8.2 Cellular Respiration
Essential idea: Energy is converted to a usable form in cell respiration
Essential idea: Energy is converted to a usable form in cell respiration
Be able to:
Outline oxidation and reduction reactions in terms of movement of electrons, hydrogen or oxygen atoms.
Define “electron carrier.”
State the name of the electron carrier molecule used in cellular respiration
involves the incomplete breakdown of organic molecules for a small yield of ATP (no oxygen required). Aerobic respiration involves the complete breakdown of organic molecules for a larger yield of ATP (oxygen is required)
Oxidation involves the loss of electrons from an element through the gain of oxygen or the loss of hydrogen.
Reduction involves the gain of electrons through the addition of hydrogen or the loss of an oxygen molecule.
These reactions are called Redox reactions (reduction-oxidation) which are chemical reactions in which atoms have their oxidation number changed.
For example the oxidation of carbon to form CO2 and the reduction of carbon by the addition of hydrogen to yield methane (CH4).
Electron carriers are specific substances that accept and give up electrons
The main electron carrier in cellular respiration is NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide)
During respiration NAD which actually exists as NAD+ accepts 2 electrons and a proton (H+) from the molecule being oxidized (like pyruvate) to form NADH with one extra H+ leftover as a product.
After the electron carriers are reduced they transport their electrons and hydrogens to the ETC, where the opposite reaction occurs (oxidation)
So when NADH is oxidized it donates the electrons and protons to an electron carrier (complex I) in the inner mitochondrial membrane made from conjugated proteins (Fe-S core)
This carrier is therefore reduced and will be re-oxidized as it passes the electrons down the ETC
Be able to:
Define phosphorylation.
State the consequence of a molecule being phosphorylated.
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is a high energy molecule that functions as an immediate power source for cells
Phosphorylation occurs when a phosphate (PO43-) molecule is added to an organic molecule to make the molecule less stable and more likely to react
Phosphorylation basically activates the molecule and is an endergonic reaction
The removal of the phosphate through hydrolysis is an exergonic reaction
The reactions are coupled together and are spontaneous- so one molecule releases the phosphate and one accepts the phosphate molecule.
Be able to:
Outline the glycolysis reaction, including phosphorylation, lysis and energy harvest.
Glycolysis is the process of releasing energy within sugars. In glycolysis, glucose (a six carbon sugar) is split into two molecules of the three-carbon sugar pyruvate. This multi-step process yields two molecules of ATP (free energy containing molecule), two molecules of pyruvate, and two "high energy" electron carrying molecules of NADH. Glycolysis can occur with or without oxygen
Be able to:
State the formula for the glycolysis reaction.
State that glycolysis occurs in both anaerobic and aerobic respiration.
State that glycolysis is an example of a metabolic pathway.
Glycolysis involves the breakdown of glucose into pyruvate (× 2), with a small net gain of ATP (two molecules). This occurs in the cytosol and does not require oxygen (it is an anaerobic process). Phosphorylation of glucose requires 2 ATP molecules. The phosphorylation of molecules makes them less stable.
Depending on the availability of oxygen, the pyruvate may be subjected to one of two alternative processes:
Aerobic respiration occurs in the presence of oxygen and results in the further production of ATP (~ 34 molecules)
Anaerobic respiration (fermentation) occurs in the absence of oxygen and no further ATP is produced
If oxygen is not present, pyruvate is not broken down further and no more ATP is produced (incomplete oxidation). The pyruvate remains in the cytosol and is converted into lactic acid (animals) or ethanol and CO2 (plants and yeast).
This conversion is reversible and is necessary to ensure that glycolysis can continue to produce small quantities of ATP
Glycolysis involves oxidation reactions that cause hydrogen carriers (NAD+) to be reduced (becomes NADH + H+)
Typically, the reduced hydrogen carriers are oxidised via aerobic respiration to restore available stocks of NAD+
In the absence of oxygen, glycolysis will quickly deplete available stocks of NAD+, preventing further glycolysis
Fermentation of pyruvate involves a reduction reaction that oxidises NADH (releasing NAD+ to restore available stocks)
Hence, anaerobic respiration allows small amounts of ATP to be produced (via glycolysis) in the absence of oxygen.
