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The rate of electron transfer between groups

The rate of electron transfer between groups. The typical electron transfer rate if groups in contact: 10 13 /s The distance between electron-carrier groups: 15 A ° 15 A°/1.7A ° ≒ 9, decrease 10 9  10 4 /s If no protein mediator: 15 A°/0.8A°≒ 19, decrease 10 19  10 -6 /s ≒ 1 day.

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The rate of electron transfer between groups

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  1. The rate of electron transfer between groups The typical electron transfer rate if groups in contact: 1013/s The distance between electron-carrier groups: 15 A° 15 A°/1.7A°≒ 9, decrease 109  104/s If no protein mediator: 15 A°/0.8A°≒ 19, decrease 1019 10-6/s ≒ 1 day – the distance between donor and acceptor of electron – the free energy change 1.7A° 0.8A° e- cytochrome c  Ⅲ  Ⅳ

  2. The rate of electron transfer between groups – the distance between donor and acceptor of electron – the free energy change inverted region Ch. 19 ?

  3. Chemiosmotic hypothesis (1961, Mitchell P.) NADH oxidation  ADP phosphorylation a covalent high-energy intermediate or an activated protein conformation proton-motive force drives the synthesis of ATP bymitochondrial ATP synthase(F1F0ATPase, complex Ⅴ) Proton-motive force ﹙ p﹚: the pH gradient ﹙ pH﹚ + the charge gradient [membrane potential ﹙﹚]

  4. Testing the chemiosmotic hypothesis Artificial membrane A separate system: (A purple-membrane protein, pump protons when light) Respiratory chain Proton gradient ATP synthase (from beef heart)

  5. 19.2 ATP synthesis Mitchell: chemiosmotic model, proton-motive-force ADP + Pi + n Hp+ → ATP + H2O + n HN+ Nelson a proton pore associated with ATP synthase

  6. ATP synthase mechanism: Mg2+ require Orthophosphate HPO42-

  7. ADP + Pi + ATP synthase in H218O isotopic-exchange experiments: enzyme-bound ATP forms readily in the absence of a proton-motive force + ATP synthase The role of proton gradient is to release ATP from ATP synthase but not to form ATP

  8. ATP synthase structure proton channel complex c-ring (10~14 c subunits) 1a, 2b, 1 matrix (3, 3, , and )  subunits participate directly in ATP synthesis Two functional components: 1. Moving units c-ring,  stalk 2. Stationary unit

  9. Boyer PD (2000): binding-change mechanism  subunit make the 3  subunits unequivalent Open The conformation of releasing ATP Loss The conformation of binding ADP and Pi Tight The conformation of binding ATP

  10. Binding-change mechanism: A counterclockwise direction in  subunit T L Proton drive  O

  11. The smallest molecular motor Only cloned 33 subunits Fluorescence labeled Polyhistidine tags of N-terminal of  subunit Nicklel ions are coated on glass surface  The  subunit was rotated, driven by the hydrolysis of ATP  120° increment/ATP hydrolysis  Near 100% efficiency

  12. Components of the proton-conducting unit of ATP synthase The site of proton entrance Asp61 COO-/COOH a pair of -helices  Two hydrophilic half-channel  Do not span the membrane  Directly about one c subunit, separately

  13. Proton flow/c-ring rotation power  rotation, then ATP synthesis [H+]cyto/[H+]matrix 25 hydrophobic interaction Arg210 in subunit a(02), Ex. 18

  14. Proton path through the membrane  C ring tightly links to  and  subunits C ring rotate   rotate  360°/3 ATP 10 c subunits/3 ATP  3.33 protons/ATP H+ NADH: 10 H+, 2.5 ATP FADH2: 6 H+, 1.5 ATP Ex. 19

  15. 116 watts (joule/s) provides energy to sustain a resting person 921 earthquake

  16. § 18.5 Shuttles: an array of membrane-spanning transporter proteins Glycerol 3-phosphate shuttle: electrons of cytosolic NADH from glycolysis enter mitochondrial electron transport chain especially prominent inmuscle and some insects lack lactate dehydrogenase G3P  1,3bisP  against NADH gradient  1.5 ATP formation for 1 NADH from glycolysis

