Cellular respiration is a process that enables cells to release and transfer energy from food molecules.
Key stages include:
Glycolysis: Breakdown of glucose to pyruvate.
Pyruvate Oxidation: Conversion of pyruvate to Acetyl-CoA, producing NADH and CO2.
Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle): Further breakdown of Acetyl-CoA to produce NADH, FADH2, GTP, and CO2.
Electron Transport Chain: Utilizes NADH and FADH2 to synthesize ATP.
Pyruvate (from glycolysis) is oxidized to form Acetyl-CoA.
Key steps in Pyruvate Oxidation:
Pyruvate is converted into a 2-C acetyl group.
The acetyl group combines with 4-C oxaloacetate to form 6-C citrate.
Through oxidation and decarboxylation reactions, NADH and CO2 are produced.
The cycle regenerates oxaloacetate, completing the cycle.
Key Outputs:
1 Acetyl-CoA per pyruvate
1 NADH
1 CO2 (as waste)
The Krebs Cycle occurs in the mitochondrial matrix, consisting of eight enzymatic reactions that oxidize Acetyl-CoA.
Reactions:
Inputs: 1 Acetyl-CoA, 3 NAD+, FAD, GDP
Outputs: 3 NADH, 1 FADH2, 1 GTP, 2 CO2 (as waste)
The cycle regenerates oxaloacetate and produces energy-rich molecules that are essential for ATP production.
Each NADH molecule can yield approximately 2.5-3 ATP molecules, while each FADH2 yields about 1.5-2 ATP molecules.
Redox Reactions: Cells utilize oxidation (loss of electrons) and reduction (gain of electrons) to transfer energy.
Oxidation: Loss of electrons or hydrogen.
Reduction: Gain of electrons or hydrogen.
These reactions synthesize molecules like ADP to ATP, GDP to GTP, NAD+ to NADH, and FAD to FADH2.
ATP Synthesis Location:
Most ATP is synthesized in mitochondria during cellular respiration:
Pyruvate oxidation and the Krebs cycle occur in the matrix.
The Electron Transport Chain occurs in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
These processes require oxygen, highlighting the importance of aerobic respiration in energy production.
Enzymes in pyruvate oxidation and Krebs cycle require vitamin B cofactors (e.g., thiamine, niacin).
These vitamins assist in the conversion of substrates and production of energy-rich molecules.
CO2 produced from both pyruvate oxidation and the Krebs cycle exits the body via exhalation, preventing toxic accumulation.
Pyruvate oxidation produces:
1 Acetyl-CoA
1 NADH
1 CO2 (waste)
Krebs cycle generates:
3 NADH
1 FADH2
1 GTP (convertible to ATP)
2 CO2 (waste)
How do redox reactions facilitate energy transfer in cells?
What are the outputs of pyruvate oxidation and the Krebs cycle?
Why do mitochondria play a vital role in cellular respiration?
Why are B vitamins important as cofactors in these metabolic processes?
Cellular Respiration: Pyruvate Oxidation & The Krebs Cycle
Pyruvate oxidation produces:
Krebs cycle generates: