Aetiology and molecular genetic basis of OXPHOS deficiencies

Published on October 31, 2023   34 min

Other Talks in the Series: Mitochondria in Health and Disease

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0:00
Hello, my name is Monika Winter, and I am an assistant professor in biochemistry at the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences at Northhumbria University in the UK. Today, I'm going to be talking to you about the aetiology and the molecular genetic basis of oxidative phosphorylation deficiency.
0:22
Mitochondria play an essential role in cellular metabolism. But what is cellular metabolism? We can define it as molecular transformations that are occurring in living cells, which involves coordinated series of chemical reactions in order to produce or consume energy. But basically, in other words, metabolism represents this balance between the catabolic and anabolic pathways in a cell. Catabolic pathways are essentially the pathways in which we intake food. This food is then broken down in our bodies. As a result, it results in a number of useful constituents, one of which is energy, and another one are cellular building blocks. The energy and the building blocks can be used by the anabolic pathways to make various macromolecules such as DNA, RNA, lipid, and those macromolecules are, of course, very important building blocks of our organelles, cells, tissues, and organs. Metabolism, as I said, really represents a balance between these two pathways.
1:40
Metabolism is very complicated. It involves a number of different pathways that are highly interconnected. On this illustration, you can see a circuitry of chemical reactions which occur inside our cells. These link all the possible metabolisms together, not only the ones that break down food, but also the ones that are building blocks for our life. All the food sources break down in a way that allows the production of simple carbon sources. These carbon sources flow through what is known as the TCA or the Krebs cycle, which produces reducing equivalents. These reducing equivalents, which are captured from the TCA cycle, but also other pathways, are the ones that feed into the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system. This system is a chain of macromolecular complexes that is embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane. These complexes constantly shuttle electrons in exchange for transporting proton to generate an electrochemical gradient that is used to produce adenosine triphosphate or ATP.

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Aetiology and molecular genetic basis of OXPHOS deficiencies

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