Similarities and Differences between Cell Respiration and Photosynthesis Similarities: 1. ATP is a key molecule in each 2. G-3-P is formed in both processes- In Glycolysis (cell respiration) and in Calvin cycle (photosynthesis) 3. Both have 2 processes feeding into one main one: Cell Respiration utilizes Glycolysis and Citric Acid Cycle to funnel energized electrons to Oxidative Phosphorylation process, PSII and PSI provide ATP and reducing power to Calvin Cycle 4. Both utilize cycles where starting material is regenerated after molecules leave the cycles (Citric acid cycle- Cell Respiration, Calvin cycle- Photosynthesis) 5. Both rely on movement of electrons for operation 6. Both use electron transport chains in production of ATP 7. Both use chemiosmosis to generate ATP 8. Mitochondria of cell respiration and chloroplasts of photosynthesis have distinct similarities, for example as above, proton pumps pump H+ across a membrane from low to high concentration. An endergonic process requiring energy protons diffuse back across membrane through ATP synthase, driving synthesis of ATP 9. Can observe emergent properties via multiple steps in both processes Differences: 1. Goals: ATP synthesis is main reason for cell respiration, whereas ATP is only a required product for photosynthesis to be able to create glucose. 2. Reactants: glucose and oxygen, Cell respiration, carbon dioxide and water, photosynthesis 3. Products: carbon dioxide and water, Cell respiration and glucose and oxygen, photosynthesis 4. Oxygen is exhaust of photosynthesis whereas carbon dioxide is exhaust of cell respiration 5. Source of elections: in photosynthesis, electrons come from water and end-up in glucose. In cell respiration, electrons extracted from glucose and end up in water 6. Electron Carriers: NADH and FADH2 carry electrons in cell respiration, NADPH carries electrons in photosynthesis 7. Location: chloroplasts for photosynthesis and mitochondria for cell respiration 8. Proton movement: Protons are pumped into the inner membrane space of the mitochondria (cell respiration), protons are pumped into the thylakoid space of the chloroplasts (photosynthesis) Protons diffuse back into the matrix of the mitochondria (cell respiration), protons diffuse into the stroma of the chloroplast (photosynthesis)