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05: Oxidative Phosphorylation and Electron Transport Chain Notes

Oxidative Phosphorylation and Role of the Electron Transport Chain

Section Objectives

  • Importance of Mitochondria:

  • Key role in aerobic respiration (energy production using oxygen).

  • High energy demands in liver and muscle tissues.

  • Structural Features of Mitochondria:

  • Outer Membrane: Permeable to small molecules and ions.

  • Intermembrane Space: Space between the outer and inner membranes.

  • Inner Membrane: Impermeable to most small molecules; houses electron transport chain.

  • Matrix: Contains enzymes for metabolic processes and mitochondrial DNA.

  • Enzymes of the Respiratory Complex:

  • Include dehydrogenases and various electron carriers.

  • Protein Complexes of the Electron Transport Chain:

  • Four multi-subunit enzyme complexes responsible for electron transfer:

    • Complex I: NADH to ubiquinone.
    • Complex II: Succinate to ubiquinone.
    • Complex III: Ubiquinol to cytochrome c.
    • Complex IV: Cytochrome c to oxygen.
  • Chemiosmotic Theory:

  • Explains how proton movement generates ATP.

  • Proton Motive Force:

  • Resulting from a concentration and charge gradient of protons.

  • Role of ATP Synthase:

  • Catalyzes the conversion of ADP and inorganic phosphate to ATP.

  • Production of ATP from NADH and FADH2:

  • 2.5 ATP per NADH and 1.5 ATP per FADH2.

Mitochondria Structure

  • Outer Membrane:

  • Contains porin (voltage-gated anion channel) which allows small, anionic molecules to pass.

  • Inner Membrane:

  • Contains folds called cristae to increase surface area for reactions.

  • Hydrophobic and requires specific transporters for molecule entry.

  • Matrix:

  • Contains enzymes for the TCA cycle and fatty acid oxidation.

  • Houses mitochondrial DNA for synthesizing key proteins.

Respiratory Complex

  • NADH and FADH2:
  • Produced by the TCA cycle and glycolysis.
  • Serve as electron donors in oxidative phosphorylation.

Mechanism of Electron Transfer

  • Electron Transport Chain:

  • Series of electron carriers including NAD+/NADH, FMN/FAD, ubiquinone.

  • Transfer of electrons releases energy used to pump protons across the membrane.

  • Coenzyme Q (Ubiquinone):

  • Lipid-soluble, functions to transfer electrons and couple electron flow to proton movement.

  • Heme Groups:

  • Prosthetic groups that participate in electron transfer.

  • Cytochromes:

  • One-electron transporters characterized by iron-containing hemes.

  • Three types: a, b, and c.

  • Iron-Sulfur Proteins:

  • Participate in electron transfer; consist of iron and sulfur associations.

The Electron Transport Chain (ETC)

  • Complex I (NADH-Q reductase):

  • Uses FMN, transfers electrons from NADH to ubiquinone, pumps 4 protons across the membrane.

  • Complex II (Succinate-Q reductase):

  • Links succinate oxidation with ubiquinone reduction; does not pump protons.

  • Complex III (QH2-cytochrome c reductase):

  • Couples electron transfer to cytochrome c and pumps protons across the membrane.

  • Complex IV (Cytochrome c oxidase):

  • Reduces molecular oxygen to water; 4 H+ are pumped for every two electrons.

Energy and ATP Production

  • Flow of Electrons:

  • Electrons move from a higher to lower energy state, releasing energy that is used to pump protons, establishing a proton gradient.

  • Chemiosmotic Theory:

  • Describes the relationship between proton gradients and ATP synthesis.

Proton Motive Force

  • Mechanism:
  • Movement of protons back into the matrix through ATP synthase drives ATP production.

Chemiosmotic Model

  • ATP Production:
  • 2.5 ATP produced per NADH and 1.5 ATP per FADH2 through the proton gradient established by the electron transport chain.

Summary

  • Key Points:
  • Complexes I, III, and IV act as proton pumps; Complex II does not.
  • ATP synthase converts ADP and inorganic phosphate into ATP, relying on the passage of protons back into the matrix.
  • Net H+ movements calculated for ATP yield: 10 H+/4 for NADH (approx. 2.5 ATP), 6/4 for FADH2 (approx. 1.5 ATP).