The Role of NAD & FAD Simplified Revision Notes for A-Level AQA Biology
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5.2.6 The Role of NAD & FAD
infoNote
What Are NAD and FAD?
NAD (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide) and FAD (Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide) are coenzymes that play a key role in respiration.
They act as electron carriers, transporting hydrogen atoms (protons and electrons) from metabolic reactions to the electron transport chain for ATP production.
Roles of NAD and FAD in Respiration
During Glycolysis and the Krebs Cycle:
NAD is reduced to NADH by accepting hydrogen atoms during dehydrogenation reactions.
FAD is reduced to FADH₂ during the Krebs cycle, specifically when succinate is converted to fumarate.
In the Electron Transport Chain (ETC):
NADH donates its hydrogen atoms (H⁺ and e⁻) to Complex I of the ETC:
Electrons are passed along the chain, releasing energy used to pump protons (H⁺) into the intermembrane space.
NAD⁺ is regenerated and returns to glycolysis or the Krebs cycle.
FADH₂ donates its hydrogen atoms to Complex II of the ETC:
Its electrons enter the chain at a slightly later stage than NADH, so FADH₂ generates less ATP per molecule.
Proton Gradient Formation:
The protons (H⁺) released from NADH and FADH₂ contribute to the formation of a proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane.
This gradient drives ATP synthesis via the enzyme ATP synthase.
ATP Yield
Each molecule of NADH contributes to the synthesis of 2.5 ATP molecules via oxidative phosphorylation.
Each molecule of FADH₂ contributes to the synthesis of 1.5 ATP molecules because it enters the ETC later than NADH.
Key Differences Between NAD and FAD
Feature
NAD
FAD
Site of Reduction
Glycolysis, Link Reaction, Krebs Cycle
Krebs Cycle (succinate → fumarate)
Electron Entry Point
Complex I
Complex II
ATP Yield
2.5 ATP per molecule
1.5 ATP per molecule
infoNote
Exam Tip
Remember the key difference: NADH donates to Complex I, while FADH₂ donates to Complex II.
Be prepared to explain why FADH₂ yields less ATP than NADH due to entering the ETC later.
Highlight the role of NAD and FAD in forming the proton gradient for ATP production.
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