergonic•Intermediate steps help release the energy in manageable amounts to accommodate the change in energy form

Page 21: Aerobic Respiration

•FADH2 enters the ETC after the first part of the

multi-enzyme complex•Therefore yields 1/3 less energy

Page 22: Aerobic Respiration

• NADH from cytosol cannot move into the mitochondrial matrix

• Electrons must be shuttled, usually via an FADH2 • Therefore usually yields 1/3 less energy then NADH

produced in the mitochondrial matrix

Page 24: Aerobic Respiration

Chemiosmosis

• H+ ions pumped using energy released in the electron cascade through the ETC

• Creates a high [H+] in the inner membrane space• This gradient drives phosphorylation of ADP ATP

Page 25: Aerobic Respiration
Page 26: Aerobic Respiration

ATP Synthase

• ATP is formed (oxidative phosphorylation)

• As the H+ re-enter the matrix through special protein channels that are coupled with ATP synthase

Page 27: Aerobic Respiration

Yield of ATP from Aerobic Respiration

• It is possible to generate 36 or 38 molecules of ATP from one glucose molecule– 38 for prokaryotes b/c they do not need to use 2 ATP

transport NADH from glycolysis across mitochondrial membrane

• These #’s are theoretical• Experimental yields are lower. Why?

(read text for reasons to account for lower values)

Page 28: Aerobic Respiration
Page 29: Aerobic Respiration

Interconnections of Metabolic Pathways

Humans eat more than just glucose. So what happens to the other molecules?

• Compounds from all nutrients can be broken down

• They can enter glycolysis and the Krebs cycle– E.g. Glycerol from fatty acids can be converted to G3P– E.g. Amino acid alanine is directly converted to

pyruvate

Page 30: Aerobic Respiration
Page 31: Aerobic Respiration

Things You Should Know...

• Aerobic respiration• 4 stages in respiration– Know where they occur– Know the basic steps (not all intermediates, but

major molecules)– Know electron carriers (NAD+ and FAD)– Reactants/products for each (esp. ATP)

• Examples of common intermediates between fat, carbohydrates, protein and stages in respiration.