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Cell Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular

Cell Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

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Jeopardy. Cell Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?. Glycolysis. Krebs Cycle. ETC. Fermentation. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. Row 1, Col 1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

Cell RespirationInitial question – do plants

undergo cellular respiration?

Page 2: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

100 100

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Glycolysis Krebs Cycle ETC Fermentation

300 300 300

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500 500 500 500

100

Page 3: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

Row 1, Col 1

Where does glycolysis occur? List 3 important products of

Glycolysis.

Cytoplasm of cell; 2 pyruvates, 2 ATP, 2 NADH

Page 4: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

1,2

Where does the Krebs cycle take Place – be specific.

Matrix of mitochondria

Page 5: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

1,3

Where, specifically, is the ETC Located in the cell?

Inner membrane of the mitochondria

Page 6: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

1,4

Fermentation is basically Glycolysis plus …

An extra step (redox reaction) that regenerates the NAD+ since there’s either no O2 to accept the e-, or there’s no

mitochondria in the cell (bacteria)

Page 7: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

2,1

Why do scientists think glycolysisis one of the first energy

Transforming reactions to evolve?

No O2 is needed, all orgs do it, occurs in cytoplasm which all organisms have

Page 8: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

2,2

What high energy molecules areProduced during the Krebs cycleAnd then transfer their energy

To the ETC?

NADH & FADH2

Page 9: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

2,3

What is the final electron In cellular respiration and whereDoes that molecule come from?

O2; from the atmosphere (humans breath it in, it diffuses into the blood vessels of fish gills, other , smaller creatures

obtain it by direct diffusion with the environment.)

Page 10: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

2,4

Which is most effective at Harvesting energy?

Glycolysis, fermentation, cellRespiration and why?

Cell respiration – it completely oxidizes glucose (food) where as the other two only split the glucose in half – partially

oxidizing it.

Page 11: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

3,1

List the following molecules in order of most reduced

to least reduced.Pyruvate, Glucose, CO2

Glucose, pyruvate, CO2

Page 12: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

3,2

If your butt getsSmaller due to decreased

Caloric intake and increased Burning of calories, where does

It go? Literally?

Released as CO2 & H2O from cell respiration as the fat molecules are used for cellular respiration

Page 13: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

3,3

What is the final electron acceptorIn oxidative phosphorylation?

Oxygen (which forms two covalent bonds with hydrogen after accepting the low energy electrons –

forming water)

Page 14: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

3,4

What final products are producedDuring lactic acid fermentation?

NAD+, lactic acid (lactate), ATP

Page 15: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

4,1

Phosphofructokinase is inhibited By which two molecules?

ATP & citrate

Page 16: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

4,2

Why is oxygen needed in The mitochondria for the

Krebs cycle to occur, even though It’s not directly used in the cycle?

With out it present to accept e- from the ETC, NAD+ and FAD+ wouldn’t be regenerated.

Page 17: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

4,3

Explain how the structure of the Mitochondria enables it’s

Function. (be able to explain At least 2 structural

characteristics)

1) Cristae- folds allow for greater surface area for more copies of the ETC resulting in more ATP. 2) Inner mem allows for the creation of a concentration gradient. 3) proteins

in ETC are sequenced such that each one is more electronegative than the previous – allows for e- to move “down” toward O2

Page 18: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

4,4

What final products are producedDuring alcoholic fermentation?

Ethanol, NAD+, ATP, CO2

Page 19: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

5,1

What shows the rate ofPhotosynthesis at various

Wavelengths?

Action spectrum

Page 20: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

5,2

Which of the following moleculesEnter the Krebs cycle?

Pyruvate, NADH, NAD+, CO2, ATP, ADP, glucose, FAD+, FADH2, O2, acetyl Co-A

Acetyl Co-A, NAD+, FAD+, ADP

Page 21: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

5,3

What is the most direct energy Source that powers the formation

Of ATP during oxidative phosphorylation?

The H+ gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane (they diffuse through ATP synthase due to

this)

Page 22: Cell  Respiration Initial question – do plants undergo cellular respiration?

5,4

Bread is the product of baking a mixture of flour, water, salt, yeast and other ingredients. During it’s

Baking, a beer-like odor is often detected.

Explain how yeast makes breadRise.

Not much O2 can diffuse through the dough to get to all the yeast cells so the yeast must produce ATP via alcoholic fermentation

which produced CO2 gas as a waste product. This gas causes the dough to rise as it gets “stuck” in the dough.