Power conversion in Mitochondria L6-7 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two Flavin molecules in the ETC?

A

FMN and FAD

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2
Q

What do cytochromes contain?

A

Haem prosthetic groups(include iron)
undergo 1 electron reduction with polyphyrin Fe3+–>Fe2+
Em depends on structure of haem and local environment of the protein
Type A-extra formyl group and C15 hydrocarbon tail
Type B-Like haem in haemoglobin
Type C-Covalently attached to cysteines

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3
Q

How far can electrons jump?

A

about 15Å=10^4s^-1

This is sufficient for respiration

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4
Q

Which amino acids have the ability to accept H+ ions?

A

Glu, Asp, His, Lys, Arg (acid and bases)

They can’t accept electrons though cos that damages them

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5
Q

What is complex I? And what cofactors does it have?

A

NADH dehydrogenase or NADH-Q-Oxidoreductase.
It has a peripheral hydrophilic domain and membrane domain
FMN (accepts 2e-) and 9 Fe-S clusters only 7 used in ETC
2Fe-S=2Fe-2S
7Fe-S=4Fe-4S
NB/ 4H+ pumper per 2e-

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6
Q

In the hydrophilic/hydrophobic domain what are the protein subunits called? Complex I

A

hydrophilic=Nqo (NADH-Q-Oxidoreductase.)

hydrophobic=Nuo (NADH ubiquinone oxidoreductase)

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7
Q

Interesting fact about hydrophobic membrane domain of Complex I

A

NuoL,M,N are all homologous to the H+/Na+ antiporter, Therefore they presumably must have an H+ channel

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8
Q

What is noteworthy of NuoL,M,N in the hydrophobic membrane domain of Complex I?

A

They all have 2 broken helices
TM7 and TM12 are broken and each have a conserved residue (Lys or Glu) at helix break (3 channels have a conserved residue)
Can accept H+ to form a proton channel

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9
Q

What is the difference between NuoL,M,N ?

A

NuoL protein has extra 2 TM helices compared to NuoM,N

These are linked by a long amphipathic helix, HL lying along the membrane surface

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10
Q

How are protons pumped in complex I?

A

Structure suggests an indirect mechanism, since redox centres are too far from the membrane domain.
Conf change in hydrophilic domain is transmitted through HL amphipathic helix. HL acts as a piston coordinating a TILT of the 3 broken helices (NuoL,M,N) resulting in proton pumping

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11
Q

How many protons are pumped through complex I?

A

4
Transport of protons against its gradient is given by energy from the conf change as electrons pass from high to low midpoint potentials

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12
Q

What is complex II known as in the ETC?

A

Succinate dehydrogenase/succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase/fumarate reductase
enzyme of the citric acid cycle/the only memb bound enzyme of the citric acid cycle
Succinate—>fumarate

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13
Q

What are the co-factors in complex II?

A

FAD, 3FeS centres, b-type heam

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14
Q

Are there any H+ involved with complex II?

A

Yes, although there is no net transfer of protons, taken and delivered on same side-contributes to hydrophobic quinone pool
The H+/energy released from reduced fumarate is relayed to reduced quinone

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15
Q

What is complex III known as?

A

bc1 complex/cytochrome bc1/ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase
This complex is a DIMER
This is where the Q cycle takes place

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16
Q

What are the three subunits of complex III?

A

Rieske protein (2Fe-2S) -peripheral
Cytochrome b (bL bH)
Cytochrome c1 -peripheral
peripheral subunits do not effect enzyme activity
Redox carriers are immobilised onto the protein scaffold.
QP(UQ binding site at P-side)
QN(UQ binding site at N side)

17
Q

How many protons are translocated through complex III?

A

4
2H+ are picked up from matrix
4H+ are released from 2 x QH2 (come from NADH/Succinate dehydrogenase)
Net effect = 2H+ translocated across the membrane

18
Q

Why are there 2 Q binding sites?

A

Q and QH2 are uncharged-can freely diffuse within the membrane
Qradical- is negatively charged, unfavourable movement to N side yet it must be reduced close to N side to pick up a H+ from the matrix. The unfavourable movement creates high energy (repulsive effect) which means it can quickly pick up a proton and deliver it to the other side of the memb.
Uses high electronic potentials to directly translocate H+

19
Q

Why are there 2 b haems?

A

electron movement from bL to bH is unfavourable as moves to the negative side. This is offset by very favourable change in Em from -100mV (bL) to +50mv(bH)
difference =150mV
A highly negative midpoint potential will drive an electron to move irrespective of it being a disfavour able reaction.

20
Q

Is cytochrome c soluble?

A

Yes it is water-soluble and peripherally associated with the P side of the IMS of mitochondrial membrane. Contains a c type heam (Fe3+—>Fe2+)

21
Q

What is complex IV called and what does it reduce?

A

Cytochrome c oxidase. Reduces oxygen to water.

This is also a DIMER (Complex III is also a dimer)

22
Q

What redox centres does complex IV have?

A

CuA consists of 2 Cu atoms, coordinated by cis and his side chains (where electrons come in)
Haem a
Haem a3 can also bind oxygen in reduced Fe2+ (like haemoglobin)
CuB
It also has important tyrosine residue that becomes oxidised and reduced by a proton form the matrix?

23
Q

How many protons does complex IV translocate?

A

2 per 2e- to make (1/2 O2)

24
Q

What is the net effect of protons in the mitochondrial ETC?

A

Passing 2e-s from NADH to 1/2 O2

10H+ pumped