Cellular respiration involves the breakdown of glucose and other food molecules within cells to extract energy through a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. Aerobic respiration uses oxygen to fully oxidize glucose through glycolysis, the formation of acetyl-CoA, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain to produce up to 38 ATP molecules. Anaerobic respiration occurs without oxygen through glycolysis and lactic acid fermentation, producing only 2 ATP but faster than aerobic respiration.
Cellular respiration involves the breakdown of glucose and other food molecules within cells to extract energy through a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. Aerobic respiration uses oxygen to fully oxidize glucose through glycolysis, the formation of acetyl-CoA, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain to produce up to 38 ATP molecules. Anaerobic respiration occurs without oxygen through glycolysis and lactic acid fermentation, producing only 2 ATP but faster than aerobic respiration.
•Metabolism is referred to all of the chemicals reactions occuring
within an organism. •Anabolism – synthetic reactions in which small molecules are used to buit bigger molecules, energy requred. •Catabolism – large molecules are broken down to form smaller molecules, energy released is used to synthesis ATP (energy rich molecule) •Chemical reactions occur in series, with the product of one reaction becoming the substrate for the next. Each step requires specific enzyme as it is specific for its particular reaction. Therefore, many enzymes required in chemical reactions, such as in aerobic respiration, at least 50 enzymes required. Aerobic respiration
• The process by which the cells of organisms break down
simple food materials in the presence of oxygen to produce carbon dioxide, water and relatively large amount of energy for their life processes. • Four stages of aerobic respiration; 1. glycolysis 2. Formation of acetyl coenzyme A, 3. Citric acid cycle 4. Electron transport • Glycolysis occur in the cytoplasm, the rest steps take place in mitochondria. • The cells that are most active, such as muscle cells, have many mitochondria within them. Glycolysis
•Splitting sugar – the cell splits the six-carbon
glucose molecule into 2, three-carbon molecules of pyruvic acid •Does not require oxygen, it can proceed under aerobic or anaerobic conditions •2 ATP and 2 NADH are produced •Occur in cytoplasm Formation of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA)
• Each molecule of pyruvic acid passes into matrix of the
mitochondrion where it is degraded to a two carbon fuel molecule (an acetyl group) that combines with coenzyme A, forming acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl CoA). • The carbon removed from pyruvic acid is released as carbon dioxide, hydrogens are also removed and combine with NAD+ to form NADH. • The formation of acetyl CoA is an important intermediate step in the aerobic respiration because it prepares the fuel molecules to enter the citric acid cycle/kreb cycle. • 2 NADH produced Citric acid cycle
• Series of reactions in which the acetyl
portion of acetyl CoA is degraded to CO2, hydrogens are released. • 2CO2, 6NADH, 2FADH2, 2ATP are released • NADH and FADH2 will be converted to ATP in electron transport chain (last step in aerobic respiration) Electron transport
• Chain of several electron transport molecules
• Hydrogens or their electron are passed along chain • Energy released is used to form proton gradient • ATP is synthesized as protons move across the gradient • Oxygen is final electron acceptor • ATP and H2O produced Energy (ATP) Yield from Aerobic Respiration of Glucose
• Net ATP profit from glycolysis 2 ATP
• Also from glycolysis 2 NADH → 4-6 ATP • 2 pyruvid acid to 2 acetyl CoA 2 NADH → 6 ATP • 2 acetyl CoA through citric acid cycle 2 ATP 6 NADH → 18 ATP 2 FADH2 → 4 ATP
TOTAL PRODUCTION = 36-38 ATP
1 NADH = 3 ATP 1 FADH2 = 2 ATP Formation of acetyl CoA and Citric acid cycle Citric acid cycle Formation of acetyl CoA and Citric acid cycle Electron Transport Chain Anaerobic respiration
• Lactic acid fermentation
• Occur in the absence of oxygen • Glucose is only partly broken down, less energy produced (2 ATP) • Glucose → lactic acid + energy • Lactic acid produced is poisonous to the cells, it will be converted to lactate which may be dissolved in the blood and carried to the liver and converted to pyruvate and respired aerobically •Aerobic respiration • glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy
•Anerobic respiration / Lactic acid fermentation
•Glucose lactic acid + energy C6H12O6 2C3H6O3 + energy