Topic 2 Flashcards
(41 cards)
energy definition
capacity to cause change
energy types
chemical bond, heat, electrical, heat, mechanical
thermodynamics definition
study of energy transformations
closed system eg
liquid/food in a thermos
open system eg
energy transformed in reactions
ATP breakdown
ATP + H2O -> ADP + Pi + ENERGY
2 uses of ATP
mechanical and transport work
exergonic
catabolic
breakdown
release energy
delta G = -ve
combustion
spontaneous
endergonic
anabolic
build up
consume energy
non-spontaneous
delta G = +ve
hydrolysis
activation energy
energy required for a reaction to occur
how do enzymes work
lowers energy barrier so less free energy is required as the reactants are less stable
photosynthesis
6 CO2 + 6 H2O -> C6H12O6 + 6O2
light dependant reactions
- light enters and breaks H2O down into H+ and O2
- light reduces NADPH into NADP+ and H+
- H+ ions are pushed against the conc gradient as ADP + Pi create ATP
light independent reactions
- carbon fixation of 3 CO2 into 3PGA
- 6NADPH -> 6NADP+ + H+
- 6ATP -> 6ADP + Pi
- reduction of 3PGA into 6GA3P
- 1 GA3P -> 1/2 glucose
- 3 ATP -> 3 ADP + Pi
- 5GA3P -> 5 RuBP
photorespiration
O2 competitively inhibits RuBP to produced phosphoglycerate which inhibits the calvin cycle
cellular respiration
glucose + 6 oxygen -> 6 carbon dioxide + 6 water
stages of ACR
glycolysis
pyruvative oxidation
TCA
oxidative phosphorylation
glycolysis
- glucose -> fructose-1,6-biphosphate
- 2 ATP-> 2 ADP
- F-1,6-BP -> 2 Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
- 2 G3P -> 2 pyruvate
- 4ADP -> 4ATP
- 2 NAD+ -> 2 NADH
pyruvative oxidation
pyruvate -> acetyl CoA
NAD+ -> NADH
CoA -> CO2
TCA
- acetyl CoA -> citrate + CoA
- citrate -> 5C + CO2
- NAD+ -> NADH
- 5C -> 4C + CO2
- NAD+ -> NADH
- GDP + Pi -> GTP
- FAD+ -> FADH
- 4C + H2O -> oxaloacetate
ETC / OP
- NADH -> NAD+ + H+ e-
- FADH2 -> FAD+ + H+ + e-
- O2 + H+ -> H2O
- H+ pushed against conc gradient and ADP -> ATP
lactic acid fermentation
glucose + 2ADP + 2Pi -> 2 lactate + 2ATP
alcoholic fermentation
glucose + 2ADP + Pi -> 2 ethanol + 2CO2 + 2ATP
glycogenesis
7 steps that produce glucose