S18) Energy Production — TCA Cycle & ETC Flashcards
Describe the structure of the mitochondrion
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Pyruvate from Stage 1 (glycolysis) does not enter directly into Stage 3 (TCA cycle).
What reaction occurs?
The link reaction
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Where does the link reaction occur?
Mitochondrial matrix – pyruvate transported from cytoplasm across mitochondrial membrane
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Which enzyme catalyses the link reaction?
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Pyruvate dehydrogenase (large multi-enzyme complex)
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Describe three features of the link reaction
- Reaction is sensitive to Vitamin B1 deficiency (PDH requires factors from B1)
- Reaction is irreversible (key regulatory step)
- Irreversible loss of CO2
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PDH is subject to multiple regulation.
Describe its activation and inhibition in terms of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation
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What is the consequence of PDH deficiency?
Lactic acidosis
Describe three features of the Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle
- Acetyl CoA converted to 2CO2
- Oxidative
- Produces some energy & precursors for biosynthesis
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Where does the TCA cycle occur?
Mitochondria
How many rounds of TCA cycle occur per glucose molecule entering from glycolysis?
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What is produced after the two rounds of the TCA cycle occurring per glucose molecule?
- 6 NADH
- 2 FADH2
- 2 GTP
How is the TCA cycle regulated?
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Appreciate the biological precusors molecules synthesised from the TCA cycle
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Which three events occur in oxidative phosphorylation?
- Electron transport and ATP synthesis
- NADH & FADH2 re-oxidised
- Large amounts of energy (ATP) produced
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Where does the ETC occur?
Inner mitochondrial membrane
What is the role of the electron carriers NADH and FAD2H in the ETC?
- NADH and FAD2H contain high energy electrons that can be transferred to O2 through a series of carrier molecules with the release of large amounts of energy
- The energy is used to drive ATP synthesis in the final stage of catabolism (oxidative phosphorylation)
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Identify and describe the two uses of reducing power in ATP synthesis
- Electron transport: electrons on NADH and FAD2H transferred through a series of carrier molecules to oxygen
- Oxidative phosphorylation: free energy released used to drive ATP synthesis
Describe what happens in the ETC
- NADH and FADH2 supply electrons from metabolic substrates
- Electrons pass through the ETC and reduce oxygen to form H2O at Complex IV
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What do proton translocating complexes do?
- Complexes I, III and IV act as proton translocating complexes
- They use free energy derived from ETC to move protons from the inside to the outside of the inner mitochondrial membrane to build up a proton motive force
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Explain the concept of the proton motive force
- The inner mitochondrial membrane is impermeable to protons and the H+ concentration in the intermembrane space builds up
- A [H+] gradient (membrane potential) across inner mitochondrial membrane forms i.e. the proton motive force
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Oxidative phosphorylation involves electron transport coupled to ATP synthesis.
In three steps, explain how this occurs
⇒ Electrons are transferred from NADH and FAD2H to molecular oxygen
⇒ Energy released is used to generate the PMF
⇒ Energy from the dissipation of the proton motive force is coupled to the synthesis of ATP from ADP
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How many proton translocating complexes are used by NADH and FADH2 respectively?
Electrons in NADH have more energy than in FAD2H:
- NADH uses 3 PTCs
- FADH2 uses only 2 PTCs
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State the amounts of ATP synthesised from the oxidation of two moles of NADH and FADH2 respectively
- Oxidation of 2 moles of NADH → synthesis of 5 moles of ATP (P/O = 2.5)
- Oxidation of 2 moles of FADH2 → synthesis of 3 moles of ATP (P/O = 1.5)
In 4 steps, explain how a high [ATP] regulates oxidative phosphorylation
⇒ Low [ADP] is low means no substrate for ATP synthase
⇒ Inward flow of H+ stops
⇒ [H+] in intermitochondrial space increases
⇒ Stops electron transport
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Explain the inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation
Inhibitors block electron transport e.g. cyanide prevents acceptance of electrons by O2
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In three steps, explain how the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation occurs
⇒ Uncouplers increase the permeability of inner mitochondrial membrane to H+
⇒ Dissipate proton gradient (reducing PMF)
⇒ No drive for ATP synthesis
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Identify an example of an uncoupler
Fatty acids
Thermogenin (UCP1) is a naturally-occurring uncoupling protein found in brown adipose tissue.
In 6 steps, explain its role in response to cold
⇒ Noradrenaline activates lipase
⇒ Lipase releases fatty acids from triacylglycerol
⇒ Fatty acids activate UCP1
⇒ UCP1 uncouples electron transport from ATP synthesis
⇒ H+ are transported back into mitochondria
⇒ Energy of PMF is released as extra heat
Where is brown adipose tissue found and what is its function?
- Newborn infants – to maintain heat, particularly around vital organs
- Hibernating animals – to generate heat to maintain body temperature
Compare and contrast oxidative phosphorylation with substrate level phosphorylation in terms of the following:
- Requirements
- Energy coupling
- O2 dependency
- ATP synthesis
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