Anaerobic Respiration
- Sometimes cells experience conditions with little or no oxygen
- There are several consequences when there is not enough oxygen available for respiration:
- There is no final acceptor (oxygen) of electrons from the electron transport chain
- The electron transport chain stops functioning
- No more ATP is produced via oxidative phosphorylation
- Reduced NAD and FAD aren’t oxidised by an electron carrier
- No oxidised NAD and FAD are available for dehydrogenation in the Krebs cycle
- The Krebs cycle stops
- The link reaction also stops
- However, there is still a way for cells to produce some ATP in low oxygen conditions through anaerobic respiration
Anaerobic pathways
- Some cells are able to oxidise the reduced NAD produced during glycolysis so it can be used for further hydrogen transport
- This means that glycolysis can continue and small amounts of ATP are still produced
- Certain types of micro-organisms and mammalian muscle cells use lactate fermentation
Lactate fermentation
- In this pathway reduced NAD transfers hydrogen to pyruvate to form lactate
- NAD can now be reused in glycolysis
- Pyruvate is reduced to lactate by enzyme lactate dehydrogenase
- Pyruvate is the hydrogen acceptor
- The final product lactate can be further metabolised
- A small amount of ATP is produced
The pathway of lactate fermentation