Electron Transport Chain | HHMI BioInteractive Video
The Electron Transport Chain
This section provides an overview of the electron transport chain and its role in cellular respiration.
The Inner Mitochondrial Membrane and Enzymes (0:00:00 - 0:01:21)
- The center of activity in cells is the mitochondria organelle, specifically the inner mitochondrial membrane.
- Enzymes on the inner mitochondrial membrane catalyze the chemical reactions of respiration, including the electron transport chain.
- Enzyme complex 1 is responsible for the first step of the electron transport chain, receiving electrons from coenzyme NADH produced by the citric acid cycle.
- Coenzyme NADH is oxidized at one end of enzyme complex 1, releasing two electrons that hop to coenzyme Q, which becomes reduced.
- Coenzyme Q carries electrons to the next step in the electron transport chain while traveling among membrane lipids.
- The movement of charged electrons through complex 1 causes it to bend and transmit energy for pumping four protons across the membrane.
Enzyme Complex 3 and Oxygen Capture (0:01:43 - 0:03:31)
- Enzyme complex 3 performs the second step of the electron transport chain by separating electrons from coenzyme Q and passing one electron to cytochrome c, which becomes reduced.
- A complete reaction cycle of enzyme complex 3 transports four protons across the membrane.
- Reduced cytochrome c carries electrons to enzyme complex four, which serves as a destination for electron transport.
- In enzyme complex four, reduced cytochrome c delivers electrons to its reaction center where a molecule of oxygen is captured, split, and reduced.
- The separated oxygen atoms accept electrons and pick up protons, resulting in two molecules of water.
Multiple Sources of Electrons (0:03:31 - 0:04:03)
- Coenzyme NADH, a product of the citric acid cycle, provides electrons to enzyme complex 1.
- Enzyme complex 2 catalyzes the oxidation of succinate in step 6 of the citric acid cycle, releasing two electrons that hop to coenzyme Q.
The transcript is already in English.