Cellular Respiration

Index to this page
  • Mitochondria
  • The Citric Acid Cycle
  • The Electron Transport Chain
  • Chemiosmosis in Mitochondria
  • How many ATPs?
  • Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)

Cellular respiration is the process of oxidizing food molecules, like glucose, to carbon dioxide and water.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O 12H2O + 6 CO2

The energy released is trapped in the form of ATP for use by all the energy-consuming activities of the cell.

The process occurs in two phases: In eukaryotes, glycolysis occurs in the cytosol. (Link to a discussion of glycolysis). The remaining processes take place in mitochondria.

Mitochondria

Mitochondria are membrane-enclosed organelles distributed through the cytosol of most eukaryotic cells. Their number within the cell ranges from a few hundred to, in very active cells, thousands. Their main function is the conversion of the potential energy of food molecules into ATP.

spacer Mitochondria have: spacer

This electron micrograph (courtesy of Keith R. Porter) shows a single mitochondrion from a bat pancreas cell. Note the double membrane and the way the inner membrane is folded into cristae. The dark, membrane-bounded objects above the mitochondrion are lysosomes.


The number of mitochondria in a cell can

(Defects in either process can produce serious, even fatal, illness.)

The Outer Membrane

The outer membrane contains many complexes of integral membrane proteins that form channels through which a variety of molecules and ions move in and out of the mitochondrion.

The Inner Membrane

The inner membrane contains 5 complexes of integral membrane proteins:

The Matrix

The matrix contains a complex mixture of soluble enzymes that catalyze the respiration of pyruvic acid and other small organic molecules.

Here pyruvic acid is

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The Citric Acid Cycle

Summary:

The electrons of NADH and FADH2 are transferred to the electron transport chain.

The Electron Transport Chain

spacer The electron transport chain consists of 3 complexes of integral membrane proteins and two freely-diffusible molecules that shuttle electrons from one complex to the next.

The electron transport chain accomplishes:

Chemiosmosis in mitochondria

The energy released as electrons pass down the gradient from NADH to oxygen is harnessed by three enzyme complexes of the respiratory chain (I, III, and IV) to pump protons (H+) against their concentration gradient from the matrix of the mitochondrion into the intermembrane space (an example of active transport).

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As their concentration increases there (which is the same as saying that the pH decreases), a strong diffusion gradient is set up. The only exit for these protons is through the ATP synthase complex. As in chloroplasts, the energy released as these protons flow down their gradient is harnessed to the synthesis of ATP. The process is called chemiosmosis and is an example of facilitated diffusion.

One-half of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Paul D. Boyer and John E. Walker for their discovery of how ATP synthase works. Link to some of the details.

External Link
Animations of the electron transport chain and the workings of ATP synthase
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How many ATPs?

It is tempting to try to view the synthesis of ATP as a simple matter of stoichiometry (the fixed ratios of reactants to products in a chemical reaction). But (with 3 exceptions) it is not.

Most of the ATP is generated by the proton gradient that develops across the inner mitochondrial membrane. The number of protons pumped out as electrons drop from NADH through the respiratory chain to oxygen is theoretically large enough to generate, as they return through ATP synthase, 3 ATPs per electron pair (but only 2 ATPs for each pair donated by FADH2).

With 12 pairs of electrons removed from each glucose molecule,

this could generate 34 ATPs.

Add to this the 4 ATPs that are generated by the 3 exceptions and one arrives at 38.

But

So the actual yield of ATP as mitochondria respire varies with conditions. It probably seldom exceeds 30.

The three exceptions

A stoichiometric production of ATP does occur at:

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)

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The human mitochondrion contains 5–10 identical, circular molecules of DNA. Each consists of 16,569 base pairs carrying the information for 37 genes which encode:

The rRNA and tRNA molecules are used in the machinery that synthesizes the 13 polypeptides.

The 13 polypeptides participate in building several protein complexes embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane.

Each of these protein complexes also requires subunits that are encoded by nuclear genes, synthesized in the cytosol, and imported from the cytosol into the mitochondrion. Nuclear genes also encode ~1,000 other proteins that must be imported into the mitochondrion. [More]

Mutations in mtDNA cause human diseases.

Mutations in 12 of the 13 polypeptide-encoding mitochondrial genes have been found to cause human disease.

Although many different organs may be affected, disorders of the muscles and brain are the most common. Perhaps this reflects the great demand for energy of both these organs. (Although representing only ~2% of our body weight, the brain consumes ~20% of the energy produced when we are at rest.)

Some of these disorders are inherited in the germline. In every case, the mutant gene is received from the mother because none of the mitochondria in sperm survives in the fertilized egg. Other disorders are somatic; that is, the mutation occurs in the somatic tissues of the individual.

Example: exercise intolerance

A number of humans who suffer from easily-fatigued muscles turn out to have a mutations in their cytochrome b gene. Curiously, only the mitochondria in their muscles have the mutation; the mtDNA of their other tissues is normal. Presumably, very early in their embryonic development, a mutation occurred in a cytochrome b gene in the mitochondrion of a cell destined to produce their muscles.

The severity of mitochondrial diseases varies greatly. The reason for this is probably the extensive mixing of mutant DNA and normal DNA in the mitochondria as they fuse with one another. A mixture of both is called heteroplasmy. The higher the ratio of mutant to normal, the greater the severity of the disease. In fact by chance alone, cells can on occasion end up with all their mitochondria carrying all-mutant genomes — a condition called homoplasmy (a phenomenon resembling genetic drift).

Mutations in some 228 nuclear genes have also been implicated in human mitochondrial diseases.

Why do mitochondria have their own genome?

Many of the features of the mitochondrial genetic system resemble those found in bacteria. This has strengthened the theory that mitochondria are the evolutionary descendants of a bacterium that established an endosymbiotic relationship with the ancestors of eukaryotic cells early in the history of life on earth. However, many of the genes needed for mitochondrial function have since moved to the nuclear genome.

The recent sequencing of the complete genome of Rickettsia prowazekii has revealed a number of genes closely related to those found in mitochondria. Perhaps rickettsias are the closest living descendants of the endosymbionts that became the mitochondria of eukaryotes.

Further discussion of the evolutionary implications of mtDNA.
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17 April 2014
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