45
Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

  • Upload
    basil

  • View
    50

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion. Mitochondrial outer membrane. ~50% lipid by weight Contains many enzymes involved in diverse activities: epinephrine oxidation, tryptophan degradation, fatty acid elongation, etc. Porin channel is surrounded by a barrel of β strands - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Chapter 5:

Aerobic Respiration

and the Mitochondrion

Page 2: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Mitochondrial outer membrane

• ~50% lipid by weight• Contains many enzymes involved in diverse

activities: epinephrine oxidation, tryptophan degradation, fatty acid elongation, etc.

• Porin channel is surrounded by a barrel of β strands

• If porin channels wide open, outer membrane is freely permeable to molecules like ATP, NAD & coenzyme A

Page 3: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Porins

• Molecules up to ~5,000 daltons to penetrate

• The intermembrane space & cytoplasm are basically continuous with respect to ATP, NAD, CoA, etc.

Page 4: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Mitochondrial inner membrane

• Very high protein/lipid ratio

(3:1 by weight; ~1 protein/every 15 phospholipids)

• >100 different polypeptides; devoid of cholesterol• Rich in the unusual phospholipid cardiolipin• Both the presence of cardiolipin & the absence of

cholesterol are characteristic of bacterial plasma membranes

Page 5: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Mitochondrial inner membrane

• Ca2+-ATPase

• Electron transport chain

• ATP synthase

Page 6: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Mitochondrial matrix

• Enzymes• Ribosomes • Circular double-stranded DNAs (encode inner

membrane proteins; nuclear DNA codes for some, too)

• Humans mitochondrial DNA encodes– 13 mitochondrial polypeptides– rRNAs and 22 tRNAs that are used in protein

synthesis within the organelle

Page 7: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

The role of anaerobic and aerobic metabolism in exercise

• Muscle cells contain a store of creatine phosphate (CrP )

• CrP + ADP Cr + ATP• Human skeletal muscles consist of fast-

twitch fibers and slow-twitch fibers

Page 8: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Fast-twitch fibers

• Contract very rapidly; 15 – 40 msec

• Nearly devoid of mitochondria

• Unable to make much ATP by aerobic respiration

Page 9: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Slow-twitch fibers

• Contract more slowly; 40 – 100 msec

• Have large numbers of mitochondria

Page 10: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Aerobic exercise

• Energy source– Initially by glucose stored as glycogen in

muscles– After a few minutes the muscles depend

increasingly on free fatty acids released into blood from adipose (fat) tissue

• The longer the exercise period, the greater the dependency on fatty acids

Page 11: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Direct evidence for rotation of γ subunit relative to αβ subunits

• Prepared a genetically engineered version of working part of ATP synthase (3α, 3β & a γ [α3β3γ])

• Fixed polypeptide complex to glass coverslip by its head & attached short, fluorescently labeled actin filament to γ subunit end jutting into medium

• Add ATP & rotation seen (like propellor) • Powered by energy released as ATPs were bound

& catalyzed by β subunit catalytic sites

Page 12: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

The mechanism by which H+ movement drives c ring rotation

• Each a subunit has 2 half-channels that are physically separated (offset) from one another

• One half-channel leads from intermembrane (cytosolic) space into the middle of the a subunit; the other leads from the middle of the a subunit into the matrix

• Each proton moves from the intermembrane space through the half-channel & binds to a negatively charged Asp residue situated at the surface of the adjoining c subunit

Page 13: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

The mechanism by which H+ movement drives c ring rotation

• Binding of H+ to Asp carboxyl group generates a major conformational change in the c subunit that causes the subunit to rotate ~30° in a counterclockwise direction

• This movement of the recently protonated c subunit brings the adjoining ring subunit (protonated at an earlier step) into alignment with the second a subunit half-channel

Page 14: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

The mechanism by which H+ movement drives c ring rotation

• The Asp releases its associated proton, which diffuses into the matrix

• After proton dissociation, the c subunit then returns to its original conformation & is ready to accept another proton from the intermembrane space & repeat the cycle

Page 15: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Peroxisomes

• Found in 1954 & called microbody• Simple membrane-bound vesicles with 0.1 - 1.0

µm diameter• Often have dense, crystalline core of an oxidative

enzyme(s) & consequently granular appearance• Multifunctional organelles containing >50

enzymes involved in diverse activities like:– Oxidation of very long chain fatty acids

