Electron transport chain Flashcards

1
Q

what is the electron transport chain

A

aka respiratory chain
Comprises 4 large multi-unit proteins intrinsic to inner mitochondrial membrane
Catalyse a series of reactions
NADH+H++1/2O2>NAD++H2O
Energy released from reaction by tightly coupled production of ATP

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2
Q

What are the components of ETC

A

Four components

Complex I, II, III and IV

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3
Q

What proteins are linked to the components of ETC

A

2 soluble proteins
Ubiquinone (coenzyme Q) – a lipid soluble benzoquinone with a long isoprenoid tail
Cytochrome C
Free to move in membrane by diffusion, not part of complexes

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4
Q

What enzymes are involved in the protein complexes of the ETC

A
NADH dehydrogenase
Succinate dehydrogenase
ubiquinone: cytochrome C oxidoreductase
cytochrome C (moves between complex III and IV)
Cytochrome oxidase
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5
Q

what is complex I

A

NADH dehydrogenase

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6
Q

what does complex I do

A

Initially electrons are passed to FMN to produce FMNH2
Subsequently transfer to series of iron-sulphur clusters then transfer to ubiquinone (coenzyme Q)
So enzyme catalyses NADH+H++Q=NAD++QH2
Proton pump, moving protons from matrix to intramitochondrial space
QH2 released outside and NAD+ stays in
4H pass

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7
Q

what is complex II

A

succinate dehydrogenase

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8
Q

What does complex II do

A

FAD within complex II is reduced to FADH2 by electrons gained from conversion of succinate to fumarate in TCA cycle
Complex II passes electrons to ubiquinone
Other substrates for mitochondrial dehydrogenases also pass on their electrons to ubiquinone but not through complex II (eg from G3P shuttle)
QH2 released

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9
Q

Sources of electrons entering the ETC

A

NADH +H+
Succinate to fumarate
FAD
ETF:Q oxidoreductase

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10
Q

what is complex III

A

Ubiquinone: cytochrome c oxidoreductase

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11
Q

what does complex III do

A

Accepts electrons from reduced ubiquinone and pass to complex IV via cyt c
2nd of 3 proton pumps in respiratory chain
4H pass

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12
Q

what is complex IV

A

Cytochrome oxidase

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13
Q

What does complex IV do

A

3rd and final proton pump
Carries electrons from cytochrome c to molecule oxygen, produces water
2h pass

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14
Q

how is ATP synthesised

A
Inner mitochondrial leaflet is generally impermeable to charged species but 3 specific systems in the membrane
Transport ADP and Pi into matrix
Synthesis ATP
Transport ATP into cytosol 
ADP3-+P2-+H+=ATP4-+H2O
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15
Q

How is the adenine nucleotide translocated

A

Integral protein of inner mitochondrial membrane
transport ADP from intramitochondrial membrane to matrix in exchange for ATP (favoured by electrochemical gradient generated by proton pump)
Known as anti porter

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16
Q

how can adenine nucleotide translocation be inhibited

A

Atractyloside, a glycoside isolated from a thistle is a specific inhibitor of adenine nucleotide translocase

17
Q

how is phosphate translocated

A

A second membrane transporter essential for oxidative phosphorylation and synthesis of ATP
Transports both phosphate and hydrogen ions into matrix, symporter
favoured by transmembrane proton gradient

18
Q

what synthesises ATP

A

An F-type ATPase
Two functional domains
1 Fo an oligomycin-sensitive proton channel
2 F1 ATP synthase

19
Q

What is the structure of ATP synthesis

A

Fo comprises of three different types of SU a b and c
Forms a complex of 13-15 Sus
Sus c1-10 arranged in a circle

F1 comprises 5 different types of SU a3, B3, y, delta and epsilon
Forms a complex of 9 SU (3B and 3a Sus, have catalytic sites for ATP synthesis)

20
Q

how are the B SUs of F1 arranged

A

B Sus are arranged alternately with a SUs like segments of an orange
Form a knob-like structure held by a stalk of y and epsilon Sus
Delta SU interacts with 2 b Sus of Fo

21
Q

what is the. theory of rotational catalysis

A

3 B Sus take it in turns catalysing the synthesis of ATP
Any given B SU starts a conformation for binding ADP and Pi
Then changes conformation so active site now binds the product ATP tightly
Then changes conformation to give active site a low affinity for ATP (B-empty conformation) so ATP released

22
Q

how does the y SU affect the B-catalytic units

A

The y-SU rotates and the properties of B-catalytic units change

23
Q

what type of reaction is the reduction of NADH

A

Highly exergonic reaction

24
Q

What results from the reduction of NADH

A

Energy released is coupled to movement of H+ across inner membrane
Electrochemical energy generated represents temporary conservation of energy of e- transfer
Protons flow spontaneously down their electrochemical gradient releasing energy available to do work

25
Q

what are uncoupling reagents

A

Normally e- flow and phosphorylation of ADP tightly coupled

Uncouplers dissipate the pH gradient by transporting H+ back into the matrix of mitochondria bypassing the ATP synthase

26
Q

what is an example of uncoupling agents

A
An uncoupler (eg DNP ) severs link between e- flow and ATP synthesis with energy released as heat
Can occur naturally eg UCPI (thermogenin) is found in brown adipose tissue and has a specific H+ channel through which H+ may be dissipated- energy released as heat
27
Q

how does uncoupling link to brown fat thermogenesis

A

BAT – high numbers of mitochondria (contain UCP1)
Extra protein in membrane for protons to bypass ATP synthesis
Specialised for heat generation – important in newborns, important in obesity/diabetes

28
Q

how is DNP an uncoupler

A

exogenous uncoupler
Weak acid that crosses membrane ferrying H+
Each DNP molecule collects a proton from IMS and moves through membrane
Can return to collect more

29
Q

what are the effects of DNP uncoupling

A

Toxicity arises from liver damage, respiratory acidosis and hyperthermia