
Beer - A Product of Ethanol Fermentation
'Ethanol fermentation' is a form of
anaerobic respiration used primarily by
yeasts when oxygen is not present in sufficient quantity for normal
cellular respiration, the cellular energy-producing system, to continue.
The need for fermentation

Glucose
In
anaerobic respiration (the branch of respiration ‘normal’ for most organisms), a molecule of
Glucose (C
6H
12O
6, shown left) is broken down through the process of
glycolysis into
pyruvate (C
3H
3O
3, shown right). In the first half of glycolysis, two
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) molecules cause glucose to break into two molecules
Glyceraldehyde-3-
phosphate (G3P). In the next step, a
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD
+) molecule removes a hydrogen atom from a G3P, converting G3P to 3-Biphosphoglycerate and NAD
+ to NADH.

Pyruvate
When oxygen is present, NADH carries its hydrogen elsewhere. Eventually, oxygen reacts with the hydrogen carried by NADH to make water (H
2O). When oxygen is not present in sufficient quantity, NADH cannot give up its hydrogen to oxygen, and so much of the cell’s supply of NAD
+ is converted to NADH that G3P can no longer be converted to 3-Biphosphoglycerate, and the generation of ATP by the cell ceases, unless another substance can be used to remove the hydrogen from NADH.
The chemical process of fermentation

Acetaldehyde

Ethanol
Fermentation is a chemical pathway that provides such a substance. In the ethanol fermentation used by yeasts and other organisms, the ionised
carboxyl group (COO
–) is removed from the pyruvate to generate a molecule of
carbon dioxide, which is released by the yeast into its surroundings. The resulting molecule,
acetaldehyde (C
2H
4O, see left), takes the place of oxygen as the chemical that accepts hydrogen from NADH. This hydrogen, together with an H
+ ion released during an earlier stage of glycolysis, is added to the acetaldehyde, making
ethanol (C
2H
6O, see right).
Ethanol respiration can be summed up in this
chemical equation: C
6H
12O
6 → 2 C
2H
5OH + 2 CO
2 + 2ATP
Uses of ethanol respiration
Ethanol respiration is the form of
fermentation used to make alcohol and bread. Yeast cells in the dough of a bread will be cut off from their sources of oxygen, and will generate alcohol (which is boiled away due to the heat) and carbon dioxide (which form bubbles that cause bread to rise). It is also used to mass-produce alcoholic beverages. The yeasts, cut off from oxygen, will ferment a starchy grain or vegetable (such as
wheat,
corn,
potatoes,
rye).
Microbes used in ethanol fermentation
★
Yeast
★
Zymomonas mobilis
See also
★
Anaerobic respiration
★
Cellulose
★
Cellular respiration
★
Fermentation (biochemistry)