Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections,: Lecture by Edward J. Zalisko
Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections,: Lecture by Edward J. Zalisko
Learning outcomes
1. Explain how cellular respiration is necessary to
provide energy that is required to sustain your life
2. Explain why breathing is necessary to support
cellular respiration
3. Describe how cellular respiration produces energy
that can be stored in ATP
4. Explain why ATP is required for human activities
5. List and describe the three main stages of cellular
respiration
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Learning outcomes
6. Describe useful applications of poisons that
interrupt critical steps in cellular respiration
7. Compare respiration and fermentation
8. Describe useful applications of poisons that
interrupt critical steps in cellular respiration
Cellular Respiration:
Aerobic Harvesting
of Energy
Fermentation: Anaerobic
Harvesting of Energy
Stages of Cellular
Respiration
Connections Between
Metabolic Pathways
Cellular Respiration:
Aerobic Harvesting
of Energy
Stages of Cellular
Respiration
Glycolysis
Citric acid cycle
Oxidative
phosphorylation
Introduction
In eukaryotes, cellular respiration
harvests energy from food,
yields large amounts of ATP, and
uses ATP to drive cellular work.
Breakdown of sugars
and other food
molecules in the
presence of oxygen
to carbon dioxide,
generating ATP
Inner and
outer
membranes
Granum
Chloroplast
Stroma
Thylakoid
Mitochondrion
Outer
membrane
Intermembrane
space
Inner
membrane
Cristae
Matrix
The mitochondrion
Sunlight energy
ECOSYSTEM
Photosynthesis
in chloroplasts
CO2
Glucose
H2O
O2
Cellular respiration
in mitochondria
(for cellular
work)
ATP
Heat energy
O2
Breathing
In breathing, CO2
and O2 are
exchanged between
your lungs and the
air.
CO2
Lungs
CO2
Bloodstream
O2
In cellular
respiration, cells
use O2 obtained
through breathing
to break down fuel,
releasing CO2 as
waste product
C6H12O6
Glucose
Oxygen
O2
6 CO2
Carbon
dioxide
H2 O
ATP
Water
Heat
Activity
979
Dancing (fast)
510
490
Swimming (2 mph)
408
Walking (4 mph)
341
Walking (3 mph)
245
Dancing (slow)
Driving a car
Sitting (writing)
204
61
28
Redox
Reduction
Addition of e- / H atoms
Oxidation
Loss of e- / H atoms
6 O2
6 CO2
6 H2O
ATP
Heat
of hydrogen atoms
6.5 CellsLoss
tap
energy from electrons falling
(becomes oxidized)
from organic fuels to oxygen
C6H12O6
6 O2
CO2
H2O
ATP
Heat
Glucose
A cellular respiration
equation
is
helpful
to
show
the
Gain of hydrogen atoms
(becomes
changes in hydrogen
atom reduced)
distribution.
Glucose
loses its hydrogen atoms and
becomes oxidized to CO2.
Oxygen
gains hydrogen atoms and
becomes reduced to H2O.
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Becomes oxidized
NAD
2H
2 H
Becomes reduced
2
2H
NADH
(carries
2 electrons)
NADH transfers e
to ETC
NADH
NAD
ATP
2
Controlled
release of
energy for
synthesis
of ATP
H
El
ec
t
ro
n
tr
an
sp
or
tc
e carrier
molecules
ha
in
Final e
acceptor
2
1 O
2 2
2 H
H2O
STAGES OF CELLULAR
RESPIRATION
CYTOPLASM
NADH
Electrons
carried by NADH
Glycolysis
Pyruvate
Glucose
Pyruvate
Oxidation
NADH
Citric Acid
Cycle
FADH2
Oxidative
Phosphorylation
(electron transport
and chemiosmosis)
Mitochondrion
ATP
ATP
ATP
Substrate-level
phosphorylation
Substrate-level
phosphorylation
Oxidative
phosphorylation
Glucose
2 ADP
2 NAD
2 P
2 NADH
2
ATP
2 Pyruvate
2 H
NADH
CoA
Pyruvate
Acetyl coenzyme A
CO2
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Coenzyme A
Acetyl CoA
CoA
CoA
2 CO2
3 NAD+
FADH2
3 NADH
FAD
3 H+
ATP
ADP + P
H
H
H Mobile
electron
carriers
Protein
complex
of electron
carriers
H
H
H
III
H ATP
synthase
IV
I
II
FADH2
Electron
flow
NADH
NAD
FAD
2 H
1
O
2 2
H2O
H
ADP
ATP
H
Chemiosmosis
H
Intermembrane
space
H
H
Protein
complex
of electron
carriers
H
H
Mobile
electron
carriers
H ATP
synthase
IV
I
II
FADH2
Electron
flow
NADH
Mitochondrial
matrix
H
III
Inner mitochondrial
membrane
NAD
FAD
2 H
1
2 O2
H2O
H
ADP
ATP
H
Chemiosmosis
Summary
CYTOPLASM
NADH
Electrons
carried by NADH
Glycolysis
Glucose
Pyruvate
Pyruvate
Oxidation
