The Stages of Aerobic Respiration Simplified Revision Notes for A-Level AQA Biology
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5.2.2 The Stages of Aerobic Respiration
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Aerobic Respiration
Aerobic respiration is the process of breaking down a respiratory substrate (e.g., glucose) to release carbon dioxide (CO2​) and produce energy in the form of ATP.
Hydrogen is combined with oxygen to form water, releasing energy in the process.
Key Stages of Aerobic Respiration
Glycolysis:
Occurs in the cytoplasm.
Glucose (6C) is split into 2 molecules of pyruvate (3C).
Produces 2 ATP (net gain) and 2 NADH.
No oxygen is required for this stage.
Link Reaction:
Occurs in the mitochondrial matrix.
Pyruvate is decarboxylated (CO2​ is removed) and oxidised to form acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA).
NADH is produced from the reduction of NAD.
Krebs Cycle:
Takes place in the mitochondrial matrix.
Acetyl-CoA combines with a 4-carbon molecule to form a 6-carbon compound which is then broken down in a series of steps.
Produces:
2CO2​per cycle.
1 ATP (via substrate-level phosphorylation) per cycle.
:highlight[3]NADH and :highlight[1]FADH2​ per cycle.
Oxidative Phosphorylation:
Occurs at the inner mitochondrial membrane (cristae).
NADH and FADHâ‚‚ donate electrons to the electron transport chain (ETC).
Electrons pass along the ETC, releasing energy used to pump protons into the intermembrane space, creating a proton gradient.
Protons flow back into the matrix through ATP synthase, driving the production of ATP from ADP and Pi.
Oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor, combining with electrons and protons to form water.
Products of Aerobic Respiration
ATP: Up to 38 molecules per molecule of glucose (theoretical yield).
Water: Produced during oxidative phosphorylation.
Carbon Dioxide: Released during the link reaction and Krebs cycle.
Summary Table
Stage
Location
Key Outputs
Glycolysis
Cytoplasm
2 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 Pyruvate
Link Reaction
Mitochondrial Matrix
2 NADH, 2 Acetyl-CoA, 2 COâ‚‚
Krebs Cycle
Mitochondrial Matrix
2 ATP, 6 NADH, 2 FADHâ‚‚, 4 COâ‚‚
Oxidative Phosphorylation
Inner Mitochondrial Membrane
34 ATP, Hâ‚‚O
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Exam Tip
Understand where each stage occurs, the key inputs and outputs, and how energy is transferred. Be prepared to explain the role of ATP, NADH, FADHâ‚‚, and oxygen in aerobic respiration. Diagrams can help illustrate the stages and pathways clearly.
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