Cellular Respiration CHAPTER 9

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Cellular Respiration CHAPTER 9. Houses epiglottis. How do our bodies burn glucose for energy?. One gram of glucose when burned in the presence of oxygen releases 3811 calories of heat energy. calorie. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Cellular RespirationCHAPTER 9

INTRO

• Fast and slow twitch muscles

What kind of runner are you?

• SLOW-TWITCH

• LONG DISTANCE RUNNING

• for repeated long contractions

• FAST-TWITCH

• SPRINTING or WEIGHT LIFTING

• Contract more quickly and powerfully

What makes these muscle fibers so different?

• SLOW TWITCH

• breaks down glucose to get ATP AEROBICALLY (using oxygen)

• FAST TWITCH

• breaks down glucose to get ATP ANAEROBICALLY(not using oxygen)

SLOW-TWITCH MUSCLES

• 1. Thin fibers• 2. have many

mitochondria• Many

myoglobin (lots of hemoglobin in muscle fibers)

FAST-TWITCH MUSCLES

• Thicker fibers

• Fewer mitochondria

• Less myoglobin

• (white meat)

• Chickens use their legs (red meat) for walking and standing for large periods of time,

• while their wings (white meat) are used for brief bursts of activity

Video of Fast and Slow-Twitch Muscles

• Teachers' Domain: The Powerhouse of the Cell

Big Question for Chapter 9

• How do our cells obtain O2

for cellular respiration and dispose of CO2?

• Respiratory System

Respiratory System

• Air intake

Nose

1. mouth

2. Larynx (Voice Box)

• Sound production

• Protection of trachea

Houses epiglottis

3. Vocal chords

• Flaps that vibrate as air goes past them.

• larynx video

4. Trachea

Windpipe

20 rings of

cartilage

5. Right Lung-shorter, broader, larger than left lung

• CT Scan

• X-ray Exchange air rich in CO2

with air rich in O2

6. Bronchioles

• Small branches of airways in lungs

Note Blood Vessel and Bronchiole and Alveoli Closeness

7. Alveoli

• Grape-like clusters of air sacs that exchange with blood vessels carbon dioxide and oxygen

How the Lungs Work - What

Happens When You Breathe Video -

About.com

8. Bronchi

• Large air tubes branch from trachea to lungs

9. Esophagus

• Tube that connects pharynx with stomach

• Glands in it produce mucus to help food slide down

10. Epiglottis

• Flap to control food from going to lungs Swallowing Animation

11. Pharynx

• Throat

• Propels food when swallowing into esophagus

12. Left Lung

• See collapse of left lung

• Smaller due to being on the same side as the heart

Diaphragm

• Muscle at base of lungs to move air in and out of lungs

• How do our bodies burn glucose for energy?

• One gram of glucose when burned in the presence of oxygen releases 3811 calories of heat energy.

calorie

• Amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water one degree Celsius.

Calorie

• Calorie = 1000 calories

• = 1 kilocalorie

Calories on food labels are actually

kilocalories

• How does the amount of energy released in glycolysis compare to burning one gram of glucose?

• Small amount (around 3.5% the amount from burning)

• So….. 3811 X 3.5% =• 133.4 calories

Cellular Respiration

• 1. Glycolysis

• 2. Krebs cycle

• 3. ETC and chemiosmosis

Cellular Respiration

• C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O + ~38 ATP

• Glucose + oxygen --> carbon+ water +energy• dioxide

 

In the mitochondrion

Glycolysis Animation: How Glycolysis Works

glucose

Pyruvic acid

Starts with 2 ATP

Makes 4 ATP

Nets: 2 ATP

NAD+

• An electron carrier• Nicotinamide adenine

dinucleotide• Accepts electrons (H+)

to form NADH

e-

e-

Electron Carrier

• A.k.a. “hydrogen carrier”

• Electron taxi cab NADH

(full)

NAD+(empty)

e-

NAD+ NADHe- carrier

Glycolysis is Anaerobic

• Without oxygen

oxygen

Only catch...

• NAD+ is used up in glycolysis

• So a cell needs a way to regenerate it (to keep glycolysis going)

How does NADH regenerate back to NAD+?

• The process of fermentation.

• It loses the electrons of NADH to form NAD+ again.

• Remember the yeast lab?

Sing or Simulate

• Glucose, Glucose SONG

• See Teacher Tube

END OF GLYCOLYSIS

• How much of the energy in glucose is still unused?

