They break down large molecules into smaller ones and release/store energy in high-energy molecules (ATP, NADH, FADH₂).
Metabolites are oxidized while cofactors like NAD⁺/FAD are reduced, and later re-oxidized to generate ATP.
(1) Re-oxidation of NADH/FADH₂ with reduction of O₂ → H₂O, and
(2) Phosphorylation of ADP → ATP, linked by a proton gradient.
NADH → NAD⁺ + H⁺ + 2e⁻
FADH₂ → FAD + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻
½ O₂ + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂O (or full form 4H⁺ + 4e⁻ + O₂ → 2H₂O).
They are embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
Complexes I–IV, Coenzyme Q, and Cytochrome c. Q is lipid-soluble; Cyt c is peripheral and mobile
FMN, Fe-S clusters, Cu²⁺, cytochrome heme groups, and Coenzyme Q.
Electrons move from lower to higher reduction potential cofactors.
ΔG°′ = −nFΔE°′; higher ΔE°′ → more negative ΔG°′.
FMN accepts 2 electrons + 2H⁺ to become FMNH₂, analogous to FAD but without adenosine
They cycle between Fe³⁺ and Fe²⁺ to transfer single electrons.
Cytochrome hemes switch oxidation states (Fe³⁺/Fe²⁺) in electron transport.
It is a lipid-soluble carrier that accepts 2 e⁻ + 2H⁺ (Q → QH₂) and transfers electrons from Complexes I/II to III.
Complexes I, III, and IV pump protons; total 10 H⁺ moved per NADH oxidized. Complex II does not pump protons.
It catalyzes succinate → fumarate, transferring electrons to Q without pumping protons.
6 H⁺ are moved per FADH₂ oxidized.
Because FADH₂ donates electrons directly to Complex II, bypassing Complex I (a proton-pumping site).
A pH gradient (ΔpH) and a charge gradient (ΔΨ). The matrix is negative/high pH; IMS is positive/low pH.
It converts potential energy into ATP via ATP synthase.
Approximately 3 H⁺ per ATP synthesized.
Roughly 10 H⁺ ÷ 3 H⁺ ≈ 3 ATP per NADH. (Approximation used for conceptual understanding.)
F₀ (transmembrane H⁺ channel) and F₁ (catalytic ATP-forming portion).
Proton flow through F₀ drives rotation of the central shaft, causing conformational changes in F₁ that catalyze ADP + Pi → ATP.
A full turn generates 3 ATP from its three active catalytic sites.
It exchanges ATP out of the matrix for ADP in, enabling ATP use in the cytosol.
It imports Pi + H⁺ into the matrix for ATP synthesis.
Electron transport, NADH re-oxidation, and O₂ consumption all depend on ATP synthase activity via the proton gradient magnitude.
When ADP rises, ATP synthase activity increases → proton gradient decreases → electron transport accelerates → O₂ consumption increases.
The number of ATP molecules produced per oxygen atom reduced to water.
Approximately 2.5 for NADH and 1.5 for FADH₂ (non-stoichiometric averages).
Uncoupling or variable proton leak alters how many H⁺ contribute to ATP synthesis.
Low ADP/Pi → low ATP synthase → ↑H⁺ gradient → ↓electron transport → ↓O₂ use → ↑NADH/FADH₂ → inhibition of CAC/PDH.
High ADP/Pi → ↑ATP synthase → ↓H⁺ gradient → ↑electron transport → ↑O₂ use → ↓NADH/FADH₂ → activation of CAC/PDH.
It allows protons to enter the matrix without ATP synthesis, so electron transport speeds up and O₂ use increases.
A membrane protein that allows proton re-entry into the matrix without ATP synthesis, generating heat.
Electron transport accelerates because the proton gradient is dissipated rapidly.
Increased fuel oxidation and increased O₂ consumption (but no ATP production)
It is a chemical uncoupler that collapses the proton gradient, causing excess heat production and potentially fatal hyperthermia.
