* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Fe-S
Basal metabolic rate wikipedia , lookup
Metalloprotein wikipedia , lookup
Photosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide wikipedia , lookup
Mitochondrion wikipedia , lookup
Phosphorylation wikipedia , lookup
Biochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Evolution of metal ions in biological systems wikipedia , lookup
Microbial metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Photosynthetic reaction centre wikipedia , lookup
Citric acid cycle wikipedia , lookup
Adenosine triphosphate wikipedia , lookup
Light-dependent reactions wikipedia , lookup
Electron transport chain wikipedia , lookup
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (H+-translocating) wikipedia , lookup
Lecture 8 Bioenergetics and Oxidative Phosphorylation Outline Introduction Free energy ATP as an energy carrier Electron transport chain Oxidative phosphorylation 1. Introduction • Energy – A central theme of Biochemistry • Organisms employ this energy to: – – – – – Grow Protect Themselves Repair Themselves Compete with other Organisms Make new Organisms (I.e., babies) • Energy cannot be produced by a cell. It can only be borrowed from someplace else. We are Energy Parasites! • The ultimate source of energy for life on Earth is the SUN. 2. Free energy, G • The amount of energy available to do work during a chemical process. • Free energy change (DG) – Predict the direction of a reaction – If DG is negative (DG<0), the reaction is spontaneously, the process is exergonic and energy is released. – If DG is positive (DG>0), the reaction is nonspontaneously, the process is endergonic and energy is absorbed. – If DG=0,the reactants are in equilibrium. Coupling Reactions •Exergonic reactions can supply energy for endergonic reactions 3. ATP: an energy carrier DGo of ATP DGo of hydrolysis of ATP is approximately –7.3 kcal/mol (-30.5 KJ/mol) for each of the two terminal phosphate groups. • Because of this large, negative DGo, ATP is called a high-energy phosphate compound. •ATP + H2O •ADP + H2O •AMP + H2O ADP + Pi ΔG0’=-30.5 KJ/mol AMP + Pi ΔG0’=-30.5 KJ/mol Adenosine+ Pi ΔG0’=-14.2 KJ/mol High-energy phosphate • High-energy phospthae bonds energy release in hydrolysis of these bonds is over 21KJ/mol –high energy phosphate bonds are denoted by the character '~ P ‘ – • Compounds which contain these bonds called high-energy phosphates. High-energy Compounds • ATP、ADP、UTP、CTP、PPi; • Phosphate with energy higher than that of ATP. DGo: greater than –10 kcal/mol (41.8KJ/mol). – Enol phosphate :PEP – Mix-anhydride :glycerate 1,3-bisphosphate – Guanidine phosphate:phosphocreatine • Thioester bond:Acetyl-CoA、Acyl-CoA, etc. High-energy Compounds Phosphenol pyruvate (PEP) O O glycerate 1,3R C O¡« P O bisphosphate O CH2 O HOOC C O¡« P O O HO P Acetyl-CoA O O O P O ¡« OH2C CH C O 61.9 kJ/mol NH NH O phosphocreatine P O R C NH ¡« O 61.9 kJ/mol HOOC CH2 O N C NH ¡« P O O CH3 CH3 C¡« SCoA O 43.9 kJ/mol 31.4 kJ/mol Function of ATP • Chemical work: as an energy carrier, supplying the needed energy for primary step of metabolism of synthesis or degradation. • Mechanical work: supplying the energy needed for the activities of organism. • Produce NTP. • Transform the high-energy phosphate to creatine to store the energy in phosphocreatine. Function of ATP ATP Energy Storage in Creatine Phosphate ATP ADP creatine kinase •Creatine phosphate is an important energy store in skeletal muscle and in the brain. •ATP as an Intermediate Phosphate Transfer How is ATP produced • Two methods (1) Substrate level phosphorylation – the production of ATP from ADP by a direct transfer of a high-energy phosphate group from a phosphorylated intermediate metabolic compound. COO ~P CH2OH CH2O-P ADP Mg2+ 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate ATP COOH CH2OH CH2O-P 3-phosphoglycerate How is ATP produced (2) Oxidative phosphorylation – the process in which ATP is formed as a result of the transfer of electrons from NADH or FADH2to O2 by a series of electron carriers. 