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CELLULAR RESPIRATION
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Cellular Respiration

Jan 25, 2016

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Cellular Respiration. Cellular Respiration. Cellular Respiration is a process by which cells gain energy from organic molecules. Cellular Respiration. C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2  6CO 2 + 6H 2 O + ATP Sugar + Oxygen  Carbon Dioxide + Water + ENERGY. Cellular Respiration. Cellular Respiration. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Cellular Respiration

CELLULA

R RESPI

RATIO

N

Page 2: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Cellular Respiration is a process by which cells gain energy from organic molecules.

Page 3: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATPSugar + Oxygen Carbon Dioxide + Water +

ENERGY

Page 4: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Page 5: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Major Players in Cellular Respiration:

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) – Energy source for all cells. Considered the “energy currency” of the cell. Releases large amounts of energy when converted to Adenosine diphosphate (ADP).

Page 6: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

NAD+/NADH

FAD/FADH2

Energy Intermediates. Used at the last stage of Cellular Respiration to create ATP.

Page 7: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Page 8: Cellular Respiration

CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Cellular respiration can occur in 2 ways:

Aerobic Respiration – requires oxygen but yields a lot of energy.

Anaerobic Respiration – Occurs when oxygen is not present. Produces little energy.

Both Aerobic and Anaerobic respiration have the first step, Glycolysis, in common.

Page 9: Cellular Respiration

AEROBIC CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Aerobic Cellular Respiration has 3 steps:

1. Glycolysis

2. Kreb’s Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle)

3. Oxidative Phosphorylation.

Page 10: Cellular Respiration

GLYCOLYSIS

Page 11: Cellular Respiration

GLYCOLYSIS

Glycolysis is the breaking down of glucose from a 6 carbon molecule into two pyruvate molecules (3 carbons each). This produces a net gain of two ATP and two NADH molecules. Glycolysis occurs in the Cytoplasm of a cell.

Page 12: Cellular Respiration

KREB’S CYCLE (CITRIC ACID CYCLE)

Page 13: Cellular Respiration

KREB’S CYCLE

First Pyruvate is broken down into an Acetyl group (two Carbons) which gives off CO2 and one NADH molecule.

Each Acetyl group (2C) is broken down to two CO2 molecules. One ATP, Three NADH and one FADH2 is made in the process. Because Glycolysis yielded two acetyl groups, total gain is:

4 CO2, 2 ATP, 6 NADH, 2 FADH2

Krebs’s Cycle occurs in the Mitochondria

Page 14: Cellular Respiration

OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION

Page 15: Cellular Respiration

OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION

Oxidative Phosphorylation consists of two parts, the Electron Transport Chain (ETC) and ATP synthase. NADH and FADH2 made in the previous stages contain high energy electrons that can be transferred to other molecules. When removed, these electrons release energy which is used to make approx. 34 ATP.

Occurs in the Mitochondria.

Page 16: Cellular Respiration