Cellular Respiration: Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmosis
Cellular Respiration Step 4: The Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmosis
Electron Transport Chain (ETC)
- Definition: A series of protein complexes located on the inner mitochondrial membrane that facilitate electron transport.
- Function: Receives electrons from NADH and FADH2, creating an energy cascade that generates energy.
- Arrangement:
- Proteins are arranged in order of electron attraction strength (weakest to strongest).
- Electrons flow through these proteins, culminating in oxygen, which is the terminal electron acceptor.
- Key Mechanism:
- As electrons move, they release energy used to pump protons (H+) from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space via proton pumps.
- The resultant electrochemical gradient is critical for ATP synthesis.
- Oxygen combines with the electrons and protons to form water (H2O).
Key Components of the Electron Transport Chain
- NADH and FADH2:
- Both are carriers of electrons generated during earlier stages (glycolysis and Krebs cycle).
- NADH can produce 3 ATP; FADH2 can produce 2 ATP.
- NADH is typically derived from glycolysis and the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA.
- Proton Pumps: Move H+ into the intermembrane space, contributing to the proton gradient.
- Key Complexes:
- NADH Dehydrogenase: First complex that accepts electrons from NADH.
- Cytochrome b-c1 Complex: Intermediary transfer of electrons.
- Cytochrome Oxidase Complex: Final complex that transfers electrons to oxygen.
- Ubiquinone and Cytochrome C: Serve as mobile carriers of electrons within the chain.
Chemiosmosis
- Definition: The process by which the stored energy in the proton gradient is converted into ATP.
- Mechanism:
- Protons in the intermembrane space flow down their gradient through ATP synthase, a protein channel that synthesizes ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi).
- Proton-Motive Force: The energy generated from protons moving through the ATP synthase creates a powerful driving force for ATP generation.
ATP Yield
- Each NADH contributes to the production of 3 ATP.
- Each FADH2 contributes to the production of 2 ATP.
- Maximal Theoretical Yield:
- Glycolysis produces 4 ATP and 2 NADH.
- One cycle of the Krebs cycle generates 6 NADH and 2 FADH2, contributing a total of 18 ATP.
- Total Theoretical ATP Yield from Glucose Oxidation: 36 ATP.
Control of Aerobic Respiration
- Regulation: Feedback inhibition and product activation loops controlled by various metabolites.
- Positive Regulators:
- ATP and ADP levels affect the activity of key enzymes like phosphofructokinase.
- Negative Regulators:
- Fructose 1,6-bisphosphate inhibits pyruvate decarboxylase.
- Acetyl-CoA and citrate can inhibit pathways in Krebs cycle.
Summary of Pathways Involved
- Glycolysis: Breaks down glucose to pyruvate, generating NADH and direct ATP.
- Krebs Cycle: Processes acetyl-CoA to produce NADH and FADH2 for the ETC.
- ETC: Transports electrons, pumps protons, establishes a gradient for ATP synthesis via oxidation phosphorylation (chemiosmosis).