Oxidative phosphorylation and the Electron Transport Chain Flashcards

1
Q

what occurs in glycolysis

A

Pyruvate and 2 ATP molecules are generated per molecule of glucose as well as 2 molecules of NADH. Takes place in the cytoplasm of all cells and does not require oxygen

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2
Q

what occurs in the TCA / Krebs cycle

A

Uses the pyruvate molecules from glycolysis to generate 2 ATP as well as several molecules of FADH2and NADH for the electron transport chain. Takes place in the mitochondrial matrix and requires oxygen.

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3
Q

what occurs in Oxidative phosphorylation/the ETC

A

Uses the NADH and FADH2molecules formed during glycolysis and TCA, creates a proton gradient that ultimately leads to the production of about 34 molecules of ATP. Takes place in the mitochondrial matrix and requires oxygen.

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4
Q

what by product molecules can be produced which can be oxidised to release further energy

A

NADH and FADH2

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5
Q

how many of NADH and FADH 2 shuffle through the ETC

A

34 ATP = 10 NADH (3 ATP per NADH)
2 FADH2 (2 ATP per FADH2)

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6
Q

what is NADH

A

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
(NAD + Hydrogen) and is a co-enzyme found in all living cells

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7
Q

what reaction is NADH involved in

A

NADH is usually involved in REDOX reactions as a transporter of electrons.
NAD+ is its oxidized form, NADH is the reduced coenzyme form (OIL RIG)

NAD+ (Oxidised state = can accept electrons!)

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8
Q

What is FADH2

A

Flavin adenine dinucleotide, another important co-enzyme found in all living cells

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9
Q

what does FADH2 transport

A

electrons
FAD is its oxidized form, (wants to accept electrons!)

FADH2 is the reduced coenzyme form (accepts two electrons and two protons)

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10
Q

What reaction changes NAD+ to NADH

A

Redox reaction - NAD+ accepts 2 electrons causing it to be negatively charged

Then accepts a positively charged hydrogen ion (H+) from surrounding environment to give neutral NADH

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11
Q

What reaction changes NAD+ to NADH

A

Redox reaction - NAD+ accepts 2 electrons causing it to be negatively charged

Then accepts a positively charged hydrogen ion (H+) from surrounding environment to give neutral NADH

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12
Q

when is NADH produced

A

produced in glycolysis and Krebs cycle

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13
Q

what 2 joined nucleotides does NADH have

A

adenine and nicotinamide

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14
Q

where is FADH2 produced

A

produced in Krebs cycle

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15
Q

What 2 joined nucleotides does FADH2 have

A

adenine and flavine mononucleotide

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16
Q

what 2 closely connected components in the Oxidative Phosphorylation

A

the ETC and chemiosmosis

17
Q

what does NADH and FADH2 do in Oxidative Phosphorylation

A

transfer electrons to oxygen across several complexes in the electron transfer chain, being returned to their oxidised forms (NAD+ and FAD)

18
Q

why is oxygen important in Oxidative Phosphorylation

A

final acceptor of electrons and is reduced to H2O in the production of ATP

19
Q

where does oxidative phosphorylation occur

A

the mitochondrion

20
Q

how is a proton gradient H+ established

A

as a result of electron transport and redox potential

21
Q

what is redox potential

A

(E)– a measure of a substance’s affinity for electrons

22
Q

what 2 processes occur in Oxidative Phosphorylation

A

1- produces a proton concentration gradient by the respiratory ETC, a series of enzyme complexes embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane, oxidises NADH and FADH2. Electrons are passed from the reduced coenzymes to O2.
2- The proton concentration gradient is a reservoir of free energy – protons are channelled back across the inner membrane through an enzyme complex, ATP synthase

23
Q

how are electrons transferred from NADH and FADH2 to oxygen along the ETC

A

using 4 multi-subunit large enzyme complexes (I, II, III, IV) and 2 mobile electron carriers (coenzyme Q and cytochrome c)

24
Q

what are redox reactions (exergonic or endogenic)

A

exergonic; the energy released is used to ‘pump’ protons across the inner mitochondrial membrane

25
Q

Are Electrons directly transferred from NADH or FADH2 to O2

A

no
Instead, NADH and FADH2 pass electrons to members of the ETC which are sequentially reduced then oxidised
O2 is the final acceptor of electrons

26
Q

what are small electron carriers

A

membrane proteins

27
Q

what is Chemiosmosis

A

is the movement of ions across a semipermeable membrane

28
Q

what occurs in complex 1

A

NADH dehydrogenase catalyses the transfer of electrons from NADH to coenzyme Q (CoQ)
Acts as a proton pump.

29
Q

what occurs in complex 2

A

succinate-CoQ oxidoreductase catalyses the transfer of electrons to coenzyme Q (CoQ)
and the product is fumarate + CoQH2.
CoQH2 is called ubiquinol, a reduced state of CoQ

30
Q

what is complex 3

A

When CoQH2 is re-oxidised to CoQ the H+ passes out the other side of the membrane (second reaction)

31
Q

what is the complex 4

A

cytochrome c oxidase, catalyses the transfer of electrons from cytochrome c to oxygen.
Completes the oxidation of original NADH molecule
Proton pumping also takes place (third reaction)

32
Q

How does proton pumping generate ATP molecules?

A

Oxidative phosphorylation couples the oxidation of NADH and FADH2 with the phosphorylation of ADP to generate ATP

33
Q

what is ATP Synthase

A

A multi-subunit protein - ATPase
This enzyme has a channel for protons to flow from the intermembrane space into the matrix.
Synthesis is in direct response to oxidation of NADH and FADH2

34
Q

how many moles of ATP does the complete oxidation of 1 molecule of glucose generates

A

38

35
Q

in cells using the glycerol phosphate shuffle what is the ATP yield

A

2- overall ATP yield in these cells is 36 per mole of glucose