What is Cellular Respiration Flashcards

What is cellular respiration? In biology, we get to learn that this is the process through which cells break down the food we consume and give the body the much-needed energy to carry out its procedures. Have a look at the flashcards below and get to see how much more you will learn about it. All the best as you get to learning!

22 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

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What are the steps of cellular respiration, in order of their occurrence?
1. Glycolysis
2. Pyruvate oxidation
3. Krebs Cycle
4. Electron transport chain and Chemiosmosis
What is the purpose of the Krebs Cycle?
To produce NADH + H+ and FADH2.
Draw and label the mitochondria. Indicate where the stages of cellular respiration take place.
Answer 3
Diagram of a mitochondria
Draw and label the chloroplast. Indicate where the stages of photosynthesis take place.
Answer 4
Diagram of a chloroplast
What part may lipids play in cellular respiration?
- breaks down into fatty acids and glycerol
- glycerol might become glucose or other intermediate through gluconeogenesis
- fatty acids become acetyl-CoA
What is substrate-level phosphorylation? When does it occur? What is oxidative phosphorylation? When does it occur? Which is more efficient?
- substrate-level: using an enzyme to bond phosphate group and ADP together to make ATP
- during glycolysis and Krebs Cycle
- oxidative: using the transfer of electrons to power the creation of ATP
- during electron transport chain and chemiosmosis
- more efficient for most organisms (but not some others like yeast)
Differentiate between cellular respiration and fermentation (3 points).
- cellular respiration is aerobic, fermentation is anaerobic
- cellular respiration has many more steps than fermentation
- cellular respiration is far more efficient (fermentation makes 2 ATP, respiration 36)
What are the reactants and products of pyruvate oxidation? Where do the products go?
- reactants: 2 pyruvate, 2 NAD+, 2 CoA
- products: 2 acetyl-CoA, 2 CO2, 2 NADH + H+
- 2 acetyl-CoA triggers Krebs Cycle
- 2 CO2 is exhaled as waste
- 2 NADH + H+ carries hydrogens and electrons to ETC and chemiosmosis
What are the functions of the light reaction products ATP, NADPH + H+ and O2?
- ATP utilized to build carbohydrates (anabolism)
- NADPH + H+ reduces intermediates in Calvin Cycle
- O2 is given off as waste
How are the ETC and chemiosmosis able to synthesize ATP?
- NADH + H+ deposits protons and electrons
- electrons transferred between proteins in increasing order of electronegativity until finally accepted by oxygen
- electron transfer powers proton movement into intermembrane space via proton pumps
- protons accumulate in intermembrane space
- some protons repelled back into matrix, enter via ATP synthase
- releases energy, used to manufacture ATP
What is the purpose of chlorophyll?
Location of photoexcitation (energizing or excitement of electrons). Enables ETC to take place and produce ATP.
What is the first intermediate in the Krebs Cycle? What are its components?
Acetyl-CoA (2 C) + oxaloacetate (4 C) => citrate (6 C)
What is G3P and why is it important?
- Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
- intermediate in glycolysis and product of Calvin Cycle
- simplified form of glucose
- important because produced in photosynthesis => can be converted to a variety of sugars (whichever is needed); also reduced to pyruvate in glycolysis
What are the final electron acceptors of the ETCs in a) cellular respiration and b) photosynthesis?
A) oxygen
b) NADP+
Why are plants important to all life on Earth?
- produce carbohydrates through photosynthesis, which are then eaten and digested by all other living organisms for energy
- take in CO2, maintaining stable levels of it (it is a waste product for animals, so too much will kill them)
- let off oxygen, maintaining stable levels of it (plants and other organisms need it for cellular respiration)