Originally posted by Monique
Could you explain a little further about the hydride donors.. I am a biochemist :) I read about it once, but that was many years ago :)
Ahh, then I'm sure you know the roles of NADH and NADPH in reductive biosynthesis. Which in a sense the opposite of oxidative decarboxylation, or other catabolic energy producing pathways. Short hand rule is that catabolism requires oxidation and biosynthesis needs reduction. And hydride ions are great reducing agents, even us clumsy organic chemists use them. You may recall from your O. Chem. class the use of LiAlH4, lithium aluminum hydride, or NaBH4, sodium borohydride to reduce carbonyls to alcohols. I haven't my biochem textbook in front of me, but I believe the pentose phospate pathway is a good example. All those pyruvates and dihydroxy acetones and what have you have to be anabolized and their carbonyls reduced to alcohols to give you those sedheptuloses and other sugars. And as ATP is the energy currency for many pathways, in the PPP NADPH (either one or the other, I think it's NADPH) is the hydride, or reductive currency. And the other is used in all sort of places where reduction is needed, peroxide metabolism for example.
Now in organic chemist, which is what biochemistry is, to reduce something is to give it electrons. And the hydride ion is H-, basically just a proton with two extra charges. So when it bonds to a compound, the compound gets an electron (reduced) and a hydrogen atom, which is basically just a filler for organic compounds, sawdust in your hamburger, if you will. So hydride donors are often referred to as electron donors, because nobody cares about the proton. You may see why using H- in an aqueous environment has advantage over harsh reducing agents, like heavy metal anions.
If you look at your citric acid cycle, not the main structures but the little arrows coming and going, you'll probably see lot's of H+'s and e-'s and NAD+ and NADH. So you may ask how if NAD+ picks up a proton and goes from being +1 to 0, which is unfortunately how it is often shown, it's because of those electrons flying haphazardly around. It's not two electrons and a proton, it's the marvelous hydride ion.
Does that make it clearer or worse?