"And Another One"
Break it (Glucose) Down
Mighty-Chondria
ATP Is the MVP
NADH Is a Four-Letter Word
100

The process by which NAD+ becomes recycled into NADH. There are two forms of this process.

What is Fermentation?

100

During glycolysis, one six-carbon molecule of glucose is broken into two of these three-carbon molecules.

What is Pyruvate?

100

Most of the respiration process takes place in this membrane-bound organelle.

What is the Mitochondria?

100

This is the 'passive' form of ATP; ATP becomes this molecule after it gives power to a cellular function.

What is ADP?

100

This is what the "H" in NADH stands for.

What is Hydrogen?

200

This fermentation process includes reducing pyruvate into a new three-carbon molecule.

What is Lactic Acid Fermentation?
200

During aerobic respiration (and alcoholic fermentation), carbon reacts with oxygen in the cell to form this waste product.

What is CO2?

200

This is the name for the enzyme in the Mitochondria which is responsible for making the most ATP at the end of respiration.

What is the ATP Synthase?

200

This is the (rough) range of ATP produced from the ATP synthase in Chemiosmosis.

What is 26-34 ATP?

200

This is the primary function of the coenzyme NADH.

What is Electron Transport?

300

The absence of oxygen; this kind of process can be used to describe both fermentation and glycolysis.

What is an Anaerobic Process?

300

Glucose is not the only six-carbon molecule in cellular respiration; the other one is called this.

What is Citrate / Citric Acid?
300

This is the name of the chain of membrane-bound enzymes at the end of cellular respiration.

What is the electron transport chain?

300

This is the full name for ATP.

What is Adenosine TriPhosphate?
300

This is the name of the waste product which results from chemiosmosis.

What is H2O?

400

This coenzyme is responsible for allowing glycolysis to repeat and therefore allows ATP to continue forming in the absence of oxygen.

What is NAD+/NADH?

400

This is the four-carbon molecule which is both a reactant and a product of the Krebs Cycle.

What is Oxaloacetate?

400

These two particles travel through the inner mitochondrial membrane to ultimately for ATP.

What are electrons and hydrogen ions (H+)?

400
This is the role of ATP in a cell.
What is powering cellular functions?
400

This is the other electron transport coenzyme involved in cellular respiration; this enzyme is found only once each in the Krebs Cycle and the Electron Transport Chain.

What is FADH2?

500

Contrary to the classification of reaction, alcoholic fermentation requires this element to complete the process.

What is Oxygen?
500

During the link reaction, pyruvate reacts with oxygen, NAD+, and a free enzyme in the cell to form these products.

What are CO2, NADH, and Acetyl CoA?

500

Electrons form this in carrier proteins to allow active transport of hydrogen ions into the mitochondrial intermembrane space.

What is a Proton Gradient?

500

This simple change in ATP causes an exergonic reaction, which is responsible for powering cell processes.

What is losing a phosphate group?

500

This is the final acceptor of electrons and hydrogen ions after respiration has completed; without it, aerobic respiration would not occur.

What is Oxygen?