Oxidative Phosphorylation Simplified Revision Notes for A-Level AQA Biology
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Oxidative Phosphorylation quickly and effectively.
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5.2.7 Oxidative Phosphorylation
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Oxidative Phosphorylation is the process by which ATP is synthesised using energy released from the transfer of electrons down the electron transport chain (ETC). This occurs in the inner mitochondrial membrane and involves four key steps:
1. Electron Donation
Reduced NAD (NADH) and Reduced FAD (FADH₂) donate their hydrogen atoms to the ETC.
NADH donates electrons to Complex I and is oxidised back to NAD⁺.
FADH₂ donates electrons to Complex II and is oxidised back to FAD.
Each hydrogen atom splits into:
Electrons (e−): Enter the ETC.
Protons (H+): Released into the mitochondrial matrix.
2. Electron Transport Chain
Electrons are transferred through a series of protein complexes (Complex I to IV) embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
Each complex has a higher affinity for electrons than the previous one, causing electrons to flow down the chain.
The energy released at Complexes I, III, and IV is used to pump protons (H⁺) from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space.
NADH: Pumps 10 protons (4 at Complex I, 4 at Complex III, 2 at Complex IV).
FADH2: Pumps 6 protons (4 at Complex III, 2 at Complex IV).
The electrons are eventually transferred to oxygen (O2), the final electron acceptor, which combines with protons to form water (H2O).
3. Proton Gradient Formation
The pumping of protons creates a proton gradient (electrochemical gradient) across the inner mitochondrial membrane:
High proton concentration in the intermembrane space.
Low proton concentration in the mitochondrial matrix.
4. ATP Synthesis
Protons flow back into the mitochondrial matrix through ATP synthase, a specialised protein channel embedded in the membrane.
This flow of protons is known as the proton motive force and provides energy for ATP synthesis.
ATP synthase catalyses the reaction: ADP+Pi→ATP
For every 10 protons passing through ATP synthase, approximately 3 ATP molecules are synthesised.
Summary of ATP Production
1 NADH contributes enough energy to synthesise 2.5 ATP molecules.
1 FADH₂ contributes enough energy to synthesise 1.5 ATP molecules.
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Key Points
Oxygen is essential as the final electron acceptor in oxidative phosphorylation. Without it, the ETC cannot operate, and ATP synthesis ceases.
Water is produced as a by-product.
The majority of ATP in aerobic respiration is generated during oxidative phosphorylation.
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Exam Tip
Understand the difference between the roles of NADH and FADH₂ in the ETC, especially their points of entry and ATP yield.
Be able to describe how the proton gradient powers ATP synthesis and the role of ATP synthase.
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