Be able to:
Define decarboxylation and oxidation.
Summarize the reactant and products of the link reaction.
Decarboxylation is a chemical reaction that removes a carboxyl group and releases carbon dioxide (CO2).
Oxidation is the loss of electrons or an increase in oxidation state by a molecule, atom, or ion. Pyruvate is oxidized by the by the removal of pairs of hydrogen atoms (with their electrons), which are passed on the NAD+ and FAD
Link Reaction
Two pyruvate molecules enter the matrix of the mitochondria and are decarboxylated to form two acetyl groups (removal of carbon as CO2).
The acetyl group is oxidized and NAD+ is reduced to form NADH.
Each acetyl group combines with CoA (enzyme) producing 2 Acetyl Coenzyme A molecules.
These products enter the Krebs cycle
Be able to:
State that NADH and FADH2 are electron carriers formed during the Krebs cycle.
Outline the events of the Krebs cycle, referencing the formation of NADH and FADH2, formation of ATP and decarboxylation of acetyl groups.
Each acetyl group enters the Krebs cycle, therefore there are two rotations of the Krebs cycle per glucose molecule. There are two decarboxylations and four oxidations per cycle**
Step 1 - In the first stage of the Krebs cycle, the acetyl group from acetyl CoA is transferred to a four carbon compound. This forms a six carbon compound.
Step 2 - This six carbon compound then undergoes decarboxylation (CO2 is removed) and oxidation (hydrogen is removed) to form a five carbon compound. The hydrogen is accepted by NAD+ and forms NADH + H+.
Step 3 - The five carbon compound undergoes decarboxylation and oxidation (hydrogen is removed) again to form a four carbon compound. The hydrogen is accepted by NAD+ and forms NADH + H+.
Step 4 - The four carbon compound then undergoes substrate-level phosphorylation and during this reaction it produces ATP. Oxidation also occurs twice (2 hydrogens are removed). The one hydrogen is accepted by NAD+ and forms NADH + H+. The other is accepted by FAD and forms FADH2. The four carbon compound is then ready to accept a new acetyl group and the cycle is repeated.
The carbon dioxide that is removed in these reactions is a waste product and is excreted from the body. The oxidations release energy which is then stored by the carriers when they accept the hydrogen. This energy is then later on used by the electron transport chain to produce ATP.
Be able to:
State that NAD+ is reduced to become NADH in the link reaction and Krebs cycle.
State that FAD is reduced to become FADH2 in the Krebs cycle.
State that NADH and FADH2 carry electrons to the electron transport chain on the mitochondrial inner membrane.
Energy released from the oxidation of the acetyl groups is transferred to electron carriers NAD and FAD to form NADH and FADH2. This energy is carried by these two molecules to the cristae of the mitochondria
The energy transferred is used to create ATP through a process called oxidative phosphorylation
Be able to:
State that at the electron transport chain, FADH2 and NADH given electrons to electron carrier proteins.
State that the movement of electrons through electron carrier proteins in the electron transport chain is used to pump protons (H+) across the inner mitochondrial membrane into the intermembrane space.
In the mitochondria, there is a chain of electron carriers, which is best known as the electron transport chain. It is through this chain that electrons from the oxidative reactions before pass along the chain. NADH donates two electrons to the first carrier in the chain. Then, these two electrons go along the chain releasing energy from one carrier to the next. At the third location of the chain, enough energy has been released to produce ATP with the usage of the ATP synthase, which is an enzyme that is found in the inner mitochondrial membrane as well. FADH2 donates electrons but at later stage than NADH. Enough energy is released at only two locations of the chain by electrons from FADH2. The ATP production relies on the released energy by oxidation and it is thus called oxidative phosphorylation
Electron transport chain (ETS):
mitochondrial inner membrane proteins of the cristae form a transport chain for electrons and protons
NADH + H+ arrives at the first carrier and transfers 2 e-s and 1 H+
another H+ is picked up from the matrix solution
the 2 e-s and 2 H+s are carried from the inner to outer face,
where the 2 H+s are deposited in the intermembrane space;
the 2 e-s return, pick up another pair of H+s and repeat the trip 2 more times,
for a total of 3 round trips;
FADH2 enters into the ETS further along,
and thus pumps only 2 pairs of H+s into the intermembrane space
Be able to:
Define oxidative phosphorylation and chemiosmosis.