4. Electron transfer chain (ETC, or Respiratory chain) • Definition: a specialized set of electron carriers, can accept or donate electrons, finally electrons combine with O2 and protons to form H2O. • Associated with cell breath, also called respiratory chain. • Electron carriers located in mitochondria according to a order. • Significance of Electron transfer chain – Electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation re-oxidize NADH and FADH2 and trap the energy released as ATP. • Site: – Located in the inner membrane of mitochondria. Mitochondria •The components of the respiratory chain located in the inner membrane of mitochondria. Respiratory chain Components of respiratory chain • 6 Components – – – – – – complex I: NADH dehydrogenase complex II: Succinate dehydrogenase Mobile carriers: Ubiquinone (CoQ) complex III: Cytochrome bc1 complex Mobile carriers: Cytochrome c (Cyt c) complex IV: Cytochrome c oxidase NADH → Complex I → Q → Complex III → cyt c → Complex IV → O2 Complex II Co-enzyme (Prosthetic group) Complexes Name of the enzyme Complexes Ⅰ NADH dehydrogenase FMN,Fe-S Complexes Ⅱ Succinate dehydrogenase FAD, Fe-S Complexes III Cyt bc1 complex Heme b, Heme c1, Fe-S Complexes Ⅳ Cyt C oxidase Heme a, Heme a3 ,Cu Two respiratory chain •NADH oxidation respiratory chain •Succinic acid oxidation respiratory chain Succinic acid oxidation respiratory chain NADH oxidation respiratory chain (1) ComplexⅠ— NADH dehydrogenase ComplexⅠ • Structure: 45 Intermembrane peptide chains, space 850 kD. • Prosthetic group: Matrix – FMN, ironsulphur (Fe-S) Iron-sulfur protein Fe-S clusters Fe2S2, Fe2+ Fe3+ + e Fe4S4 (2) Coenzyme Q (CoQ, Ubiquinone) : CoQ10 • Ubiquinone: ubiquitous in living system. • CoQ contain a polyisoprene side chain. Liposolubility,make it move in mitochondrial inner membrane easily. 4H+ FMN Fe-S Q NADH+H+ • Function of complexes I NAD+ FMN Fe2+ Fe-S NAD+ QH2 matrix 2e- NADH+H+ Intermembrane space FMNH2 Fe3+ – bind and oxidize NADH – transfer electrons to CoQ Q – release 4H+ to QH2 interspace of inner and outer membrane. Electron transport from complexes I to CoQ (3) ComplexⅡ- Succinate dehydrogenase Intermembrane space Matrix succinic acid succinic acid →FAD→Fe-S→Q Structure: succinate dehydrogenase, consists at list 4 peptides. Prosthetic group: FAD, Fe-S Function Transfer electron from succinic acid to CoQ, do not release H+ to the interspace. (4) Complex Ⅲ: Cytochrome bc1 complex Structure: consists of 11 peptide chains different, existing as a dimer. Prosthetic group: heme b,heme c1, Fe-S Cytochrome, Cyt • Structure – colourant protein containing iron porphyrin (heme group). • Typing – Cyta: Cyta, a3 – Cytb: Cytb562 、Cytb566 – Cytc: Cytc, c1 Cytochrome Cyt a Cyt b Fe3+ + e Cyt c Fe2+ Complex Ⅲ: Cyt bc1 complex Function Catalyze electron transfer from Q to cyt c. QH2 bFe-Sc1 Cytc every two electrons’s transfering lead 4 H+ pumped to the intermembrance space. (5) Cytochrome c (Cyt c) • Cyt c is a small heme protein found loosely associated with the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. • It is a highly soluble protein, with a solubility of about 100g/L. • It transfers electrons between Complexes III and IV. Fe3+ + e Fe2+ (6) Complex Ⅳ: Cyt c oxidase The only electron carrier can directly react with molecular oxygen. Prosthetic group: heme a, heme a3 CuA, CuB Function: transfer electrons from Cu2+ + e Cu+ Cyt c cytochrome c to O2, converting O2 to H20. every two electrons’s transfering lead 2 H+ pumped to the intermembrance space. CuA a a3 CuB O2 Intermembrane space 2H+ 4H+ + 4H+ + + + + + Cyt c + + + + Q - Ⅰ Ⅱ - - F Ⅲ - Ⅳ - - fumarate NADH+H+ NAD+ Succinate 0 1/2O2+2H+ - - - H2 O F1 Matrix ADP+Pi ATP H+ 目录 Summary: Two respiratory chain Succinic acid NADH oxidation respiratory chain NADH FAD (Fe-S) FMN (Fe-S) complexesⅠ CoQ Succinic acid oxidation respiratory chain complexesⅡ Cyt b→Cyt c1 Complexes Ⅲ Cyt c Cyt aa3 Complexes Ⅳ 1/2O2 5. Oxidative Phosphorylation •Defenition: The process of synthesizing ATP from ADP and Pi coupled with the electron transport chain(ETC) is know as oxidative phosphorylation. •It is main form of ATP producing in body. 2.5 ADP + 2.5 Pi 2.5 ATP (1) P/O Ratio • The relationship between ATP synthesis and O2 consumption. the number of moles of ATP made P/O ratio = ----------------------------------------------(½) the number of moles of O2 consumed • When NADH is substrate, P/O = 2-3 • When succinate is used, P/O = 1-2 • When ascorbic acid is used, P/O = 0.88 succinate The sites of coupled oxidative phosphorylation (2) 4 H+ transported for each ATP synthesized (important!) Complex I • H+ translocated/2e- : 2 • For NADH: • IV 4 10 H+ translocated / (2e-) yield 2.5 ATPs when NADH is oxidized. • For succinate: • III 4 6 H+ translocated / (2e-) yield 1.5 ATPs when FADH2 is oxidized. (3). Mechanisms of coupling electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation •This coupling mechanism had ever been a mystery for many years! A. Chemical coupling B. Conformational coupling C. The chemiosmotic theory The chemiosmotic theory •Proposed by Peter Mitchell in the 1960’s (Nobel Prize 1978) • Chemiosmotic theory: A proton concentration gradient serves as the energy reservoir for driving ATP formation. Chemiosmotic coupling • Electrons from NADH and FADH2 are transported down a respiratory chain in the mitochondrial inner membrane. • The energy released is used to pump protons (H+) across the inner membrane • Creates an electrochemical proton gradient • Flow of H+ back is used to drive the conversion of ADP+Pi to ATP + + __ + + _ _ + _ _ + __ + _ + _ + _+ _ + _ _ + _ _ _ + + + _ + ___ _ +_ + _ + + + __ _ _ _ _ + + + _ + _ _ + + + _ + + + + + (4) Mechanism of ATP synthesis • ATP synthase also called Complex V, or F0F1-ATPase • FoF1 ATPase uses the proton gradient energy for the synthesis of ATP F1/F0 ATP Synthase ----“knob-and-stalk” structure F1 (knob): catalytic subunit, made of 5 polypeptides: a3b3gde Fo (stalk): complex of integral membrane proteins that mediates proton transport, made of a1b2c9-12 Proton diffusion through the protein drives ATP synthesis F1 Matrix Intermembrane space F0 Pi+ ATP ADP e¯ e¯ NADH +H+ HH++ H+ H+ + H H+ + + H H H+H+ 目录 Complex Ⅰ NADH Fe-S Amytal Rotenone Q Complex Ⅲ b × c1 Antimycin A C Complex Ⅳ aa3 O2 CO, CN N3- 6. Drugs that inhibit the ETC (Important!) NAD+ FMN I Rotenone helps natives of the Amazon rain forest catch fish! Amytal rotenone FeS FeS FAD II ubiquinone Cyt b Inhibit Complex IV Antimycin A CN-, N3- ubiquinone Cyt c1 FeS III Cyt c Cyt a Cyt a3 IV CO 1/2 O2 Oligomycin H+ ADP H+ H+ H+ Ⅳ + H H+ Q Ⅲ H+ H+ C Ⅰ Oligomycin: Inhibitors of ATP Synthase H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ H+ • Fo is sensitive to oligomycin, an antibiotic that binds in the channel and blocks H+ passage, thereby inhibiting ATP synthesis Intermembrane space oligomycin Matrix Uncouplers • Uncouplers disrupt the tight coupling between electron transport and the ATP synthase. – They act by dissipating the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane created by the electron transport system, so affect ATP synthesis. H+ ADP Pi H+ H+ Ⅳ H+ H+ H+ H++ •Features: hydrophobic and a dissociable proton. –Acquire protons on the cytosolic surface of the membrane –Carry them to the matrix side –Thereby destroying the proton gradient that couples electron transport and the ATP synthase. •Electron transport continues, but ATP synthesis does not occur. The energy released in electron transport is dissipated as heat. + H H+ Q Ⅲ H+ H+ C Ⅰ 2,4-Dinitrophenol( DNP): an uncoupler Points • Free energy change (DG) – negative (DG<0), spontaneously – positive (DG>0), nonspontaneously • High-energy Compounds • Function of ATP • How is ATP produced – Substrate level phosphorylation – Oxidative phosphorylation • Electron transfer chain (or Respiratory chain) – Definition, Significance, Site, Components – Two respiratory chain • NADH oxidation respiratory chain • Succinic acid oxidation respiratory chain Points (continued) • Oxidative Phosphorylation – – – – P/O Ratio 2.5 ATP per NADH; 1.5 ATP per FADH2 The chemiosmotic theory ATP synthase (or F0F1-ATPase) • Drugs that inhibit the ETC or oxidative phosphorylation – Amytal, rotenone, antimycin A, CN-, CO, N3– Oligomycin – Uncouplers: DNP