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Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise...

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Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration
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Page 1: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration

Page 2: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Chemical Energy and Food

A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C– 1g of glucose releases 3811

calories 1 Calorie (capital “C”) on

food labels is actually a kilocalorie (1000 calories)– 1g of glucose releases

3.811 Calories

Page 3: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 4: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 5: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 6: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Using Chemical Energy

Plants and animals both use glucose for metabolic fuel

Glucose is not directly usable– Must be converted into ATP

first

Page 7: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Cellular Respiration Overview

Converts glucose into ATP Occurs in both plants and

animals Cellular Respiration

Reaction:– C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

Opposite of photosynthesis- 6CO2 + 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2

Page 8: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 9: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Glycolysis

Series of reactions which break a 6-carbon glucose molecule into two 3-carbon molecules called pyruvic acid (a.k.a. pyruvate)

Occurs in the cytoplasm

Glucose

to electron transport chain

2 Pyruvate2 G3P

Page 10: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Glycolysis

Process is ancient – all organisms from simple bacteria to humans perform

it the same way Yields 2 ATP and 2 NADH per glucose molecule

Glucose

to electron transport chain

2 Pyruvate2 G3P

Page 11: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Glycolysis

Overview: Glucose is converted

into 2 pyruvic acid molecules– A.K.A. pyruvate

Pyruvic acid is a reactant in the Krebs Cycle

Page 12: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Glycolysis

Step 1: The cell invests 2 ATP

to convert glucose 2 G3P

Page 13: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Glycolysis

Step 2: 4 ATP molecules are

produced from the conversion of 2 G3P 2 pyruvic acid

2 NADH molecules are produced– Used in E.T.C.

Page 15: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 16: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 17: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Aerobic Cellular Respiration

Oxygen required = aerobic 2 more sets of reactions which occur in a

specialized organelles called mitochondria1. The Krebs Cycle

2. The Electron Transport Chain

Page 18: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 19: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

The Krebs Cycle

AKA The Citric Acid Cycle Completes the breakdown of glucose

– Carbon and oxygen atoms end up in CO2 and H2O, respectively

Produces only 2 more ATP – but produces electron carriers NADH and FADH2

which move to the 3rd stage (The Electron Transport Chain)

Page 20: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

The Krebs Cycle

Citric Acid Production

Page 21: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

The Krebs Cycle

Products (per glucose): 6 CO2

2 ATP 8 NADH 2 FADH2

to E.T.C.

Page 23: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 24: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 25: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Electron Transport Chain

Powered by electron carriers from the Kreb’s Cycle

Produces a total of 32 ATP Water is formed when oxygen combines with

protons

Page 26: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

The Electron Transport Chain

Electron Transport

Hydrogen Ion Movement

ATP Production

ATP synthase

H+ Diffusion

Intermembrane

Space

Inner Membrane

Mitochondrial Matrix

H+ Active Transport

Page 27: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 28: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Energy Tally

36 ATP for aerobic vs. 2 ATP for anaerobic

– Glycolysis 2 ATP

– Krebs 2 ATP

– Electron Transport Chain 32 ATP 36 ATP

Anaerobic organisms can’t be too energetic but are important for global recycling of carbon

Page 29: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 30: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 31: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 32: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.
Page 33: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Anaerobic Cellular Respiration

Also called fermentation Some organisms thrive in environments with little or no

oxygen– Marshes, bogs, digestive tracts, sewage treatment tanks, etc.

No oxygen used = anaerobic Results in no more ATP

– The final steps in these pathways serve ONLY to regenerate NAD+ so it can keep glycolysis running

End products such as ethanol and CO2 (yeast in beer/bread) or lactic acid (muscle cells)

Page 34: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Fermentation Overview

Page 35: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Alcoholic Fermentation

Used by yeasts and other microorganisms Produces carbon dioxide and ethanol Used to make bread and alcoholic drinks (beer, wine,

etc.)

Page 36: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Lactic Acid Fermentation

Used by both unicellular and multicellular organisms Lactic acid buildup in muscles causes a burning sensation Used in the production of sour cream, cheese, yogurt, and

many other foods & beverages

Glucose Pyruvic Acid Lactic Acid

Page 37: Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration. Chemical Energy and Food A calorie is the energy required to raise 1g of water 1˚C – 1g of glucose releases 3811 calories.

Fermentation Overview


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