Metabolism III: Oxidative Phosphorylation
Electrons
- For one glucose molecule, glycolysis and the TCA cycle yields:
- Each one will carry two high energy electrons
- Electrons from NADH and FADH2 are used to reduce O2 to H2O
- Glycerol-3-phosphate and malate-aspartate shuttles allow NADH to cross the inner mitochondrial membrane
Redox potentials
- In oxidative phosphorylation, the electron transfer potential of NADH+ and FADH2 is converted into the phosphoryl transfer potential of ATP
- Phosphoryl transfer potential: free energy change during ATP hydrolysis
- Electron transfer potential: measured by redox potential of a compound (E’0) - how readily it donates electrons
- Negative (E’0) means the reduced form of compound has a lower affinity for electrons than hydrogen (+ vice versa)
Oxidative phosphorylation
- Respiratory chain - electrons handed down from carriers with increasingly positive potentials, transferred onto O2 to form H2O
- Oxygen is the final electron acceptor
- Transfer of electrons through respiratory chain is coupled to transport of H+ from the mitochondrial matrix
- 1, 3 and 4 respiratory complexes pump H+ into the intermembrane space
- Flow of H+ back into the matrix through ATP synthases (following concentration gradient) phosphorylates ADP → ATP
Inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation
- Cyanide, azide and CO inhibits transfer of electrons to O2
- No proton gradient formed → no ATP synthesized
ATP total
- From 1 molecule of glucose, through glycolysis, the TCA cycle and oxidative phosphorylation, 30-32 ATP molecules are produced
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