Oxidative Phosphorylation - Prokaryotic Electron Transport Chains

Prokaryotic Electron Transport Chains

Further information: Microbial metabolism

In contrast to the general similarity in structure and function of the electron transport chains in eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea possess a large variety of electron-transfer enzymes. These use an equally wide set of chemicals as substrates. In common with eukaryotes, prokaryotic electron transport uses the energy released from the oxidation of a substrate to pump ions across a membrane and generate an electrochemical gradient. In the bacteria, oxidative phosphorylation in Escherichia coli is understood in most detail, while archaeal systems are at present poorly understood.

The main difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic oxidative phosphorylation is that bacteria and archaea use many different substances to donate or accept electrons. This allows prokaryotes to grow under a wide variety of environmental conditions. In E. coli, for example, oxidative phosphorylation can be driven by a large number of pairs of reducing agents and oxidizing agents, which are listed below. The midpoint potential of a chemical measures how much energy is released when it is oxidized or reduced, with reducing agents having negative potentials and oxidizing agents positive potentials.

Respiratory enzymes and substrates in E. coli.
Respiratory enzyme Redox pair Midpoint potential

(Volts)

Formate dehydrogenase Bicarbonate / Formate
−0.43
Hydrogenase Proton / Hydrogen
−0.42
NADH dehydrogenase NAD+ / NADH
−0.32
Glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase DHAP / Gly-3-P
−0.19
Pyruvate oxidase Acetate + Carbon dioxide / Pyruvate
?
Lactate dehydrogenase Pyruvate / Lactate
−0.19
-amino acid dehydrogenase 2-oxoacid + ammonia / -amino acid
?
Glucose dehydrogenase Gluconate / Glucose
−0.14
Succinate dehydrogenase Fumarate / Succinate
+0.03
Ubiquinol oxidase Oxygen / Water
+0.82
Nitrate reductase Nitrate / Nitrite
+0.42
Nitrite reductase Nitrite / Ammonia
+0.36
Dimethyl sulfoxide reductase DMSO / DMS
+0.16
Trimethylamine N-oxide reductase TMAO / TMA
+0.13
Fumarate reductase Fumarate / Succinate
+0.03

As shown above, E. coli can grow with reducing agents such as formate, hydrogen, or lactate as electron donors, and nitrate, DMSO, or oxygen as acceptors. The larger the difference in midpoint potential between an oxidizing and reducing agent, the more energy is released when they react. Out of these compounds, the succinate/fumarate pair is unusual, as its midpoint potential is close to zero. Succinate can therefore be oxidized to fumarate if a strong oxidizing agent such as oxygen is available, or fumarate can be reduced to succinate using a strong reducing agent such as formate. These alternative reactions are catalyzed by succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate reductase, respectively.

Some prokaryotes use redox pairs that have only a small difference in midpoint potential. For example, nitrifying bacteria such as Nitrobacter oxidize nitrite to nitrate, donating the electrons to oxygen. The small amount of energy released in this reaction is enough to pump protons and generate ATP, but not enough to produce NADH or NADPH directly for use in anabolism. This problem is solved by using a nitrite oxidoreductase to produce enough proton-motive force to run part of the electron transport chain in reverse, causing complex I to generate NADH.

Prokaryotes control their use of these electron donors and acceptors by varying which enzymes are produced, in response to environmental conditions. This flexibility is possible because different oxidases and reductases use the same ubiquinone pool. This allows many combinations of enzymes to function together, linked by the common ubiquinol intermediate. These respiratory chains therefore have a modular design, with easily interchangeable sets of enzyme systems.

In addition to this metabolic diversity, prokaryotes also possess a range of isozymes – different enzymes that catalyze the same reaction. For example, in E. coli, there are two different types of ubiquinol oxidase using oxygen as an electron acceptor. Under highly aerobic conditions, the cell uses an oxidase with a low affinity for oxygen that can transport two protons per electron. However, if levels of oxygen fall, they switch to an oxidase that transfers only one proton per electron, but has a high affinity for oxygen.

Read more about this topic:  Oxidative Phosphorylation

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