3.1 Cellular Respiration
64 MHR • Unit 1 Metabolic Processes
You are running late for school. The bus stop is
five minutes’ walking distance away, and the bus
is due to arrive in only three minutes. Taking a
shortcut, you sprint the full distance, arriving just
as the bus comes to the stop. You board the bus
and collapse into a seat, breathing heavily. During
your sprint, molecules of glucose were broken
down in your cells. This process provided your
muscles with the energy they needed to carry you
to the bus. As you recall from Chapter 2, the
breakdown of glucose is an exothermic reaction
that releases energy. In this reaction, hydrogen
atoms and electrons are removed from glucose and
added to oxygen. Glucose is oxidized, and oxygen
is reduced. Energy from this reaction is used for
the production of ATP molecules, which are the
energy source for cells. Metabolic pathways that
contribute to the production of ATP molecules in
cells are collectively referred to as aerobic cellular
respiration. The term aerobicmeans that the
process requires oxygen. The overall equation of
aerobic cellular respiration is shown in Figure 3.1.
Figure 3.1Aerobic cellular respiration most often involves
the breakdown of glucose, coupled with the manufacture
of ATP.
When a molecule of glucose undergoes aerobic
cellular respiration, 36 molecules of ATP are
produced. Glucose is an energy-rich molecule. The
breakdown of glucose results in the formation of
low-energy molecules and energy. ATP synthesis
requires energy; it involves a series of endothermic
reactions. The exothermic breakdown of glucose
is coupled (linked) to the endothermic reactions
involved in the synthesis of ATP. This coupling
of reactions results in about 40 percent of the
chemical energy in the glucose molecule being
energy
water
+++
carbon
dioxide
glucose oxygen
ADP + ATP
C 6 H 12 O 6 6O 2 6CO 2 6H 2 O
Pi
transformed into energy in ATP molecules. The rest
of the energy is waste thermal energy.
Releasing energy from a stable molecule, such as
glucose, within the cell requires controlled oxidation.
Controlled oxidation is made possible by a series of
reactions involving various enzymes and metabolic
pathways, as well as coupled reactions. In this way,
each reaction releases only a small portion of
energy, while other reactions conserve this energy
in molecules of ATP.
Figure 3.2All organisms, including these E. colibacteria,
manufacture ATP to fuel cellular functions.
Stages of Aerobic
Cellular Respiration
The process of aerobic cellular repiration can be
divided into four distinct stages. These stages are
summarized in Figure 3.3. Refer to the figure as you
read the following overview. Section 3.1 describes
glycolysis in detail. Section 3.2 examines the three
remaining steps in aerobic cellular respiration.
Overview of Cellular Respiration
The first step in this process is a chain of reactions
called glycolysis. “Glycolysis” means breaking
sugar. This process is anaerobic(without oxygen)
and occurs in the cytosol of cells, outside the
organelles. The process of glycolysis produces
EXPECTATIONS
Identify and describe the four stages of aerobic cellular respiration.
Outline the key steps of glycolysis.
Identify the products of glycolysis.