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Electron Transport Chain and Oxidative Phosphorylation. Dr. Sooad Al- Daihan Biochemistry department . Introduction.
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Electron Transport Chain and Oxidative Phosphorylation Dr. Sooad Al-Daihan Biochemistry department
Introduction • The NADH and FADH2 formed in glycolysis, fatty acid oxidation, and the citric acid cycle are energy-rich molecules. because each contains a pair of electrons having a high transfer potential. • When these electrons are used to reduce molecular oxygen to water, a large amount of free energy is liberated, which can be used to generate ATP. • Oxidative phosphorylation is the process in which ATP is formed as a result of the transfer of electrons from NADH or FADH2 to O2 by a series of electron carriers.
Continue.. • The inner mitochondrial membrane contains 5 separate enzyme complexes, called compelexes I, II, III, IV and V. • Each complex accepts or donates electrons to mobile carrier, such as coenzyme Q and cytochrome c. • The electrons ultimately combine with oxygen and protons to form water.
The Components of the ETC • The components of the electron transport chain are organized into 4 complexes. Each complex contains several different electron carriers. 1. Complex I also known as the NADH-coenzyme Q reductase or NADH dehydrogenase. 2. Complex II also known as succinate-coenzyme Q reductase or succinate dehydrogenase. 3. Complex III also known as coenzyme Q reductase. 4. Complex IV also known as cytochrome oxidase. • Each of these complexes are large multisubunit complexes embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
Complex I: • Also called NADH-Coenzyme Q reductase because this large protein complex transfers 2 electrons from NADH to coenzyme Q. • Complex I was known as NADH dehydrogenase. • Complex I (850,000 kD) contains a FMN prosthetic group which is absolutely required for activity and seven or more Fe-S clusters. • This complex binds NADH, transfers two electrons in the form of a hydride to FMN to produce NAD+ and FMNH2. • The subsequent steps involve the transfer of electrons one at a time to a series of iron-sulfer complexes.
Continue.. • The importance of FMN. Firstit functions as a 2 electron acceptor in the hydride transfer from NADH. Second it functions as a 1 electron donor to the series of iron sulfur clusters. • The process of transferring electrons from NADH to CoQ by complex I results in the net transport of protons from the matrix side of the inner mitochondrial membrane to the inter membrane space where the H+ ions accumulate generating a proton motive force. • The stiochiometry is 4 H+ transported per 2 electrons.
Complex II • It is none other than succinate dehydrogenase, the only enzyme of the citric acid cycle that is an integral membrane protein, so its the only membrane-bound enzyme in the citric acid cycle • This complex is composed of four subunits. Two of which are iron-sulfur proteins and the other two subunits together bind FAD through a covalent link to a histidine residue.
Continue.. • In the first step of this complex, succinate is bound and a hydride is transferred to FAD to generate FADH2 and fumarate. • FADH2then transfers its electrons one at a time to the Fe-S centers. Thus once again FAD functions as 2 electron acceptor and a 1 electron donor. The final step of this complex is the transfer of 2 electrons one at a time to coenzyme Q to produce CoQH2.
Complex III • This complex is also known as coenzyme Q-cytochrome c reductase because it passes the electrons formCoQH2 to cyt c through a very unique electron transport pathway called the Q-cycle. • In complex III we find two b-type cytochromes and one c-typecytochrome and iron sulfur proteins.
Complex IV • Complex IV is also known as cytochrome c oxidase because it accepts the electrons from cytochrome c and directs them towards the four electron reduction of O2 to form 2 molecules of H2O. • Cytochrome c oxidase contains 2 heme centres, cytochrome a and cytochrome a3 and two copper proteins. • The reduction of oxygen involves the transfer of four electrons. Four protons are abstracted from the matrix and two protons are released into the intermembrane space
Overall Reaction • NADH + 11H+ matrix + ½ O2 NAD+ + 10 H+intermem +H2O • Protons Pumped out to the intermembrane space : Complex I 4H+ Complex III 4H+ Complex IV 2H+
ATP synthetase: ATPase (Complex V) • This enzyme complex synthesizes ATP , utilizing the energy of the proton gradient (proton motive force) generated by the electron transport chain. • The Chemiosmotic theory proposes that after proton have transferred to the cytosolic side of inner mitochondrial membrane, they can re-enter the matrix by passing through the proton channel in the ATPase (F0), resulting in the synthesis of ATP in (F1) subunit.
Properties of ATP synthetase • Multisubunittransmembrane protein • Molecular mass ~450 kDa • Functional units◦ F0: water‐insoluble transmembrane protein (up to 8 different subunits)◦ F1: water‐soluble peripheral membrane protein (5 subunits),contains the catalytic site for ATP synthesis • Flow of 3 protons through ATP synthase leads to phosphorylation of 1 ADP
Electron transport inhibitors • These compounds prevent the passage of electrons by binding to chain components, blocking the oxidation/reduction reaction • Inhibition of electron transport also inhibits ATP synthesis.
Ionophores • Ionophores are termed because of their ability to form complex with certain cations and facilitate their transport across the mitochondrial membraneSo ionophores are lipophilic. e. g: • Valinomycin:allows penetration of K+ across the mitochondrial membrane and then discharges the membrane potential between outside and the inside ( i.e: does not affect the pH potential). • Nigericin:also acts as ionophore for K+ but in exchange with H+. It therefore abolishes the pH gradient.