Oxidative Phosphorylation Flashcards
Substrate level phosphorylation
Any chemical reaction that directly uses exothermic reaction to drive phosphorylation of ADP. Generally an unstable molecule passes p to ADP
Example of substrate level phosphorylation in glycolysis
1,3-biophosphoglycerate to 3-phosphoglyerate
Example of substrate level phosphorylation in citric acid cycle
Succinyl coA to succinate, GDP to GTP but relies on hydrolysis of thioester bond rather than high energy phosphate
How does oxidative phosphorylation differ from substrate-level?
Uses REDOX to drive phosphorylation and not a strict 1:1 ratio
Sources of reduced co-enzymes
- FA oxidation (doesn’t produce ATP)
- AA oxidation
- Citric acid cycle
Shuttles
Systems that transfer reducing power to NAD/FAD in mitochondria
Outline the malate-aspartate shuttle
- Malate dehydrogenase in the cytosol can take oxoloacetate and convert it to malate (opposite of citric acid cycle)
- This uses NADH -> NAD
- Malate then has reducing power from NADH
- Transported to inner MM where malate dehydrogenase converts back to oxoloacetate
- This generates NADH
NADH is worth ____ ATP
2.5
FADH2 is worth ____ ATP
1.5
Outline the glycerol -3-P shuttle
- Dihydroxyacetponephosphate can take the reducing power from NADH and become glycerol-3-P
- Using glycerol-3-P dehydrogenase
- Glycerol-3-P transferred into IMS
- Another version of glycerol-3-P-dehydrogenase converts this to dihydroxyacetone phosphate
- This converts FAD to FADH2 (bound to enzyme)
Which shuttle is more efficient?
Malate-aspartate however both are used in unison to allow faster regeneration of NAD