Q.66 Which ONE of the following components is NOT an electron acceptor during anaerobic respiration? (A) Lactate (B) Carbonate (C) Nitrate (D) Sulphate

Q.66 Which ONE of the following components is NOT an electron acceptor during anaerobic respiration?
(A) Lactate (B) Carbonate (C) Nitrate (D) Sulphate

Carbonate is NOT an electron acceptor during anaerobic respiration.

Question Breakdown

Anaerobic respiration uses alternative terminal electron acceptors (instead of O₂) in the electron transport chain to generate proton motive force/ATP. Common acceptors ranked by reduction potential: NO₃⁻ > SO₄²⁻ > CO₂ > fumarate.

Option Analysis

(A) Lactate

Used in fermentation (not respiration). Pyruvate accepts electrons from NADH → lactate (homofermentative bacteria like Lactobacillus). No ETC involved.

(B) Carbonate

NOT an electron acceptor. CO₂ (not carbonate CO₃²⁻) accepts electrons in methanogenesis (acetogens/methanogens: CO₂ → CH₄). Carbonate lacks suitable redox potential.

(C) Nitrate

Correct acceptor. Denitrification: NO₃⁻ → NO₂⁻ → NO → N₂O → N₂ (Pseudomonas, Paracoccus). High energy yield.

(D) Sulphate

Correct acceptor. Sulfate reduction: SO₄²⁻ → SO₃²⁻ → S²⁻ (Desulfovibrio). Common in sediments.

Correct Choice

(B) Carbonate

Electron acceptor anaerobic respiration excludes carbonate; standard acceptors are nitrate (denitrification), sulphate (sulfate reduction), not CO₃²⁻.

Anaerobic Electron Transport Chain

text
NADH/FADH₂ → Quinone → bc₁ → NO₃⁻ reductase → N₂ [Nitrate]
→ SO₄²⁻ reductase → H₂S [Sulfate]
→ Fumarate reductase → Succinate

Fermentation (no ETC): Pyruvate → Lactate/Ethanol

Acceptor Comparison

Option Used in Anaerobic Respiration? Process Microbes
(A) Lactate No Fermentation product Lactobacillus
(B) Carbonate No CO₂ in methanogenesis Methanogens
(C) Nitrate Yes Denitrification Pseudomonas
(D) Sulphate Yes Sulfate reduction Desulfovibrio

GATE Exam Relevance

Microbiology PYQ tests respiration vs fermentation distinctionRespiration = ETC + external acceptor (NO₃⁻, SO₄²⁻). Fermentation = substrate-level phosphorylation (lactate, ethanol). CO₂ (not carbonate) for methanogens.

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