Noncoupled respiration: Difference between revisions
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* ''More details:'' [[ | * ''More details:'' [[OXPHOS coupling efficiency]] and [[ETS coupling efficiency]] |
Revision as of 12:54, 19 January 2015
Description
Noncoupled respiration is distinguished from general (pharmacological or mechanical) uncoupled respiration, to give a label to an effort to reach the state of maximum uncoupler-activated respiration without inhibiting respiration. Noncoupled respiration, therefore, yields an estimate of ETS capacity. Experimentally uncoupled respiration may fail to yield an estimate of ETS capacity, due to inhibition of respiration above optimum uncoupler concentrations or insufficient stimulation by sub-optimal uncoupler concentrations. Optimum uncoupler concentrations for evaluation of (noncoupled) ETS capacity require inhibitor titrations (Steinlechner-Maran_1996_AJP; Huetter_2004_BJ; Gnaiger_2008_POS).
Noncoupled respiration is maximum electron flow in an open-transmembrane proton circuit mode of operation (see ETS capacity).
Abbreviation: E
Reference: Gnaiger 2014 MitoPathways, MitoPedia: Respiratory states
MitoPedia methods:
Respirometry
MitoPedia topics: "Respiratory state" is not in the list (Enzyme, Medium, Inhibitor, Substrate and metabolite, Uncoupler, Sample preparation, Permeabilization agent, EAGLE, MitoGlobal Organizations, MitoGlobal Centres, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia topic" property.
Respiratory state"Respiratory state" is not in the list (Enzyme, Medium, Inhibitor, Substrate and metabolite, Uncoupler, Sample preparation, Permeabilization agent, EAGLE, MitoGlobal Organizations, MitoGlobal Centres, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia topic" property.
Is respiration uncoupled - noncoupled - dyscoupled?
- More details: Uncoupler
Biochemical coupling efficiency: from 0 to <1
- More details: OXPHOS coupling efficiency and ETS coupling efficiency