NADH
Citric Acid
Cycle
FADH2
Oxidative
Phosphorylation
(electron transport
and chemiosmosis)
Mitochondrion
ATP
Substrate-level
phosphorylation
ATP
Substrate-level
phosphorylation
ATP
Oxidative
phosphorylation
Rotenone
NADH
H
ATP
synthase
H H H
FAD
1
O
2 2
H2O
2 H
ADP
ATP
Cyanide,
carbon monoxide
H
H
ATP
synthase
DNP
FADH2
NAD
NADH
H
FAD
1
O
2 2
H2O
2 H
ADP
ATP
H
H
Blocks passage
Cyanide,
of H+
carbon monoxide
though channel in ATP
H
synthase
H H H
Used on skin to fight
fungal infections
NAD
NADH
H
ATP
synthase
FADH2
Oligomycin
FAD
1
O
2 2
H2O
2 H
ADP
ATP
H
H H H
ATP
synthase
DNP
FADH2
NAD
NADH
H
FAD
H2O
ATP
FERMENTATION:
ANAEROBIC HARVESTING
OF ENERGY
2 ATP
Glucose
2 NAD
2 NADH
2 ADP
2 P
2 ATP
2 Pyruvate
Glycolysis
2 ADP
2 P
Glycolysis
Glucose
2 NAD
2 NADH
2 Pyruvate
2 NADH
2 NADH
2 CO2
2 NAD
2 Lactate
2 NAD
2 Ethanol
Alcohol fermentation
Glucose
2 P
2 ATP
Glycolysis
2 NADH
2 Pyruvate
2 NADH
2 Lactate
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2 ADP
2 P
2 ATP
2 NAD
2 NADH
2 Pyruvate
Glycolysis
Glucose
6.13 Fermentation enables cells to produce
ATP
without oxygen
2 NADH
2 CO2
2 NAD
2 Ethanol
CONNECTIONS BETWEEN
METABOLIC PATHWAYS
Food, such as
peanuts
Carbohydrates
Sugars
Fats
Proteins
Amino acids
Amino
groups
Glucose
G3P
Pyruvate
Glycolysis
Pyruvate
Oxidation
Acetyl CoA
ATP
Citric
Acid
Cycle
Oxidative
Phosphorylation
Disposed
of in urine
ATP needed
to drive
biosynthesis
Citric
Acid
Cycle
ATP
Pyruvate
Oxidation
Acetyl CoA
Glucose Synthesis
Pyruvate
Glucose
G3P
Amino
groups
Amino acids
Proteins
Fats
Sugars
Carbohydrates
STAGES OF CELLULAR
RESPIRATION
AND FERMENTATION
Mitochondria
Fuel
(glucose)
Oxygen
(O2)
Blood vessel
Muscle cell
Here, the blood vessel on the left delivers fuel and oxygen to a single
muscle cell.
Mitochondrion
Oxygen
Water
Carbon
dioxide
ATP
Fuel (glucose)
Glycolysis
Mitochondrion
ATP
Glucose
GLYCOLYSIS
Lets take a closer look at how ATP is produced from a molecule of
glucoseour fuel. Only the carbon skeleton is shown to keep things
simple. The first step is called glycolysis, and it takes place outside the
mitochondria. To begin the process, some energy has to be invested.
ATP
Pyruvic acid
In the final steps of glycolysis, some ATP is produced, but not much
for every glucose molecule, only two net ATPs are produced outside the
mitochondrion. However, glycolysis has produced pyruvic acid, which
still has a lot of energy available.
Outer mitochondrial
membrane
Pyruvic acid
Inner mitochondrial
membrane
Lets follow this pyruvic acid molecule into a mitochondrion to see
where most of the energy is extracted.
Carbon dioxide
Acetyl CoA
Coenzyme A attaches to the 2-carbon fragment, forming acetyl CoA.
Coenzyme A
CITRIC ACID CYCLE
Coenzyme A is removed and the remaining 2-carbon skeleton is attached
to an existing 4-carbon molecule that serves as the starting point for the
citric acid cycle.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide
and more carbon dioxide is released. The carbon dioxide that you
exhale comes from the reactions of cellular respiration.
ATP
Two ATPs are produced by the citric acid cycle for each molecule of
glucose. At this point, only a small number of ATPs have been produced.
Coenzyme A
Oxidative Phosphorylation:
Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis
Inner
mitochondrial
membrane
Electrons
Oxygen
Electrons
Hydrogen ions
Lets take a closer look at the path electrons take through the chain. As
electrons move along each step of the chain, they give up a bit of energy.
The oxygen you breathe pulls electrons from the transport chain
Water
and water is formed as a by-product.
Hydrogen ions
Area of high
hydrogen ion
concentration
Inner
mitochondrial
membrane
ATP
ATP synthase
Outer
mitochondrial
membrane
Inner
mitochondrial
membrane
Cellular
respiration
has three stages
generates
oxidizes
uses
produce
some
energy for
glucose and
organic fuels
(a)
produces
many
(b)
(d)
to pull
electrons down
(c)
cellular work
(f)
by a process called
uses
H diffuse
through
ATP synthase
chemiosmosis
uses
(e)
pumps H to create
H gradient
(g)
to