Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
Rock Eaters ■ 89

e– e–

e– e– e–

Glucose

Pyruvate

To Krebs cycle

To oxidative phosphorylation

NADH


NAD+


NADH


NAD+


ADP+


ATP


ATP


ATP


1


1


Glycolysis occurs in
cell cytoplasm (outside
mitochondrion).

3 Oxidative
phosphorylation occurs
in inner mitochondrial
membrane.

2 Krebs cycle, or citric
acid cycle, occurs in
mitochondrial matrix.

H+ H


+ H+ H+


H+


H+


H 2 O


O 2


H+


H+


H+


H+


Glucose in

Carbon
dioxide out

Mitochondrial
matrix

Inner
mitochondrial
membrane

Cytoplasm

Energy
(ATP, etc)
Water out

Oxygen in

P


ADP


P


3


H+


ATP


synthase

FADH 2


FAD


NADH


NAD+


ATP


ADP+P


2 Pyruvate

CO 2


Hydrogen ions build
up and move through
the ATP synthase,
fueling ATP synthesis.

Protein complexes serve
as proton (H+) pumps
and electron carriers.

aElectrons attain a high
energy state as they move
along the electron transport
chain (blue arrows).

b c

Figure 5.11


Cellular respiration is highly efficient in eukaryotes


In glycolysis, each six-carbon glucose molecule is converted into two molecules of pyruvate. The next two stages of cellular


respiration require oxygen. The Krebs cycle (bottom left) releases carbon dioxide and generates high-energy molecules. Oxidative


phosphorylation (bottom right), the last stage in cellular respiration, produces more ATP than any other metabolic pathway. M


Q1: What are the products of cellular respiration?

Q2: Considering the inputs and products of each process, why is cellular respiration considered the reciprocal process to
photosynthesis?

Q3: Which of the three stages of cellular respiration—glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, or oxidative phosphorylation—could
organisms have used 4 billion years ago, before photosynthesis by cyanobacteria released oxygen into the atmosphere?
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