Fermentation is mainly used to reoxidize NADH back to NAD+ when cells do not use or cannot use an electron transport chain.
ATP is made only by glycolysis through substrate-level phosphorylation.
The final electron acceptor in fermentation is an organic molecule, usually derived from pyruvate.
Without an ETC, NADH would build up and NAD+ would run out, so glycolysis would stop.
It regenerates NAD+ so glycolysis can continue.
2 ATP.
If sugar is abundant, repeated glycolysis can still provide enough ATP for growth.
It produces ethanol and CO2 and is important in yeast, alcoholic beverages, and bread making.
Mostly lactate.
A mixture including lactate, ethanol, and CO2.
Aerobic respiration.
Anaerobic respiration.
Fermentation.
Reducing O2 to H2O gives the greatest Gibbs free energy release.
The terminal electron acceptor is different; aerobic uses oxygen and anaerobic uses another inorganic acceptor such as nitrate.
No. It means the organism is using a terminal electron acceptor other than oxygen, not necessarily that oxygen is toxic.
No. Fermentation does not use an electron transport chain.
No. Fermentation does not make PMF by an ETC.
It is metabolism where inorganic molecules are used as electron donors.
They rely on inorganic electron donors and generally use electron transport rather than organic fermentation pathways.
H2, H2S, Fe2+, NH4+, and NO2- depending on the organism.
They transfer electrons outside the cell to extracellular electron acceptors such as iron-containing minerals.
Its final electron acceptor can be outside the cell and insoluble, so electrons must be transferred outward.
Phototrophy is the use of light to make chemical energy such as ATP and often reducing power.
It uses light for energy, uses water as the electron donor, and produces oxygen.
Cyanobacteria and eukaryotic phototrophs.
It uses light for energy but does not use water as the electron donor and does not produce oxygen.
Hydrogen sulfide.
Oxygenic uses H2O and makes O2; anoxygenic usually uses H2S or another donor and does not make O2.
They use light to generate energy without a full photosynthetic ETC.
They use bacteriorhodopsin, a light-driven proton pump.
A membrane protein that uses light energy to pump protons across the membrane.
No. It directly generates PMF without an ETC.
Retinal.
It isomerizes, changing shape and triggering protein conformational changes.
Light causes retinal to change shape, which drives proton transfer through the protein and pumps H+ out of the cell.
One proton is pumped out of the cell.
Bacteriochlorophyll.
It is similar in ring structure but uses Mg instead of Fe.
They absorb wavelengths of light that chlorophylls do not absorb well and transfer that energy to chlorophyll.
Carotenoids and phycobiliproteins.
Light excites electrons, electrons move through carriers, protons are moved across the membrane, and ATP is made from PMF.
This is cyclic electron flow, which helps generate PMF and ATP.
Anabolism is the building of macromolecules from smaller precursor molecules.
Carbon source, inorganic nutrients, vitamins or micronutrients, energy, and reducing power.
NADPH.
Building large molecules from smaller ones requires energy input and reducing power.
Cells constantly replace damaged molecules and remodel components for changing environments.
It uses organic carbon.
It uses inorganic carbon, usually CO2.
It uses light.
It uses chemical compounds.
It uses organic electron donors.
It uses inorganic electron donors.
Carbon fixation is the incorporation of CO2 into organic molecules.
The Calvin cycle and the reductive TCA cycle.
The reductive pentose phosphate pathway.
To fix CO2 into organic carbon that can be used to build cellular molecules.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate.
RuBisCO.
3-phosphoglycerate.
ATP and NADPH.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate.
It is the CO2 acceptor, so the cycle must regenerate it to continue fixing carbon.
In carboxysomes.
It helps generate CO2 for RuBisCO.
Assimilation is incorporation of inorganic molecules into organic molecules.
Nitrogen is needed for proteins, nucleic acids, coenzymes, and many other cell components.
Ammonia, nitrate, and nitrogen gas.
It is already relatively reduced, so less energy is needed to incorporate it.
It incorporates ammonia into alpha-ketoglutarate to make glutamate.
It adds ammonia to glutamate to make glutamine, using energy.
They transfer amino groups between molecules.
Nitrogen fixation is the conversion of atmospheric N2 into ammonia.
Nitrogenase.
Only certain bacteria and archaea.
Breaking the N≡N bond is very difficult and requires a lot of ATP and electrons.
16 ATP per N2 fixed.
Oxygen damages or inactivates the enzyme.
By using a thick glycocalyx or forming heterocysts.
A thick-walled specialized cell that protects nitrogenase and does not perform aerobic respiration.
It is generally much easier because phosphate is common and readily incorporated.
Sulfur is needed for certain amino acids and cofactors.
Proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and carbohydrates.
By gluconeogenesis.
The pentose phosphate pathway.
Glycolysis and the TCA cycle.
Histidine.