The chain is a series of electron carriers located in the inner membrane of mitochondria that pass electrons from one carrier to the next down an energy gradient.
NADH supplies 2 electrons to the first carrier in the chain (reforming NAD+). These electrons move along the chain of electron carriers giving up energy each time they pass from one carrier to the next.
FADH2 is also oxidized (forms FAD) releases its electrons a little later into the electron transport chain.
Energy is released as the electrons are passed along the carrier proteins.
This energy is used to pump H+ ions across the inner mitochondrial membrane from the matrix to the inter-membrane space.
This accumulation of H+ ions in the inter membrane space creates an H+concentration gradient.
Protons (H+) flow back from the inter membrane space to the matrix through special protein channels located in the inner mitochondrial membrane called ATP synthase.
As the protons pass across the membrane, they release energy, which is used by the ATP synthase to produce ATP through a phosphorylation reaction.
This process is called oxidative phosphorylation because oxygen is the final electron accepter and the energy released by reducing oxygen to water is used to phosphorylate ADP and generate ATP.
For each glucose molecule, about 32 molecules of ATP are produced.
Be able to:
State that oxygen is the final electron acceptor in aerobic cellular respiration.
State that that formation of water in the matrix at the end of the electron transport chain helps to maintain the hydrogen gradient between the intermembrane space and the matrix.
At the end of the ETC, electrons are given to oxygen. Oxygen accepts hydrogen ions and forms water (known as the terminal acceptor).
If oxygen is not available, electron flow along the ETC stops and NADH + H+cannot be reconverted to NAD+.
Supplies of NAD+ in the mitochondrion run out and the link reaction and Krebs cycle cannot continue.
Glycolysis can continue because conversion of pyruvate into lactate or ethanol and carbon dioxide produces as much NAD+ as is used in glycolysis.
Therefore oxygen is necessary for aerobic respiration to take place.
Also, by using up the hydrogen to form water, the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane is maintained.
Be able to:
Outline how mitochondria structure could evolve through natural selection.
State evidence that suggests mitochondria were once free living prokaryotes.
outer membrane:
impermeable to H+s,
facilitates diffusion of pyruvate,
shuttles 2 e-s from glycolytic NADH + H+ to inside of mitochondrion
inter-membrane space:
low pH = high concentration of H+s from ETS/proton pump
inner membrane:
folded into cristae, increasing SA for ETS and ATP synthetase;
permeable to H+s
matrix:
contains enzymes for oxidative decarboxylation and Krebs cycle
Be able to:
State that electron tomography enables scientists to view the dynamic nature of mitochondrial membranes.
Electron tomography is a technique by which the 3-dimensional internal structure of a sample can be modeled
Used to create a 3-D image of active mitochondria
Show cristea are connected to intermembrane space
Show shape and volume changes of cristae in active mitochondria.
Be able to:
State that decarboxylation of glucose occurs in the linking reaction and Krebs cycle of aerobic respiration.
Aerobic respiration involves the breakdown of glucose in the presence of oxygen to produce water and carbon dioxide
Aerobic respiration involves three main types of reactions – decarboxylation, oxidation and phosphorylation
Be able to:
Draw and label a diagram of the mitochondria.
State the function of the following mitochondrial structures: outer membrane, inner membrane, cristae, intermembrane space, matrix, ribosome and mtDNA.
Electron micrographs of a mitochondrion may differ in appearance depending on where the cross-section occurs
Typically, mitochondrial diagrams should display the following features:
Usually sausage-shaped in appearance (though will appear more rounded in perpendicular cross-sections)
Inner membrane contains many internal protrusions (cristae)
Intermembrane space is very small (allows for a more rapid generation of a proton motive force)
Ribosomes and mitochondrial DNA are usually not visible at standard resolutions and magnifications
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