(VLCFAs); whose chains typically contain 24 – 26 C

Page 16: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Peroxisomes

• Synthesis of plasmalogens– Abnormalities in plasmalogen synthesis can

lead to severe neurological dysfunction

• Luciferase– which generates light emitted by fireflies, is

also a peroxisomal enzyme

Page 17: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Peroxisomes

• Named peroxisomes since they are the site of synthesis & degradation of H2O2

• H2O2 is produced by a number of peroxisomal enzymes– Urate oxidase, glycolate oxidase & amino acid

oxidases that utilize molecular oxygen to oxidize their respective substrates

• Catalase (at high concentration in peroxisomes) rapidly breaks down H2O2 generated in these reactions

Page 18: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Peroxisomes

• Form by splitting from preexisting organelles

• Import preformed proteins from cytosol

• Do similar kinds of oxidative metabolism in mitochondria– Alanine/glyoxylate aminotransferase, is seen in

the mitochondria of some mammals (cats, dogs) & peroxisomes of others (rabbits, humans)

Page 19: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Glyoxysomes

• A specialized type of peroxisome found only in plants

• Contain some of same enzymes (catalase, fatty acid oxidase), but others as well

• Plant seedlings rely on stored fatty acids to provide energy & material to form new plant

• Glyoxylate cycle

Page 20: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Glyoxysomes

• A primary metabolic activity in these germinating seedlings is the conversion of stored fatty acids to carbohydrate

• Stored fatty acid disassembly produces acetyl CoA & it condenses with oxaloacetate to form citrate

• Citrate is then converted to glucose by a series of glyoxylate cycle enzymes found in glyoxysomes

Page 21: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion
Page 22: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Diseases result from abnormal mitochondrial or peroxisomal function

• Muscle & nerve tissues tend to be most seriously impacted in these disorders since they have the highest demand for ATP

• Depending on protein(s) affected, conditions vary in severity from diseases that lead to death during infancy to disorders that produce seizures ( 中風驟發 ), blindness, deafness and/or strokelike episodes

• Sometimes conditions are mild & characterized by intolerance to exercise or nonmotile sperm

Page 23: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Abnormal mitochondria

• Closer examination of mitochondria reveals large numbers of abnormal inclusions

• A number of common neurological diseases with adult onset (like Parkinson's disease) might be a consequence of degenerative changes in mitochondrial function

• The first such disease-causing mutation was reported in 1995 – The mutation occurred in gene encoding the

flavoprotein subunit of the TCA enzyme succinate dehydrogenase

Page 24: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Mitochondrial disorder inheritance contrasts in several ways with nuclear

gene Mendelian inheritance

• Mitochondria in cells of human embryo are derived exclusively from mitochondria present in the egg at the time of conception without any contribution from the fertilizing sperm

• Mitochondrial disorders are inherited maternally• Mitochondria in cell can contain mixture of

normal (wild-type) & mutant mtDNA (heteroplasmy)

Page 25: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

mtDNA Mutation

• Nuclear DNA is protected from damage by a variety of DNA repair systems which are generally lacking in mitochondria

• mtDNA may also be subjected to high levels of mutagenic oxygen radicals

• mtDNA experiences >10 times the mutation rate of nuclear DNA

Page 26: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Abnormal peroxisomes

• Zellweger syndrome (ZS) is a rare inherited disease characterized by a variety of neurological, visual & liver abnormalities leading to death during early infancy

• Sidney Goldfischer et al. (1973) – reported that liver & renal cells from these patients lacked peroxisomes

• Later studies showed that peroxisomes were not entirely absent from the cells of these individuals

Page 27: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Zellweger syndrome (ZS)

• Peroxisomes were present as empty membranous ghosts (organelles lacking the enzymes normally found in peroxisomes)

• These individuals can make peroxisomal enzymes but the enzymes fail to be imported into peroxisomes & stay largely in cytosol where they are unable to carry out their normal functions

• Mutations in at least 11 different genes– Encoding proteins involved in uptake of

peroxisomal enzymes from cytosol

Page 28: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), subject of the movie Lorenzo's Oil

• Absence of a single peroxisomal enzyme • A defect in a membrane protein that transports

very-long-chain-fatty-acids (VLCFAs) into the peroxisomes where they are normally metabolized

• In the absence of this protein, VLCFAs accumulate in brain & destroy myelin sheaths that insulate nerve cells

• Boys with the disease are typically unaffected until midchildhood, when symptoms of adrenal insufficiency & neurological dysfunction begin

Page 29: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD)