  17. Malate-aspartate shuttle  in heart and liver  is readily reversible  the NADH/NAD+ ratio of the cytosol is higher than that of mitochondria  2.5 ATP formation for 1 NADH from glycolysis transamination transamination

  18. ATP-ADP translocase(adenine nucleotide translocase or ANT) highly abundant in the inner mitochondrial membrane (15%)  30 kd, a single nucleotide-binding site, without Mg2+﹙Ex. 20﹚ ADP first entry then coupled to ATP exit, even though the transport rate of ATP is 30-fold higher than that of ADP high energy consumed, about ¼ of the energy from e- transfer atractyloside P site N site Membrane potential Proton-motive force Ex. 22 Bongkrekic acid

  19. Mitochondrial transporters H2PO4- ATP synthasome: ATP synthase, ATP-ADP translocase, phosphate carrier (electroneutral exchange) Dicarboxylate carrier  40 genes in human genome are encoded

  20. Consumed a proton during ATP translocation Other metabolites translocated  2e- transferless than 10H+ formation Glucose is completely oxidized Glycolysis + 2 TCA cycle (GTP) + 2 or +5 or 32 anaerobic metabolism: 2 ATP

  21. Respiratory control (or acceptor control) the rate of oxidative phosphorylation is primarily regulated byADP level the rate of oxidative phosphorylation is determined bythe need for ATP

  22. Energy charge regulation The rate of TCA cycle is controlled by the availability of NAD+ and FAD ATP synthasome

  23. Uncoupling proteins (UCPs)  dissipate proton flow  generate heat  UCP1 (thermogenin) Temp.   -adrenergic agonists  triacylglycerol degrade  free fatty acids liberate  Activate UCP-1

  24. UCP proteins:  generate heat to maintain body temperature in hibernating animals, some newborn animals, and in mammals adapted to cold Brown adipose tissue (also brown fat mitochondria), which is very rich in mitochondria, is specialized for nonshivering thermogenesis (vs. white adipose tissue)  regulate the body weight (obesity)[UCP2 and UCP3]  increase the evaporation of odoriferous molecules, skunk cabbage p. 533 7th line: greenish-colored cytochromes

  25. Uncoupler disrupted the coupling of electron transport and phosphorylation – dissipated proton-motive force oxygen consumption, NADH oxidation, no ATP formation  heat loss • DNP and certain other acidic aromatic compounds used in some herbicides, fungicides, weight- loss drug (?)

  26. Sites of action of inhibitors of electron transport ferric ferrous form of heme a3

  27. Oligomycin Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) prevent the influx of protons through ATP synthase

  28. Nelson Alternative mechanisms in plant mitochondria Araceae: one family of stinking plants thermogenesis a cyanide-resistant QH2 oxidase bypass complex III and Ⅳ a rotenone insensitive NADH dehydrogenase, bypass complex Ⅰ a skunk cabbage

  29. Mitochondria ¤ semiautonomous organelles ¤ endosymbiotic double membrane, circular DNA, specific transcription and translation machinery ¤ Maternally inherited

  30. Mitochondria – diseases  a center of energy metabolism Leber hereditary optic neuropathy – NADH-Q oxidoreductase (complexⅠ) mutation – resulted in blindness during midlife  chance fluctuation percentage  the threshold of defect  the accumulation of mutations effect the energy transduction, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation  nervous system and heart are vulnerable – aging, degenerative disorders, and cancer.

  31. Three mitochondrial cell death pathways Apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) Apoptotic protease activating factor-1(Apaf-1) Programmed cell death Cysteine protease family mtPTP (mitochondrial permeability transition pore) PS

  32. Proton gradient– a central interconvertible currency of free energy (Mito. inner membrane)

  33. P:O ratio: the number of molecules of inorganic phosphate incorporated into organic form per atom of oxygen consumed. the number of molecules of ATP synthesized per pair of electrons carried through electron transport. ATP synthesis: is quantitative as phosphate uptake, conversion of orthophosphate to organic phosphates. Electron pairs: are quantitative as oxygen uptake. matrix NADH: 2.5 matrix FADH2: 1.5 + 2,4-dinitrophenol: P/O ratio from 2.5  0 Ex. 6

  34. 96C 96T 192

  35. 97T 97C

  36. 98T 98C

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