Muscle contraction
Active transport
Building molecules
1. ATP stored in the muscle
2. Creatine phosphate is used to rephosphorylate the ADP to ATP
3. Anaerobic respiration is able to synthesise a small concentration of ATP
4. When oxygen levels are sufficiently high, aerobic respiration provides high concentration of ATP
glucose -> (-2 atp) hexose bisphosphate -> triose phosphate -> triose bisphosphate -> pyruvate (X2)
2x ATP
2x Reduced NAD
2x Pyruvate
Cytoplasm
Inner membrane
Outer membrane
Inter membrane space
Matrix
ATP synthphase
Cristae
Increase surface area for oxidative phosphorylation
contains molecules for electron transport chain and ATP synthase
1. Pyruvate is actively transported into mitochondria matrix
2. Pyruvate undergoes oxidative Decarboxylation
3. Oxidation occurs when hydrogen atoms are removed
4. Hydrogen bind to NAD forming reduced NAD
5. Two carbon acetyl groups bound by coenzyme A forming acetyl coenzyme A
Pyruvate -> decarboxylation + oxidised NAD -> acetyl group + coenzyme A -> acetylcoenzyme A
x2 per glucose
x2 ATP (glycolysis)
x4 reduced NAD (2 glycolysis, 2 link)
x2 CO2 (link)
Mitochondrial matrix
acetyl CoA -> acetate -> citrate C6 -> CO2 + reduced NAD is released -> C5 -> CO2 + reduced NAD is released -> products = atp, reduced FAD, reduced NAD -> oxaloacetate
x2 per glucose
per glucose:
6x reduced NAD
2x reduced FAD
2x ATP
4x CO2
4x ATP (2 glycolysis, 2 kreb)
10x reduced NAD (2 glycolysis, 2 link, 6 kreb)
2x reduced FAD (kreb)
6x CO2 (2 link, 4 kreb)
used to transfer protons, electrons and functional groups between the many enzyme controlled reactions
H dissociate to H+ and e-, e- bind to electron carrier (reducing it), e- moves along ETC, loses energy, energy is used to pump H+ ions across membrane, creates H+ conc gradient, H+ ios pass back through ATP synthase, ADP + Pi = ATP (chemiosmosis). at end of ETC, H+ ions and e- + O2 = water. FAD + NAD coenzymes now oxidised return to earlier stages of respiration. O2 is final electron acceptor
Anaerobic respiration produces for less ATP and it's less efficient than aerobic
Without oxygen etc stops working and cells have a buildup of reduced NAD and pyruvate. Without supply of oxidised NAD, krebs, link and glycolysis all stop
Pyruvate is converted into lactate using reduced NAD to produce oxidised NAD which can be used in the glycolysis pathway by lactate dehydrogenase
Pyruvate is converted into ethanol and carbon dioxide by pyruvate decarboxylase and ethanol dehydrogenase (Ethanol is toxic)
Glucose is not the only molecule used to release energy to synthesise ATP
Pathway of amino acids helps in the synthesis of ATP
Fatty acids and glycerol can also feed into the respiratory pathways
Measure volume of oxygen used up and volume of Carbon dioxide produced
Calculates the respiratory quotient
RQ=CO2 produced/O2 consumed
