00:00:00
Captions are on! Click CC to turn off.
00:00:04
Are you a morning person?
00:00:06
One of us is and one of us is definitely not.
00:00:09
Mainly because, when I wake up in the morning,
it just takes a while for me to get my energy
00:00:13
back.
00:00:14
It takes a lot of time- and coffee -for that
to happen for me.
00:00:17
Cells really don’t have that luxury.
00:00:20
They are busy performing cell processes all the time: active transport of many substances
00:00:25
needed for their survival, for example.
00:00:27
And the energy currency they need, specifically, is ATP.
00:00:31
ATP stands for adenosine triphosphate.
00:00:34
It’s a type of nucleic acid actually, and
it is action packed with three phosphates.
00:00:39
We have a video all about ATP and how it works as an energy currency.
00:00:44
So where am I going with this?
00:00:46
Well, cells have to make this ATP.
00:00:48
It doesn’t really matter what kind of cell
you are - prokaryote or eukaryote - you have
00:00:53
to make ATP.
00:00:54
The process for making that ATP can be different, however, depending on that type of cell.
00:01:00
One way is called aerobic cellular respiration.
00:01:03
Lots of organisms can do aerobic cellular
respiration, but this video is specifically
00:01:08
going to go into aerobic cellular respiration
in eukaryotic cells.
00:01:12
That means, this video is talking about the
process within cells that have membrane-bound
00:01:17
organelles such as a nucleus and mitochondria.
00:01:21
Eukaryotic cells include the cells you’d
find in protists, fungi, animals, and plants.
00:01:27
The mitochondria- which can be found in most eukaryotic cells - are going to be kind of
00:01:32
a big deal in this aerobic cellular respiration, because some of the process occurs in the
00:01:37
mitochondria.
00:01:38
So let’s get started.
00:01:39
Remember the major goal for any organism performing
this: it’s to make ATP.
00:01:43
Ok, here’s the overall look at the equation
for aerobic cellular respiration.
00:01:49
Remember that reactants (inputs) are on the left side of the arrow.
00:01:53
And products (outputs) are on the right side of the arrow.
00:01:57
This equation, by the way, looks remarkably similar to photosynthesis.
00:02:01
Look at how the reactants and products are on different sides.
00:02:04
While that doesn’t mean they’re simply
opposites, it does show that they have substances
00:02:09
in common.
00:02:10
In photosynthesis, organisms make glucose.
00:02:13
Notice how glucose is a product.
00:02:16
But in cellular respiration, organisms break the glucose down to make ATP.
00:02:21
Fun fact: You know how when a bean seed first germinates in the ground, it isn’t able
00:02:25
to do photosynthesis yet?
00:02:27
Yeah, the germinating bean is relying on glucose that it has stored and it’s doing cellular
00:02:33
respiration to break it down to make ATP so it can grow.
00:02:37
Of course, once it starts to mature and develop leaves, it can do photosynthesis.
00:02:41
It will be able to do both photosynthesis
and cellular respiration.
00:02:45
Plants make glucose in photosynthesis and they break it down in cellular
respiration:
00:02:50
they can do both.
00:02:52
But if you aren’t photosynthetic, such as
a human or an amoeba, you have to find a food
00:02:56
source to get your glucose.
00:02:58
You need glucose to get this process started, and we’re going to assume that we’re starting
00:03:02
with one glucose molecule.
00:03:05
Step #1 Glycolysis.
00:03:07
This step takes place in the cytoplasm, and this step does not require oxygen.
00:03:11
It’s considered anaerobic.
00:03:13
In glycolysis, glucose, the sugar from the
equation, is converted into a more usable
00:03:19
form called pyruvate.
00:03:21
Glycolysis usually takes a little ATP itself
to start up.
00:03:25
The net yield from this step is approximately 2 pyruvate and 2 ATP molecules.
00:03:29
And 2 NADH.
00:03:31
What is NADH?
00:03:32
NADH is a coenzyme, and it has the ability
to transfer electrons, which will be very
00:03:39
useful in making even more ATP later on.
00:03:42
We’ll get to that in a minute.
00:03:44
Now, an intermediate step occurs.
00:03:46
The 2 pyruvate are transported by active transport into the mitochondria, specifically the mitochondrial
00:03:52
matrix.
00:03:53
In the mitochondria, pyruvate is oxidized.
00:03:56
The 2 pyruvate are converted to 2 acetyl CoA, which will be used by the next step.
00:04:01
Carbon dioxide is released, and 2 NADH are produced.
00:04:05
Step #2 The Krebs Cycle - also called the
Citric Acid Cycle.
