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Difference between revisions of "R/E control ratio"

From Bioblast
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{{MitoPedia
{{MitoPedia
|abbr=''R/E''
|abbr=''R/E''
|description=[[Image:R over E.jpg|50 px|ROUTINE control ratio]] The '''ROUTINE control ratio''' (''R/E'' coupling control ratio) is the ratio of (partially coupled) [[ROUTINE respiration]] and (noncoupled) [[ETS capacity]].Β  The ''R/E'' control ratio is an expression of how close ROUTINE respiration operates to ETS capacity.
|description=[[Image:R over E.jpg|50 px|ROUTINE control ratio]] The '''ROUTINE control ratio''' (''R/E'' coupling control ratio) is the ratio of (partially coupled) [[ROUTINE respiration]] and (noncoupled) [[ET capacity]].Β  The ''R/E'' control ratio is an expression of how close ROUTINE respiration operates to ET capacity.
|info=[[Gnaiger 2014 MitoPathways]]
|info=[[Gnaiger 2014 MitoPathways]]
}}
}}
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== Boundaries of the ROUTINE control ratio ==
== Boundaries of the ROUTINE control ratio ==


:::: ''R/E'' increases due to (i) high ATP demand and ADP-stimulated ROUTINE respiration, (ii) partial uncoupling, and (iii) limitation of oxidative capacity by defects of substrate oxidation and complexes of the ETS. The corresponding inverse ratio is the uncoupling control ratio, UCR, which can be seen as an index of apparent ETS excess capacity. The lower boundary of ''R/E'' is the ''[[L/E]]'' flux control ratio, whereas the upper boundary is set by the ''[[P/E]]'' flux control ratio (OXPHOS/ETS capacity).
:::: ''R/E'' increases due to (i) high ATP demand and ADP-stimulated ROUTINE respiration, (ii) partial uncoupling, and (iii) limitation of oxidative capacity by defects of substrate oxidation and complexes of the ET-pathway. The corresponding inverse ratio is the uncoupling control ratio, UCR, which can be seen as an index of apparent ET-pathway excess capacity. The lower boundary of ''R/E'' is the ''[[L/E]]'' flux control ratio, whereas the upper boundary is set by the ''[[P/E]]'' flux control ratio (OXPHOS/ET capacity).


== Biochemical coupling efficiency: from 0 to <1 ==
== Biochemical coupling efficiency: from 0 to <1 ==
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== List of publications: ROUTINE and ETS ==
== List of publications: ROUTINE and ET-pathway ==
{{#ask:[[Category:Publications]] [[Coupling states::ROUTINE]] [[Coupling states::ETS]]
{{#ask:[[Category:Publications]] [[Coupling states::ROUTINE]] [[Coupling states::ETS]]
|?Was published in year=Year
|?Has title=Reference
|?Mammal and model
|?Tissue and cell
|?Stress
|?Diseases
|format=broadtable
|limit=5000
|offset=0
|sort=Was published in year
|order=descending
}}
{{#ask:[[Category:Publications]] [[Coupling states::ROUTINE]] [[Coupling states::ET-pathway]]
|?Was published in year=Year
|?Was published in year=Year
|?Has title=Reference
|?Has title=Reference

Revision as of 09:49, 20 October 2017


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


R/E control ratio

Description

ROUTINE control ratio The ROUTINE control ratio (R/E coupling control ratio) is the ratio of (partially coupled) ROUTINE respiration and (noncoupled) ET capacity. The R/E control ratio is an expression of how close ROUTINE respiration operates to ET capacity.

Abbreviation: R/E

Reference: Gnaiger 2014 MitoPathways


MitoPedia concepts: Respiratory control ratio 

Boundaries of the ROUTINE control ratio

R/E increases due to (i) high ATP demand and ADP-stimulated ROUTINE respiration, (ii) partial uncoupling, and (iii) limitation of oxidative capacity by defects of substrate oxidation and complexes of the ET-pathway. The corresponding inverse ratio is the uncoupling control ratio, UCR, which can be seen as an index of apparent ET-pathway excess capacity. The lower boundary of R/E is the L/E flux control ratio, whereas the upper boundary is set by the P/E flux control ratio (OXPHOS/ET capacity).

Biochemical coupling efficiency: from 0 to <1

Compare:


List of publications: ROUTINE and ET-pathway