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Chapter 18 Oxidative phosphorylation the process in which ATP is formed as a result of the transfer of electrons from NADH or FADH 2 to O 2 by a series of electron carriers take place in mitochondria, the major source of ATP in aerobic organisms the culmination of a series of energy transformations that are called cellular respiration or simple respiration (p. 503) Electron-motive force NADH-Q oxidoreductase, Q-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, cytochrome c oxidase Proton-motive force Phosphoryl transfer potential (ATP synthase) Proton gradients are an interconvertible currency of free energy in biological systems
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(oxidative phosphorylation) (TCA cycle, fatty acid oxidation) §18.1 Oxidative phosphorylation in eukaryotes takes place in mitochondria: 2 m in length and 0.5 m in diameter Kennedy and Lehninger quite permeable voltage-dependent anion channel (mitochondrial porin) Impermeable a large family of transporters shuttles metabolites matrix side (N side) cytosolic side (P side)
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1M reduction potential of H + :H 2 couple = 0 §18.2 Oxidative phosphorylation depends on electron transfer Measurement of redox potential (E 0 ’ ) to evaluate electron-transfer potential (G° ’ )
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½ O 2 + NADH + H + H 2 O + NAD + G 0' = - 52.6 kcal mole -1 p. 508 Release energy is used 1. proton gradient formation ATP synthesis ATP hydrolysis G 0' = -7.3 kcal mole -1 2. transport metabolites across the Mito. membrane H + matrix cyto : 5.2 kcal mole -1 G°= -nF E 0 faraday (23.05 kcal mol -1 V -1 ) △ G = RT ln(C 2 /C 1 ) + ZF △ V pH lower
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§ 18.3 Four complexes in respiratory chain Electron affinity high Respirasome 1,2,3 1,2,4 ?
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Nelson does not pump protons
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N P
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Respiratory chain complexes separation ATP synthase (complex V) In vitro, hydrolytic activity Nelson
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Universal electron acceptors: NADH and NADPH: are water soluble, can’t cross inner Mito. membrane carry e - from catabolic rxs. vs. supply e - to anabolic rxs. [reduced form]/[oxidized form] hydride Nelson UV p. 499
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Universal electron acceptors: Flavin nucleotides (FMN or FAD): are bound to flavoproteins which determine the reduction potential of a flavin nucleotide a part of the flavoprotein’s active site flavoproteins can participate in either one- or two- electron transfer Nelson
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Universal electron acceptors: Ubiquinone (coenzyme Q, Q): a lipid-soluble molecule can accept one or two e - carry both e - and proton Nelson Q pool: a pool of Q and QH 2 exist in the inner Mito. membrane
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Universal electron acceptors: iron-sulfur proteins: one-electron transfer non-heme iron proteins without releasing or binding protons 1 Fe — 4 Cys 2 Fe — 2 S — 4 Cys 4 Fe — 4 S — 4 Cys Rieske iron-sulfur proteins: 2 His residues replace 2 cys residues Nelson p. 511 Phosphorylation at His
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Universal electron acceptors: cytochromes: a, b, c three classes in Mito. one-electron transfer The longest-wavelength 600 nm 560 nm 550 nm Covalently associated to proteins The standard reduction potential (p. 507) Nelson (C 17 ) Vinyl group
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Reduced state (Fe 2+ )Nelson Color?
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1. NADH-Q oxidoreductase (NADH dehydrogenase, complex Ⅰ ) NADH + Q + 5H + matrix NAD+ + QH 2 + 4H + cytosol
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Nelson 2. Succinate-Q reductase (complex Ⅱ ) p. 528
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Q cycle: semiquinone radical anion
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Nelson
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3. Q-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cytochrome bc1 complex; cytochrome reductase; complex Ⅲ ) His replace cys 1e - Q 3(hemes) cytochrome c 1(2Fe-2S) during Q cycle
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4 cyt c red + 8 H + N + O 2 4 cyt c ox + 2 H 2 O + 4 H + P 4. Complex Ⅳ : Cytochrome c oxidase e - from cytosol to O 2 2 heme a, 3 copper ions 3 subunits Cu A /Cu A heme a heme a 3 Cu B O 2 ferric/ferrous cupric/cuprous ? Nelson
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1 st e - Cupric (Cu 2+ ) Cuprous (Cu + ) 2 nd e - Ferric (Fe 3+ ) Ferrous (Fe 2+ ) 3 th and 4 th e -
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Proton transport by complex Ⅳ 4 cyt c red + 8 H + N + O 2 4 cyt c ox + 2 H 2 O + 4 H + P Charge neutrality and Conformational changes (p. 517) G 0’ 4 H + 5.2 kcal/mole (p. 509) 2 23.06 0.82 (Tab. 18.1)
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only electrons transfer, no protons transport NADH + 11 H + N + ½ O 2 → NAD + + 10 H + p + H 2 O FADH 2 6
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Reactive (active) oxygen species (R[A]OSs) superoxide radical ( · O 2 - ), peroxide (O 2 2- ), hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ), hydroxyl radical (OH·), singlet oxygen (O 2 1 ) superoxide dismutase (SOD): Cu/Zn-; Mn-; Fe- catalase (CAT): 2 H 2 O 2 O 2 + 2H 2 O a heme protein peroxidase: H 2 O 2 + RH 2 2 H 2 O + R [ascorbate or glutathione peroxidase] SOD: 2 · O 2 - + 2H + O 2 + H 2 O 2 Dismutation: a reaction in which a single reactant is converted into two different products Antioxidant vitamins: Vit C: Vit E: lipophilic, avoid lipid peroxidation Danger lurks in the reduction of O 2
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Radical · Q – from complex Ⅰ to QH 2 QH 2 to b L of complex III Also from pentose phosphate pathway Nelson p. 722
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Type Ⅰ : insulin dep. a paucity of pancreatic cells Type Ⅱ : non-insulin dep. slow to develop, in older, obese individuals insulin is produced, but some feature of the insulin-response system is defective The characteristic symptoms of both types: polydipsia, polyuria, glucosuria Aerobic metabolism More ROS More protective enzymes were induced
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