Respiratory enzymesLIVINGS
In
BIOLOGY
FOR
GENERAL SECONDARY CERTIFICATE
Unit (I)
Chapter (3)
Respiration in Living Organisms
The concept of respiration
Its importance to living organisms.
Green plants absorb energy from sun light, and change it into chemical energy during photosynthesis. They store the chemical energy in high-energy compounds, the most important of which are carbohydrates, especially glucose. Respiration process comprises the uptake of Oxygen and the release of CO2. In case of unicellulars, Oxygen diffuses directly into the cell, and CO2 passes out as a bi-product. In case of multicellulars, the presence of a respiratory system is essential. Uptake of Oxygen and release of CO2 is called gaseous exchange, which is completely different from cellular respiration.
The cellular respiration:
Cellular respiration is the process by which energy is extracted from bonds of food molecules manufactured by plants or eaten by animals. The released energy is used in generating ATP molecules.
The importance of glucose in cellular respiration:
Carbohydrates, especially glucose is considered as a form of stored energy that can be transferred from one cell to another and from one living organism to another.
The glucose molecule is considered as an excellent example to study the steps of breaking down the food molecules, as it is the molecule commonly used by the majority of living organisms to produce energy more than any molecule of available food.
Role played by ATP (Adenosine tri-phosphate) molecules:
Any energy required by a cell, needs ATP molecules. ATP molecule is considered as the small currency of energy. It can be easily spent and exchanged, it can be considered as the universal currency of energy in the cell.
The structure of ATP molecules:
ATP molecule is built up of 3 subunits:
1. Adenine: Which is a nitrogenous base (has the properties of a base)
2. Ribose: This is a 5-Carbon sugar (a pentose)
3. Three phosphate groups: Those are linked together by two high energy bonds.
During cellular reactions, only one of these bonds usually break down, only one phosphate group is removed by hydrolysis of an ATP molecule, which becomes ADP (Adenosine di-phosphate), and an amount of energy (which is about 7-12 K Cal/mole) is released.
Adenosine Adenosine + A Phosphate + Energy
tri-phosphate di-phosphate group (7-12 K Cal/mole)
Steps of cellular respiration:
( The complete oxidation of a glucose molecule ):
The process of cellular respiration starts with a glucose molecule, and can be summarized in the following equation:
Respiratory enzymes
C6H12O6 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + 38 ATP
Cellular respiration takes place in three major stages:
1. Glycolysis:
Date: 2015-12-11; view: 929
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