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Chapter 14 (Part 1). Electron transport. Chemiosmotic Theory. Electron Transport: Electrons carried by reduced coenzymes are passed through a chain of proteins and coenzymes to drive the generation of a proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane
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Chapter 14 (Part 1) Electron transport
Chemiosmotic Theory • Electron Transport: Electrons carried by reduced coenzymes are passed through a chain of proteins and coenzymes to drive the generation of a proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane • Oxidative Phosphorylation: The proton gradient runs downhill to drive the synthesis of ATP • Electron transport is coupled with oxidative phosphorylation • It all happens in or at the inner mitochondrial membrane
Outer Membrane – Freely permeable to small molecules and ions. Contains porins with 10,000 dalton limit Inner membrane – Protein rich (4:1 protein:lipid). Impermeable. Contains ETR, ATP synthase, transporters. Cristae – Highly folded inner membrane structure. Increase surface area. Matrix- “cytosol” of the mitochondria. Protein rich (500 mg/ml) Contains TCA cycle enzymes, pyruvate dehydrogenase, fatty and amino acid oxidation pathway, DNA, ribosomes Intermembrane Space – composition similar to cytosol
Reduction Potentials • High Eo' indicates a strong tendency to be reduced • Crucial equation: Go' = -nF Eo' • Eo' = Eo'(acceptor) - Eo'(donor) • NADH + ½ O2 + H+ NAD++ H+ + H2O • NAD++ H+ + 2e- NADH Eo’ = -0.32 • ½ O2 + 2e- + 2H+ H2O Eo’ = 0.816 • Go‘= -nF(Eo'(O2) - Eo'(NADH)) • Go‘= -nF(0.82 –(-0.32)) = -nF(1.14) • = -2(96.5 kJ mol-1V-1)(1.136) = -220 kJ mol-1
Electron Transport • Four protein complexes in the inner mitochondrial membrane • A lipid soluble coenzyme (UQ, CoQ) and a water soluble protein (cyt c) shuttle between protein complexes • Electrons generally fall in energy through the chain - from complexes I and II to complex IV
Standard reduction potentials of the major respiratory electron carriers.
NADH + H+ CoQ NAD+ CoQH2 Complex I • NADH-CoQ Reductase • Electron transfer from NADH to CoQ • More than 30 protein subunits - mass of 850 kD • 1st step is 2 e- transfer from NADH to FMN • FMNH2 converts 2 e- to 1 e- transfer • Four H+ transported out per 2 e- FMN Fe2+S FMNH2 Fe3+S
Succinate CoQ Fumarate CoQH2 FAD Fe2+S FADH2 Fe3+S Complex II • Succinate-CoQ Reductase • aka succinate dehydrogenase (from TCA cycle!) • four subunits • Two largest subunits contain 2 Fe-S proteins • Other subunits involved in binding succinate dehydrogenase to membrane and passing e- to Ubiquinone • FAD accepts 2 e- and then passes 1 e- at a time to Fe-S protein • No protons pumped from this step
Q-Cycle UQ • Transfer from the 2 e- carrier ubiquinone (QH2) to Complex III must occur 1 e- at a time. • Works by two single electron transfer steps taking advantage of the stable semiquinone intermediate • Also allows for the pumping of 4 protons out of mitochondria at Complex III • Myxothiazol (antifungal agent) inhibits electron transfer from UQH2 and Complex III. UQ.- UQH2
CoQH2 cyt c red CoQ cyt c ox cyt c1ox cyt b ox Fe2+S cyt c1red cyt b red Fe3+S Complex III • CoQ-Cytochrome c Reductase • CoQ passes electrons to cyt c (and pumps H+) in a unique redox cycle known as the Q cycle • Cytochromes, like Fe in Fe-S clusters, are one- electron transfer agents • cyt c is a water-soluble electron carrier • 4 protons pumped out of mitochondria (2 from UQH2)
cyt c red cyt a ox cyt a3red O2 cyt c ox cyt a red cyt a3ox 2 H2O Complex IV • Cytochrome c Oxidase • Electrons from cyt c are used in a four-electron reduction of O2 to produce 2H2O • Oxygen is thus the terminal acceptor of electrons in the electron transport pathway - the end! • Cytochrome c oxidase utilizes 2 hemes (a and a3) and 2 copper sites • Complex IV also transports H+ (2 protons)
Inhibitors of Oxidative Phosphorylation • Rotenone inhibits Complex I - and helps natives of the Amazon rain forest catch fish! • Cyanide, azide and CO inhibit Complex IV, binding tightly to the ferric form (Fe3+) of a3 • Oligomycin and DCCD are ATP synthase inhibitors
Shuttling Electron Carriers into the Mitochondrion • The inner mitochondrial membrane is impermeable to NADH. • Electrons carried by NADH that are created in the cytoplasm (such as in glycolysis) must be shuttled into the mitochondrial matrix before they can enter the ETS
Uncouplers • Uncouplers disrupt the tight coupling between electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation by dissipating the proton gradient • Uncouplers are hydrophobic molecules with a dissociable proton • They shuttle back and forth across the membrane, carrying protons to dissipate the gradient • w/o oxidative-phosphorylation energy lost as heat • Dinitrophenol once used as diet drug, people ran 107oF temperatures