• 90% Doesn’t seem very efficient, does it?

Now What, Pyruvic Acid?

• Fermentation

• Anaerobic – no oxygen

• In cytoplasm

• Krebs Cycle

• Aerobic –needs oxygen

• In mitochondria

OK, if you are yeast...

• Making

2 ATP from glycolysis is enough

Yeast Acting on Pyruvic Acid

• Ethanol is released as a waste product O

o

o

o

NAD+

CO2

Alcoholic Fermentation

• Pyruvic acid + NADH alcohol + CO2 + NAD+

Lactic Acid in Bacteria

• Used in dairy industry to make cheese and yogurt

Lactic Acid Fermentation

• Pyruvic acid + NADH lactic acid + NAD+

Why must oxygen be kept out of the wine and beer vats?

• If oxygen is present, the pyruvic acid will make CO2 and water.

• If oxygen is not present, yeast and bacteria will make ethanol and CO2.

CONTRAST

• ANAEROBIC

• Does not use oxygen

• In the cytoplasm

EX: Glycolysis

Fermentation

• AEROBIC

• Uses oxygen

• In the mitochondrion

• EX: Krebs cycle

ETC and chemiosmosis

#3 CONTRAST

• Respiration• Really mean

breathing• Means of getting

oxygen into body and carbon dioxide out

• Cellular Respiration

• energy-releasing pathway within the cell (mitochondrion)

#4 Pyruvic Acid (Pyruvate)

In order to further break down pyruvic acid we need

oxygen.

2 2 34

Cytoplasm

CO2 CO2

#5 Mitochondrion

• Organelle that can use oxygen for cellular respiration.

“Grooming” Pyruvic Acid Haircut and Conditioning

“HAIRCUT”

As NADH is reduced to NAD+

pyruvic acid is oxidized (carbon atom removed as CO2)

“CONDITIONING”

Coenzyme A (from B vitamin) joins the 2-c fragment

MAKES-Acetyl Coenzyme

A or CoA

#6

#7

Cut, Groom and Krebs Cycle Animation

• krebstca

• animation

Ready to GO

• The Acetyl-CoA is now ready to enter the Krebs cycle

Hans Krebs (1900-1981)Yeah, he got a Nobel Prize, too

#4- #8 Krebs Cycle

• Also known as “citric acid cycle”

#9

Cellular Respiration

• Respiration animation

• Cellular respiration

CONTRAST

• AEROBIC

• Does use oxygen

Glycolysis

Fermentation

• ANAEROBIC

• Does not oxygen

• In the mitochondrion

• Krebs cycle

• ETC and chemiosmosis

Where does it all come from?

•1 NADH = 3 ATP

•1 FADH2 = 2 ATP

ChemiosmosisPowers Most of ATP Produced

• Glycolysis -2 ATP

• Krebs Cycle - 2 ATP

• Chemiosmosis/ ETC - 34 ATP

• TOTAL 38 ATP from one glucose molecule

ETC

• Electron Transport Chain

• VCAC: Cellular Processes: Electron Transport Chain

• Or krebstca

Where is the ETC located?

• Inner membrane of the mitochondrion

What gets made via the ETC?

• 1. electrons + H+ + Oxygen = water

• 2. H+ ions go across the inner membrane and build up in the inner membrane space

• H+ ions go through ATP synthase to generate ATP

e-e- e-

ATP ADP + P

e-

ATP SYNTHASE

• H+ ions move through this enzyme to generate energy for P to join ADP to make ADP

Chemiosmosis and ETC

• H+ ions can only pass through a special port ATP synthase (see knobs on cristae)

ETC Animation

• Krebstca (clear, nice animation)

• Electron transport system (very simple)

• VCAC: Cellular Processes: Electron Transport Chain click on THE MOVIE)

• ETC (nice from McGraw Hill)

ATP GRAND TOTALS

• Glycolysis produces 2 ATP• Krebs cycle produces 2 ATP• ETC and chemiosmosis produces 34 ATP

GRAND TOTAL 38 ATP from one glucose molecule

CONTRAST CHART

• Photosynthesis• Makes sugars for

food energy• Chloroplast• React: CO2 and H2O• Prod: C6H12O6 and O2

• EQUATION:

6 CO2 and 6 H2O

6 O2 + C6H12O6

• Cellular Respiration• Energy released

• Mitochondrion• C6H12O6 and O2

• CO2 and H2O• EQUATION:• 6 O2 + C6H12O6 6

CO2 and 6 H2O