• A diet rich in certain fatty acids is able to retard the progress of the disease

• A number of ALD patients have been successfully treated by bone marrow transplantation, which provides normal cells capable of metabolizing VLCFAs

• Administration of drugs (e.g., lovastatin) that may lower VLCFA levels

• Clinical studies employing gene therapy are also being planned

Page 30: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Chapter 8-1:

Cytoplasmic Membrane Systems:

Structure, Function, and

Membrane Trafficking

Page 31: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Endomembrane system

• Plasma membrane, vesicles, vacuoles, ER, Golgi apparatus, nuclear membrane, lysosome– Have distinct structures & functions but

together form an endomembrane system– Dynamic, integrated network– Materials are shuttled (transport vesicles)

between the endomembrane system

Page 32: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Transport vesicles in endomembrane system

• Transport vesicles form by budding from donor compartment

• Transport vesicles move in directed manner, often pulled by motor proteins operating on tracks formed by microtubules & microfilaments of the cytoskeleton

• When they reach their destination, they fuse with acceptor compartment

Page 33: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Transport in endomembrane system

• Endocytic pathway

• Exocytotic pathway

– Secretory pathway

Page 34: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Biosynthetic (secretory) pathway

• Synthesis in ER (protein) or Golgi (lipid, carbohydrate)

• Many materials made in ER (proteins) & Golgi (complex polysaccharides) fated for secretion from cell

• Two types of secretory activity– Constitutive secretion– Regulated secretion

Page 35: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Constitutive secretion

• Synthesis & secretion into extracellular space occurs in continual, unregulated manner

• Form extracellular matrix & plasma membrane

Page 36: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Regulated secretion

• Secretory materials stored in large, densely packed, membrane-bound secretory granules in cell periphery

• Secreted after correct stimulus – Endocrine cells release hormones – Pancreatic acinar cells release digestive

enzymes – Nerve cells release neurotransmitters

Page 37: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Proteins targeting

• Through sorting signals located on proteins & receptors in transport vesicle walls that recognize them

• Salivary gland cell protein trafficking– Salivary mucus proteins (made in ER)

specifically targeted to secretory granules• Lysosome enzymes (also made in ER) specifically

sent to lysosome • Sorting signals are encoded in protein amino acid

sequence or in attached oligosaccharides

Page 38: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Approaches to the study of cytomembranes

• EM micrographs give detailed view of cell cytoplasm, but little insight into functions of the structures

• Insights gained from autoradiography– Detect location of radioactively labeled

materials in cell • Insights from pulse-chase trials

Page 39: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Pulse-chase trials

• Expose to hot amino acids briefly (pulse)

• Wash to remove excess isotope from tissue • Transferred tissue to medium with

unlabeled amino acids (chase), which lasts for varying time periods

• See wave of radioactivity moving through cell, discern pathway sequence

Page 40: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Use of green fluorescent protein (GFP) reveals the movement of proteins within

a living cell

• GFP is small protein from certain jellyfish that emits a green fluorescent light

• GFP gene fused to DNA encoding protein to be studied

• Introduce the chimeric DNA into cells• Chimeric DNA expresses chimeric protein

(GFP fused to the protein to be studied)

Page 41: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Use of green fluorescent protein (GFP) reveals the movement of proteins within

a living cell

• Usually, GFP stuck to end of a protein has little or no effect on its movement or function & protein under study has no effect on fluorescence of attached GFP

Page 42: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Example: infect a mammalian cell with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) strain in which a viral gene

(VSVG) is fused to GFP gene

• Cell begins to make massive amounts of VSVG protein in RER

• VSVG then goes to Golgi complex & eventually to the plasma membrane of the infected cell where they are incorporated into viral envelopes

• Can see relatively synchronous wave of protein movement (green fluorescence) soon after infection

Page 43: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Infect a mammalian cell with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) strain in which a viral

gene (VSVG) is fused to GFP gene

• Synchrony is enhanced by use of virus with mutant VSVG protein that cannot leave ER of infected cells grown at elevated temperature (40°C).

• The green fluorescence is restricted to the ER.

Page 44: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

• When temperature is lowered to 32°C, the fluorescent GFP-VSVG protein that had accumulated in ER moves synchronously to Golgi complex for various processing events & then to membrane

• Temperature-sensitive mutants– Permissive temperature

Mutants function normally – Restrictive temperatures

Mutants function abnormally

Page 45: Chapter 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion

Cell fractionation

• Homogenization

• Organelles fractionation by centrifugation