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Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely
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Page 1: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Lecture Notes for Chapter 15

Oxidative Phosphorylation

Essential BiochemistryThird Edition

Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely

Page 2: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

KEY CONCEPTS: Section 15-1

• The standard reduction potential indicates a substance’s tendency to become reduced; the actual reduction potential depends on the concentrations of reactants.

• Electrons are transferred from a substance with a lower reduction potential to a substance with a higher reduction potential.

• The free energy change for an oxidation-reduction reaction depends on the change in reduction potential.

Page 3: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Overview in Context

Page 4: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Recap on Oxidation-Reduction

• One reactant is in its oxidized state while the other is in its reduced state.

• Loss of electrons = oxidation• Gain of electrons = reduction

Page 5: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Reduction potential

indicates a substance’s tendency to

accept electrons.

Page 6: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The actual reduction potential depends on the actual concentrations

of oxidized and reduced species.

The Nernst EquationR = Gas Constant = 8.3145 J mol-1 K-1 T = temperature in Kelvinn = # of electrons F = Faraday’s constant = 96,485 J V-1 K-1

Page 7: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The free energy change can be calculated from the change in reduction

potential.

Page 8: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Overview of Mitochondrial

Electron Transport

Page 9: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

KEY CONCEPTS: Section 15-2

• The inner mitochondrial membrane encloses the matrix and includes specific transport proteins.

• Complex I transfers electrons from NADH to ubiquinone.

• The citric acid cycle, fatty acid oxidation, and other processes also generate mitochondrial ubiquinol.

• The Q cycle mediated by Complex III reduces cytochrome c.

• Complex IV uses electrons from cytochrome c to reduce O2 to H2O.

Page 10: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Electron transport takes place in the mitochondrion.

Page 11: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Experimental imaging helps us know what mitochondria look like.

Electron Micrograph3D Reconstruction by Electron Tomography

Electron Micrograph of a Fibroblast

Mitochondria in Green

Page 12: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The malate-aspartate shuttle transports reducing agents across the inner mitochondrial membrane.

Page 13: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

A different transport system is used to move ATP from the matrix to the cytosol.

ATP translocase protein imports ADP and exports ATP.

A symport protein permitssimultaneous movement of Pi

and H+.

Page 14: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Complex I binds ubiquinone.

• Structure of a bacterial complex– FMN and Fe-S clusters are

cofactors in space-filling representation.

– Q binding site is highlighted.– Part of the protein has membrane-

spanning a helices.

Page 15: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Complex I transfers electrons from NADH to Q.

• Electrons transfer from NADH to FMN, then from FMN to Q.

• As electrons are transferred from NADH to ubiquinone, Complex I transfers four protons from the matrix to the intermembrane space.

Page 16: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

FMN can pick up two electrons from NADH.

Page 17: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Iron-sulfur clusters undergo

one-electron transfer reactions.

Page 18: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Other oxidation reactions contribute to the ubiquinol pool.

• Succinate dehydrogenase produces QH2 during the citric acid cycle.

• QH2 is also produced during fatty acid oxidation.

• Electrons from cytosolic NADH can enter the mitochondrial ubiquinol pool through the actions of a cytosolic and a mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.

Page 19: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Summary of Q Pool Reactions

Page 20: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Complex III transfers electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c.

• Cytochromes are proteins with heme prosthetic groups.

• Unlike the heme groups in hemoglobin and myoglobin, heme in cytochrome c undergoes reversible one-electron transfers.

• The central iron atom is either oxidized (Fe3+) or reduced (Fe2+).

Page 21: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Structure of Mammalian Complex III

Arrangement of Prosthetic Groups

Cyt b Cyt c1

Fe-S clusters

Heme groups of Cyt b

Page 22: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The circuitous route of electrons from ubiquinol to

cytochrome c is described by

the Q cycle.

Page 23: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Results of the Q Cycle

• Two electrons from QH2 reduce two molecules of cytochrome c.

• Four protons are pumped into the intermembrane space.– Two from QH2 in the first round

– Two from QH2 in the second round

Page 24: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Complex IV oxidizes cytochrome c and reduces O2.

• Cytochrome c is a small membrane-soluble protein.

• Cytochrome c transfers one electron at a time from Complex III to Complex IV.

• Complex IV (cytochrome oxidase) catalyzes this reaction:

Page 25: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Complex IV (Cytochrome c Oxidase) Structure

Page 26: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

A Proposed Model for

Cytochrome c Oxidase Activity

• O2 is reduced to H2O via the Fe-S clusters in

cytochrome c oxidase.

Page 27: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

More on Complex IV Function

• For every two electrons donated by cytochrome c, two protons are translocated to the intermembrane space

• Two protons from the matrix are also consumed in the reaction: ½ O2 H2O

Page 28: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

KEY CONCEPTS: Section 15-3

• The formation of a transmembrane proton gradient during electron transport provides the free energy to synthesize ATP.

• Both concentration and charge contribute to the free energy of the proton gradient.

Page 29: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

How much energy is available from electron transport?

• This is enough energy to drive the endergonic phosphorylation of ADP to form ATP (ΔG°' = +30.5 kJ•mol–1)!

Page 30: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The imbalance of protons represents a source of free energy, also called a

protonmotive force, that can drive the activity of an ATP synthase.

[H+] = high

[H+] = low

Page 31: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Computing the free energy change for the imbalance of protons.

With respect to the chemical imbalance

of protons:

With respect to the electrical imbalance

of protons:

Z = Ion’s ChargeΔy = Membrane Potential

Combining these effects:

Page 32: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

KEY CONCEPTS: Section 15-4

• Proton translocation drives the rotation of a portion of ATP synthase.

• Rotation-induced conformational changes allow ATP synthase to bind ADP and Pi to phosphorylate ADP, and to release ATP.

• Because ATP synthesis is indirectly linked to electron transport, the P:O ratio is not a whole number.

• The supply of reduced cofactors determines the rate of oxidative phosphorylation.

Page 33: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The protein that taps the electrochemical proton gradient to

phosphorylate ADP is known as ATP synthase (Complex V).

Page 34: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

ATP Synthase FunctionForm ATP

• Use theelectrochemicalgradient to drivephosphorylation.

Page 35: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

ATP synthase rotates as it translocates protons.

• H+ binds to a c subunit.

• The c subunit moves away from the a subunit.

• As a new c subunit reaches the a subunit a proton is released.

• One rotation of the ring translocates 8 protons

Page 36: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The 3 ab pairs interact asymmetrically with the γ subunit.

a = blueb = greeng = purple

Page 37: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

The binding change mechanism explains how

ATP is made.• The ab subunits form three different

conformations.– O = open– T = tight– L = loose

• ADP and Pi bind to the open conformation.

• ATP is formed in the tight conformation.

• ATP is released in the open conformation.

Page 38: Lecture Notes for Chapter 15 Oxidative Phosphorylation Essential Biochemistry Third Edition Charlotte W. Pratt | Kathleen Cornely.

Quantifying Oxidative Phosphorylation

• The P:O ratio describes the stoichiometry of oxidative phosphorylation.– P:O ratio = # phosphorylations of ADP per # of oxygen

atoms reduced– P:O ratios will not be integral because chemical energy

becomes a protonmotive force, then mechanical movement of ATP synthase and back to chemical energy

• The rate of oxidative phosphorylation depends on the rate of fuel catabolism.– Oxidative phosphorylation is regulated by the

availability of reduced cofactors (NADH and QH2) produced by other metabolic processes.


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