NAD & FAD
Summary of oxidative phosphorylation
- Oxidative phosphorylation is the last stage of aerobic respiration
- It takes place at the inner mitochondrial membrane
- This is the most efficient producer of ATP in the process of aerobic respiration
- It also is the stage that produces water from oxygen
- Oxidative phosphorylation is comprised of the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis
- During the electron transport chain, electrons are passed along carrier molecules forming an electrochemical gradient
- Chemiosmosis describes the formation of ATP using this gradient
- Coenzymes NAD+ and FAD play a critical role in oxidative phosphorylation by transferring electrons (from hydrogen) from the previous stages of aerobic respiration through a series of carrier molecules
NAD and FAD
- Coenzymes NAD and FAD play a critical role in aerobic respiration by transferring hydrogen through different stages of respiration
- When hydrogen atoms become available at different points during respiration NAD and FAD accept these hydrogen atoms
- A hydrogen atom consists of a proton (hydrogen ion/H+) and an electron (e-)
- When the coenzymes gain a hydrogen they are ‘reduced’
- They transfer the hydrogen atoms (protons and electrons) from the different stages of respiration to the electron transport chain on the inner mitochondrial membrane, called the cristae (the site where hydrogens are removed from the coenzymes)
- When the hydrogen atoms are removed the coenzymes are ‘oxidised’
The reduction and oxidation of NAD and FAD
Sources of reduced NAD & FAD
- A certain amount of reduced NAD and FAD is produced during the aerobic respiration of a single glucose molecule
- Reduced NAD:
- 2 x 1 = 2 from Glycolysis
- 2 x 1 = 2 from the Link Reaction
- 2 x 3 = 6 from the Krebs cycle
- Reduced FAD:
- 2 x 1 = 2 from the Krebs cycle
Examiner Tip
Note at all stages there is a doubling (2x) of reduced NAD and FAD. This is because one glucose molecule is split in two in glycolysis and so these reactions occur twice per single molecule of glucose.
Remember NAD can also be written as NAD+