CHAPTER: 11(D)
Electron Trasport System
Electron Transport System:
• In the process of oxidation taking place in kreb’s cycle, dehydrogenase enzymes release pairs of hydrogen and electrons from different substrates .
• Hydrogen and electron pass through different electrons carriers and ultimately react with oxygen and form water molecules.
• During transfer of hydrogen atoms from one enzyme carrier to another in ETS , large amount of energy is released, which is stored in the pyrophosphate bond of ATP produced from ADP and inorganic phosphate.
• The system of transport of electrons from NADH to oxygen releasing water via different electron carriers in mitochondrial matm.rix is known as electron transport system
• Electron transport & oxidative phosphorylation occur in the inner membrane of mitochondria.
• These process reoxidize the NADH and FADH2 that arises from the citric acid cycle, glycolysis and fatty acid oxidation and trap the energy released as ATP.
• Oxidative phosphorylation is major source of ATP in the cell.
Electron Transport from NADH:
• Electrons are transferred from NADH to oxygen along the electron transport chain (also called the respiratory chain).
• NADH passes electrons to NADH dehydrogenase, which contains Flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and two types of iron-sulfur (FeS) clustres.
• The electrons are accepted by the FMN to produce FMNH2 and then passed to the iron atoms of the FeS clusters.
• Electrons are then passed to ubiquinone (coenzyme Q , CoQ), converting it to ubiquinol (or CoQH2), and then to cytochrome bc1 complex.
• The cytochrome bc1 complex passes the electron to cytochrome c which in turn passes them to cytochrome oxidase, a complex that contains two cytochromes (cytochrome –a & a3 ) paired with copper atom.
• Finally, cytochrome oxidase passes four electrons to molecular oxygen to form two molecules of water.
Electron transport from FADH2 :
• FADH2 is reoxidised to FAD by donating two electron to succinate –CoQ reductase (Complex II), which consist FeS clusters.
• It passes the electrons onto ubiquinone in the main electron transport chain where their further transport leads to the formation of an H+ gradient and ATP synthesis.
Oxidative Phosphorylation:
• The final step of respiration is the oxidation of the reduced CoA (NADH and NADPH) by molecular oxygen. During this oxidation energy is released and ATP is synthesized.
• The production of high energy phosphate bonds of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) is called oxidative phosphorylation.
• For the production of ATP molecule at least 10-12 K cal of energy is required as shown below:
ADP + Pi + 10/12 K Cal = ATP
• The production of ATP in respiration is closely linked with electron transport chain because some energy is released during the transfer of electrons from donor to acceptor molecule.
• Oxidative phosphorylation is the name given to the synthesis of ATP that occurs when NADH & FADH2 are oxidized by electron transport through the respiratory chain.
• The inner membrane of mitochondria (Cristae) has a key role in the synthesis of ATP.
• Mechanism of oxidative phosphorylation was originally proposed as “Chemiosmotic Hypothesis” by Peter Mitchell in 1961.
• This hypothesis is now assumed to be theory and state as, “ Energy liberated by a electron transport is used to create a proton gradient across the mitochondrial inner membrane and that is used to drive ATP synthesis.
• Approximately 3 ATP are synthesized per NADH oxidised and 2 ATP are synthesized per FADH2 oxidised.
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