Q.20 Cyanide is probably the most potent inhibitor of electron transport chain. It binds to: NADH dehydrogenase ATP synthase Succinate dehydrogenase Fe3+ of cytochrome oxidase

Q.20 Cyanide is probably the most potent inhibitor of electron transport chain. It binds to:

  1. NADH dehydrogenase
  2. ATP synthase
  3. Succinate dehydrogenase
  4. Fe3+ of cytochrome oxidase

    Cyanide is the most potent inhibitor of the electron transport chain (ETC), binding specifically to the Fe3+ iron in cytochrome oxidase (Complex IV), halting electron flow to oxygen and ATP production.

    Correct Answer

    Fe3+ of cytochrome oxidase

    Option Analysis

    • NADH dehydrogenase: Incorrect. This is Complex I; cyanide does not bind here—rotenone or amytal are its inhibitors, blocking NADH electron entry early in the chain.

    • ATP synthase: Incorrect. This is Complex V, using the proton gradient for ATP synthesis; cyanide indirectly stops it by collapsing the gradient but does not bind it (oligomycin is the direct inhibitor).

    • Succinate dehydrogenase: Incorrect. This is Complex II, oxidizing succinate to fumarate; cyanide has no effect here (malonate inhibits it), as Complex II feeds electrons downstream.

    • Fe3+ of cytochrome oxidase: Correct. Cyanide (CN-) binds irreversibly to the ferric (Fe3+) heme a3-CuB binuclear center in Complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase), preventing O2 reduction and backing up electrons across the ETC.

    Cyanide electron transport chain binding to Fe3+ of cytochrome oxidase makes it a deadly poison by stopping cellular respiration at Complex IV. This halts electron flow from cytochrome c to O2, preventing proton gradient formation and ATP synthesis, leading to rapid cell death.

    Mechanism of Inhibition

    Cyanide’s CN- ion coordinates with the Fe3+ in cytochrome oxidase’s heme a3, mimicking O2 and locking the site. Upstream complexes (NADH dehydrogenase/Complex I, succinate dehydrogenase/Complex II) accumulate reduced carriers, but no oxidation occurs, causing lactic acidosis. ATP synthase fails without protons.

    Effects on ETC Components

    Component Role Cyanide Effect
    NADH dehydrogenase Complex I entry Backed up electrons; no direct binding 
    ATP synthase ATP production Indirect halt via no gradient 
    Succinate dehydrogenase Complex II entry Unaffected directly; flow stops downstream 
    Cytochrome oxidase O2 reduction Direct Fe3+ binding blocks respiration 

    Clinical Implications

    Cyanide poisoning causes hypoxia despite O2 presence, treated with hydroxocobalamin or thiosulfate. Understanding cyanide electron transport chain binding aids toxicology and mitochondrial research.

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