Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. More information

Difference between revisions of "Uncoupled respiration"

From Bioblast
Line 10: Line 10:
Uncoupled and [[dyscoupled respiration]] are summarized as [[LEAK respiration]].Β  In contrast, [[non-coupled respiration]] is induced experimentally for evaluation of [[ETS capacity]].
Uncoupled and [[dyscoupled respiration]] are summarized as [[LEAK respiration]].Β  In contrast, [[non-coupled respiration]] is induced experimentally for evaluation of [[ETS capacity]].
|info=[[MiPNet12.15]], [[MiPNet10.04]]
|info=[[MiPNet12.15]], [[MiPNet10.04]]
|type=Respiration
}}
{{MitoPedia topics
|mitopedia topic=Uncoupler
|type=Respiration
|type=Respiration
}}
}}
{{Labeling
{{Labeling
|discipline=Mitochondrial Physiology
|discipline=Mitochondrial Physiology
|enzymes=Uncoupler Protein
|topics=Respiration; OXPHOS; ETS Capacity, Coupling; Membrane Potential
|topics=Respiration; OXPHOS; ETS Capacity, Coupling; Membrane Potential
|enzymes=Uncoupler Protein
|type=Respiration
}}
}}
The uncoupled part of respiration in state ''P'' is larger than LEAK respiration evaluated in state ''L'' after inhibition of [[ATP synthase]] or [[adenine nucleotide translocase]]. This is due to the increase of mt-membrane potential in state ''L'' versus ''P'', causing a corresponding increase of the proton leak driven by the higher proton motive force. As an approximation, however, the difference ''E''-''L'' yields an estimate of the physiological scope of uncoupling, or the pathological scope of dyscoupling.
The uncoupled part of respiration in state ''P'' is larger than LEAK respiration evaluated in state ''L'' after inhibition of [[ATP synthase]] or [[adenine nucleotide translocase]]. This is due to the increase of mt-membrane potential in state ''L'' versus ''P'', causing a corresponding increase of the proton leak driven by the higher proton motive force. As an approximation, however, the difference ''E''-''L'' yields an estimate of the physiological scope of uncoupling, or the pathological scope of dyscoupling.

Revision as of 14:51, 9 March 2011


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Uncoupled respiration

Description

The uncoupled part of respiration in state P pumps protons to compensate for intrinsic uncoupling, which is a property of:

(a) the inner mt-membrane (proton leak),

(b) the proton pumps (proton slip; decoupling), and

(c) is regulated by molecular uncouplers (uncoupling protein, UCP1).

Uncoupled and dyscoupled respiration are summarized as LEAK respiration. In contrast, non-coupled respiration is induced experimentally for evaluation of ETS capacity.


Reference: MiPNet12.15, MiPNet10.04


MitoPedia topics: Uncoupler 


Labels:



Enzyme: Uncoupler Protein"Uncoupler Protein" is not in the list (Adenine nucleotide translocase, Complex I, Complex II;succinate dehydrogenase, Complex III, Complex IV;cytochrome c oxidase, Complex V;ATP synthase, Inner mt-membrane transporter, Marker enzyme, Supercomplex, TCA cycle and matrix dehydrogenases, ...) of allowed values for the "Enzyme" property.  Regulation: Respiration; OXPHOS; ETS Capacity"Respiration; OXPHOS; ETS Capacity" is not in the list (Aerobic glycolysis, ADP, ATP, ATP production, AMP, Calcium, Coupling efficiency;uncoupling, Cyt c, Flux control, Inhibitor, ...) of allowed values for the "Respiration and regulation" property., Coupling; Membrane Potential"Coupling; Membrane Potential" is not in the list (Aerobic glycolysis, ADP, ATP, ATP production, AMP, Calcium, Coupling efficiency;uncoupling, Cyt c, Flux control, Inhibitor, ...) of allowed values for the "Respiration and regulation" property. 




The uncoupled part of respiration in state P is larger than LEAK respiration evaluated in state L after inhibition of ATP synthase or adenine nucleotide translocase. This is due to the increase of mt-membrane potential in state L versus P, causing a corresponding increase of the proton leak driven by the higher proton motive force. As an approximation, however, the difference E-L yields an estimate of the physiological scope of uncoupling, or the pathological scope of dyscoupling.