Explaining the effect of different substrates on the rate of cellular respiration
I can analyse data collected from a measuring cylinder, calculate the rate of cellular respiration, and explain the effect of different substrates on the rate.
Explaining the effect of different substrates on the rate of cellular respiration
I can analyse data collected from a measuring cylinder, calculate the rate of cellular respiration, and explain the effect of different substrates on the rate.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Process data to calculate the volume of gas collected in the measuring cylinder, and the mean of repeat measurements.
- Calculate the rate of respiration by dividing the volume of gas collected in the measuring cylinder by the time.
- Use appropriate units for the rate of cellular respiration.
- Compare the rate of respiration in yeast given different substrates, and describe trends in the data.
- Use ideas about enzymes and active sites to explain the effect of different substrates on the rate of respiration.
Common misconception
Thinking that each enzyme can act on many different substrates.
This lesson reinforces understanding that each enzyme has a specific substrate, because only that substrate will fit into they enzyme's active site.
Keywords
Rate - A measure of how much change occurs per unit of time.
Cellular respiration - An exothermic chemical process that transfers energy for life processes, using glucose as fuel.
Substrate - The substance that fits into an enzyme’s active site.
Enzyme - A biological catalyst.
Active site - The part of an enzyme where the substrate binds.
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
Video
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
Aerobic respiration -
glucose + oxygen --> water + carbon dioxide
Anaerobic respiration (animals) -
glucose --> lactic acid
Anaerobic respiration (plants) -
glucose --> carbon dioxide + ethanol
Exit quiz
6 Questions
Active site -
the part of an enzyme’s structure where the substrate binds
Enzyme -
biological catalyst
Lock and key -
a model used to explain why each enzyme can only catalyse one reaction
Substrate -
a substance that binds to the active site of an enzyme
Rate -
a measure of change over time