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Soluble coupling enzyme and

This is a crucial point because (as we will see) proton transport is coupled with ATP synthesis. Oxidation of one FADHg in the electron transport chain results in synthesis of approximately two molecules of ATP, compared with the approximately three ATPs produced by the oxidation of one NADH. Other enzymes can also supply electrons to UQ, including mitochondrial 5w-glyc-erophosphate dehydrogenase, an inner membrane-bound shuttle enzyme, and the fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenases, three soluble matrix enzymes involved in fatty acid oxidation (Figure 21.7 also see Chapter 24). The path of electrons from succinate to UQ is shown in Figure 21.8. [Pg.684]

Ad values) (4) effect on the pH function of any or all components of the reactions (including the buffer) (5) effect on the affinity(ies) of enzyme effector(s) (6) an alteration in the rate determining (or rate contributing) step(s) (7) effect on the coupling enzymes of the assay and (8) effect on physical properties e.g., solubility of substrates, particularly gas substrates such as O2 and N2, dielectric constant of the solvent, etc.). [Pg.671]

The reaction in a homogeneous solution with a polar organic solvent in which the enzymes and substrates are both soluble, occurs often at the expense of the enzyme stability [4, 5]. Besides immobilised enzymes in organic solvents [6], emulsion reactors, especially enzyme-membrane-reactors coupled with a product separation by membrane based extractive processes [7-9] and two-phase membrane reactors [10-12], are already established on a production scale. [Pg.187]

The conformation of membrane-bound enzymes is undoubtedly restricted by the membrane. However, the mechanism of action of these enzymes appears to be similar to that of soluble enzymes, so that the presence of clefts and conformational flexibility is to be expected. The mitochondrial coupling factor apparently contains both the ATP synthesizing enzyme and a proton channel conformational changes undoubtedly play a role in the function of this system. A large movement of polypeptide chains has been proposed in the functioning of this system (and for other membrane-bound enzymes), but no convincing experimental evidence is available to support such a hypothesis. [Pg.215]

The outcome of these coupled reactions, both reversible under cellular conditions, is that the energy released on oxidation of an aldehyde to a carboxylate group is conserved by the coupled formation of ATP from ADP and Pj. The formation of ATP by phosphoryl group transfer from a substrate such as 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate is referred to as a substrate-level phosphorylation, to distinguish this mechanism from respiration-linked phosphorylation. Substrate-level phosphorylations involve soluble enzymes and chemical intermediates (1,3-bisphosphoglycerate in this case). Respiration-linked phosphorylations, on the other hand, involve membrane -bound enzymes and transmembrane gradients of protons (Chapter 19). [Pg.531]

In the discussion of the biochemistry of copper in Section 62.1.8 it was noted that three types of copper exist in copper enzymes. These are type 1 ( blue copper centres) type 2 ( normal copper centres) and type 3 (which occur as coupled pairs). All three classes are present in the blue copper oxidases laccase, ascorbate oxidase and ceruloplasmin. Laccase contains four copper ions per molecule, and the other two contain eight copper ions per molecule. In all cases oxidation of substrate is linked to the four-electron reduction of dioxygen to water. Unlike cytochrome oxidase, these are water-soluble enzymes, and so are convenient systems for studying the problems of multielectron redox reactions. The type 3 pair of copper centres constitutes the 02-reducing sites in these enzymes, and provides a two-electron pathway to peroxide, bypassing the formation of superoxide. Laccase also contains one type 1 and one type 2 centre. While ascorbate oxidase contains eight copper ions per molecule, so far ESR and analysis data have led to the identification of type 1 (two), type 2 (two) and type 3 (four) copper centres. [Pg.699]


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