00:04:10
Still in the mitochondrial matrix.
00:04:11
The Citric Acid Cycle is considered an aerobic process.
00:04:15
While the cycle doesn’t directly consume
oxygen, some of the events in the cycle need
00:04:19
oxygen to continue.
00:04:20
To learn more about this intricate cycle where the 2 acetyl CoA will enter, check out the
00:04:25
further reading suggestions in the video details.
00:04:28
Carbon dioxide is released.
00:04:30
We also produce 2 ATP, 6 NADH, and 2 FADH2.
00:04:35
FADH2 is also a coenzyme, like NADH, and it will also assist in transferring electrons
00:04:40
to make even more ATP.
00:04:43
Step #3 The electron transport chain and chemiosmosis.
00:04:47
This is, just, a beautiful thing, really.
00:04:50
In eukaryotic cells, this is still in the
mitochondria, and to be more specific, it’s
00:04:54
involving the inner mitochondrial membrane.
00:04:57
We do require oxygen for this aerobic step.
00:05:00
This is a very complex process, and we are greatly simplifying it by saying that electrons
00:05:05
are transferred from the NADH and FADH2 to protein complexes and electron carriers.
00:05:11
The electrons are used to generate a proton gradient as protons are pumped across to the
00:05:17
intermembrane space.
00:05:19
All these protons being pumped out into this intermembrane space generates an electrical
00:05:24
and chemical gradient.
00:05:26
The thing is, if you remember from our cell transport video, ions (like the H+) don’t
00:05:31
easily travel across membranes directly without something to travel through.
00:05:35
The protons can travel through an amazing enzyme called ATP synthase.
00:05:40
If I could be any enzyme, I’d be ATP synthase, because it has the ability to make ATP by
00:05:45
adding a phosphate to ADP.
00:05:47
ADP is a precursor to ATP.
00:05:50
ADP has two phosphates, but if it obtains
a third phosphate, it becomes ATP.
00:05:56
So, in chemiosmosis, the protons travel down their electrochemical gradient through a portion
00:06:02
of the ATP synthase, powering it to make ATP.
00:06:06
The ultimate goal.
00:06:08
Oxygen is the final acceptor of the electrons.
00:06:10
When oxygen combines with two hydrogens, you get H20 - water.
00:06:13
If you remember from our equation, water is a listed product.
00:06:17
Now, the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis step makes a lot more ATP compared to the
00:06:22
other two previous steps.
00:06:24
How much?
00:06:25
So, I’ve noticed in my years of teaching
and the assortment of textbooks I’ve collected
00:06:29
over the years, there are some different numbers in cellular respiration charts.
00:06:33
In fact, you can even see them change a bit in different editions of the same book.
00:06:37
And it’s made me want to emphasize that
it’s important to not just memorize a number,
00:06:42
because it really is more of a range.
00:06:44
I want to focus less on that number of ATP
made per glucose molecule because it depends
00:06:49
on a lot of variables.
00:06:50
One variable is the gradient we were talking about: how many protons were pumped across
00:06:55
that mitochondrial membrane.
00:06:57
You can see more variables discussed in the factual references, and those references have
00:07:01
estimates ranging from 26-34 molecules of ATP per glucose molecule in the electron transport
00:07:07
chain and chemiosmosis step alone.
00:07:10
Then if you add the other two steps: Krebs
– otherwise known as the Citric Acid Cycle
00:07:14
- and glycolysis, you could estimate a range of anywhere between 30-38 net ATP molecules
00:07:22
total per molecule of glucose.
00:07:24
Again, to emphasize, a range.
00:07:27
Now, this was just one way of creating ATP.
00:07:30
But like we had said at the beginning, all
cells have to make ATP, but the way that they
00:07:34
do it can differ.
00:07:35
If there's no oxygen available, some cells
have the ability to perform a process known
00:07:40
as fermentation.
00:07:41
It’s not as efficient, but it can still
make ATP when there isn’t oxygen.
00:07:45
We have a video about that!
00:07:46
We can’t emphasize enough how important the process of making ATP is for cells.
00:07:51
For example, cyanide - which is found in some rat poisons - can block a step in the electron
00:07:56
transport chain, which would block ATP production.
00:08:00
A poison that prevents ATP from being produced can be deadly.
00:08:04
With the important role that mitochondria
have in ATP production, there is also a demand
00:08:10
for increased research on mitochondrial diseases.
00:08:14
We are confident that the understanding of
how to treat these diseases will continue
00:08:18
to improve as more people, like you, ask questions.
00:08:22
Well, that’s it for the Amoeba Sisters,
and we remind you to stay curious.