Aerobic vs Anaerobic Respiration - Lactic Acid and Ethanol Fermentation
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ต.ค. 2019
- This biology and biochemistry video tutorial explains the difference between aerobic respiration and anaerobic respiration. Anaerobic respiration includes lactic acid fermentation which occurs in muscle cells and ethanol fermentation which occurs in yeast.
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Hey just want to put it out there that fermentation is not the same thing as anaerobic respiration!
Fermentation is an ANAEROBIC PROCESS but it is not technically ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION.
Anaerobic respiration typically refers to a way that organisms can use the electron transport chain (ETC) but instead of using oxygen to "accept/catch" all the electrons at the end of the line they use a different molecule, one that also really wants some electrons (examples = Nitrate (NO3[2-]) or sulfate (SO4[2-]).
A good way to think about it:
fermentation = regeneration of electron carriers (NAD+) in the absence of oxygen
"respiration" = some sort of electron transport chain is involved (may be modified so that it can use other electron acceptors at the end of the chain)... AEROBIC RESPIRATION = final electron acceptor is O2; ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION = final electron acceptor is something other than O2 (iron, nitrate, sulfate etc.).
Love your video man, just wanted to clear some things up incase some university students are watching the video
Thank you, I was wondering the main difference between anaerobic respiration and fermentation. This video was helpful nonetheless, but your comment answered my question.
It can be confusing! Glad I could help :)
Yes! This is huge, I hope he changes that in the video. This could trick a lot of students if they aren't careful. Thank you for clarifying!
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Is there a Redox Imbalance of NAD+ in Ethanol fermentation?
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Hi im struggling with a question which asks 'what happens to the hydrogen removed in stage 1?' (Glucose to pyruvate in anerobic respiration)
do you mean in glycolysis? if so, they're used to produce NADH/H+ (reduced NAD) from NAD as well as water
Iman Bajwa ah thanks for your help
9:04 you say 38 MAX ATP can be produced with anaerobic respiration? Did you mean to say aerobic at that part?
9:05- anaerobic can't be called respiration which only refers to aerobic oxidation. You must mean Aerobic produce 38 ATP.
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Pyruvate has 3 hydrogen but acetaldehyde has 4 so where does that hydrogen comes from sir please clear my confusion
Where was the video last week when I had my bioenergetics test?
Errr, not uploaded? Bisshesd
10th like
5th comment
P. S:amazing video
According to Chemiosmotic theory, The no. Of ATP's produced are 30.
(In aerobic respiration)
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Sir
@@onlyabdelix what?
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Anam Khan sir
Anaerobic Respiration and Fermentation are two different things.
In my channal there are fermentation .....
Be careful ! Anaerobic respiration and fermentation are not the same thing
Hhhhmmmmm Very interesting🤔
the narrator sounds like MARKIE MARK WAHLBERG
First
Y'all should know that anaerobic respiration involves moving electrons through a membrane to an electron acceptor other than oxygen. Fermentation is totally different from anaerobic respiration. The information in this video is wrong.
Why final electron acceptor is necessary?