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Cellular Respiration Part 1 Pages 90 to 92

Cellular Respiration Part 1

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Cellular Respiration Part 1. Pages 90 to 92. Fig. 9-2. Light energy. ECOSYSTEM. Photosynthesis in chloroplasts. Organic molecules. CO 2 + H 2 O. + O 2. Cellular respiration in mitochondria. ATP. ATP powers most cellular work. Heat energy. Summarize Relationship. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Cellular Respiration Part 1Pages 90 to 92

Page 2: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Fig. 9-2

Light energy

ECOSYSTEM

Photosynthesis in chloroplastsCO2 +

H2O Cellular respiration

in mitochondria

Organic molecules+ O2

ATP powers most cellular work

Heat energy

ATP

Page 3: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Summarize Relationship•Sunlight provides energy to power

photosynthesis – ultimate source of energy

•Photosynthesis produces glucose and oxygen needed for cellular respiration

•Cellular respiration produces water and carbon dioxide needed for photosynthesis; it also produces ATP needed to do cellular work

Page 4: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Do plants undergo cellular respiration?

•Yes!•They need ATP for cellular work (building,

maintaining, transporting, etc…) just like animals, protists and bacteria

Page 5: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Respiration - Write about it…•When you hear the word RESPIRATION,

what do you think of? Write your response on the ½ sheet provided. Write at least 2 sentences explaining what respiration means to you. You should use complete sentences in your answer.

Page 6: Cellular Respiration Part 1

How is your breathing related to cellular respiration?•Breathing provides the oxygen needed for

cellular respiration to occur•Breathing eliminates carbon dioxide

waste produced by cellular respiration

Page 7: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Complete balanced equation for cellular respiration…• C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + ATP•Glucose + oxygen yields carbon dioxide +

water + Energy•Is this reaction endergonic or exergonic?

▫Exergonic – releasing energy

Page 8: Cellular Respiration Part 1
Page 9: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Differentiate between life sustaining activities and voluntary activities• Life sustaining

▫ Heart pumping▫ Breathing ▫ Maintain Body Temp▫ Essential for LIFE▫ 75% of your daily energy

requirements

• Voluntary▫ Biking▫ Running▫ Swimming▫ Etc..▫ 25% of your daily energy

requirements

Page 10: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Redox Reactions (oxidation/reduction)•The transfer of electrons during chemical

reactions releases energy stored in organic molecules

•This released energy is ultimately used to synthesize ATP

•Chemical reactions that transfer electrons between reactants are called oxidation-reduction reactions, or redox reactions

Page 11: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Redox Reactions• In oxidation, a substance loses electrons,

or is oxidized•In reduction, a substance gains

electrons, or is reduced (the amount of positive charge is reduced)

Page 12: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Fig. 9-UN1

becomes oxidized(loses electron)

becomes reduced(gains electron)

Page 13: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Cellular Respiration - Redox•What is being oxidized (gives up

electrons)▫Glucose

•What is being reduced (takes on electrons)▫Oxygen

Page 14: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Fig. 9-UN3

becomes oxidized

becomes reduced

Page 15: Cellular Respiration Part 1

What is the role of dehydrogenase in cellular respiration?•The enzyme that catalyzes the chemical

reaction in which one or more hydrogen atoms are removed from a molecule

Dehydrogenase

Page 16: Cellular Respiration Part 1

What is the role of NAD+ (NADH)?• NAD+ accepts electrons from carbon containing

compounds (e.g. glucose) to form NADH• NADH then shuttles the electrons to an electron

transport chain where they are used to create ATP• It is one of the electron carriers of cellular

respiration• This is a redox reaction• What is oxidized?

▫Glucose / carbon compounds• What is reduced?

▫NAD+ to form NADH

Page 17: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Fig. 9-4

DehydrogenaseReduction of

NAD+

Oxidation of NADH

2 e– + 2 H+ 2 e– +

H+

NAD+

+ 2[H]

NADH

+

H+

H+

Nicotinamide(oxidized form)

Nicotinamide(reduced form)

Page 18: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Fig. 9-5

Free

ene

rgy,

G Fr

ee e

nerg

y,

G

(a) Uncontrolled reaction

H2O

H2 + 1/2 O2

Explosiverelease ofheat and

lightenergy

(b) Cellular respiration

Controlled

release ofenergy forsynthesis

ofATP

2 H+ + 2 e–

2 H + 1/2 O2

(from food via NADH)

ATP

ATPATP

1/2 O2

2 H+

2 e–Electron

transportchain

H2O

Page 19: Cellular Respiration Part 1

Where is the Electron Transport Chain?•The inner membrane of the mitochondria

(aka – the cristea)