Give the details of respiratory complexes

Give the Details of Respiratory Complexes

The mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) is a sequence of protein complexes embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane that plays a key role in cellular respiration. These complexes transfer electrons from electron carriers (NADH and FADH₂) to molecular oxygen while pumping protons across the membrane to generate a proton gradient. This proton motive force is then used to synthesize ATP through oxidative phosphorylation. The major respiratory complexes include:

Complex I: NADH: Ubiquinone Oxidoreductase

  • Accepts electrons from NADH and transfers them to ubiquinone (coenzyme Q).
  • Pumps four protons (H⁺) from the matrix into the intermembrane space.
  • Contains FMN and iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters as cofactors.

Complex II: Succinate Dehydrogenase

  • Receives electrons from FADH₂ (produced in the TCA cycle) and transfers them to ubiquinone.
  • Unlike Complex I, it does not pump protons.
  • Contains FAD and Fe-S clusters.

Complex III: Cytochrome bc₁ Complex

  • Transfers electrons from reduced ubiquinone (QH₂) to cytochrome c.
  • Pumps four protons per two electrons transferred.
  • Contains cytochromes b and c₁ and a Rieske Fe-S protein.

Complex IV: Cytochrome c Oxidase

  • Transfers electrons from cytochrome c to molecular oxygen, reducing it to water.
  • Pumps two protons across the membrane per electron pair.
  • Contains heme groups (cytochromes a and a₃) and copper centers (CuA and CuB).

ATP Synthase (Complex V)

  • Utilizes the proton gradient created by complexes I, III, and IV to synthesize ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi).
  • Consists of two parts: F₀ (proton channel) and F₁ (catalytic site).

These complexes work in concert to efficiently convert biochemical energy from nutrients into usable cellular energy in the form of ATP.

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