Lecture 22 Flashcards
Define oxidative phosphorylation
the method of generating ATP which is dependent on the transport of protons across the mitochondrial membrane
What are the 2 stages of oxidative phosphorylation?
Stage 1 : high energy electrons are transferred down the electron transport chain which pumps protons across a membrane, generating an electrochemical gradient
Stage 2: Protons flow back down their electrochemical gradient through ATP synthase to produce ATP
Define chemiosmotic coupling
it is a mechanism that uses energy stored in a transmembrane gradient to drive an energy requiring process (like generating ATP)
provide details about the mitochondria
- evolved from bacteria that was engulfed by ancestral cells
- can undergo fission
- contains its own DNA
- can change shape, location and number in response to cells metabolic demands
Mitochondrial structure
- outer membrane is permeable to most small molecules as a result of a protein called porin
- inner membrane is impermeable to most small molecules because it has many infolding known as cristae
- the intermembrane space is located between the outer and inner membrane
- the interior space is known as the matrix
Generation of high energy electrons
- acetyl-CoA that is generated from fatty acids, sugars and amino acids can enter CAC and produce large amounts of the activated carriers like NADH and FADH2
- electrons from NADH and FADH2 can be passed down the electron transport chain, causing protons to be pumped from the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space
How are electrons from NADH and FADH2 passed down the electron transport chain
through using respiratory enzyme complexes
What is complex I
Name: NADH dehydrogenase complex
- transfers a pair of electrons from NADH to coenzyme Q (Q –> ubiquinone)
- transfer of electrons are energetically favoured
- pumps protons into the intermembrane space
Coenzyme Q
- lipophilic tail allows it to enter hydrophobic core of mitochondrial membrane
- complete reduction requires 2 H+ and 2e-
What is complex III
Name: cytochrome c reductase complex
- receives electrons from reduced coenzyme Q (QH2 –> ubiquinol) and transfers them onto cytochrome c
- pumps protons into intermembrane space
What is complex II
Name: FADH2 dehydrogenase complex
- It takes electrons from FADH2 generated during the CAC and transfers them to ubiquinone
- complex II does not pump protons
What is complex IV
Name: cytochrome c oxidase complex
- accepts electrons from cytochrome c and directs them to the 4 electron reduction of O2 to form H2O
- pumps protons into intermembrane space
proton pumping
- complex 1, 3, and 4 pump protons from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space creating a H+ gradient and a voltage gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane
- it is very favourable for protons to flow back into the mitochondrial space due to the difference in pH and mostly because of the difference in membrane potential
what is proton-motive force
the combines contribution of change in voltage and change in pH
what is complex V
Name: ATP synthase
- it is a large multi subunit protein embedded in the inner mitochondrial matrix that uses energy stored in the electrochemical gradient to produce ATP
- head faces mitochondrial matrix
- when protons flow through it causes central stalk to turn