Submitted by WeedCat1 t3_zr40m7 in askscience
So if there is oxygen present, then the pyruvate would go to the mitochondria and do aerobic cellular respiration. If there is no oxygen it would instead do fermentation from what I understand. But I am curious about what biochemically causes this change aside from just the lack of oxygen. Like if there's some transport protein that is deactivated or something when there's no oxygen somehow that then causes it to not be moved into the mitochondria.
-Metacelsus- t1_j11tl4y wrote
This paper is a good review of pyruvate transport into the mitochondria. Basically, pyruvate can flow across the mitochondrial outer membrane using non-selective anion channels such as VDAC1. There are two proteins, MPC1 and MPC2 (named for being mitochondrial pyruvate carriers), that form a complex that transports pyruvate through the inner membrane into the mitochondrial matrix, where the oxidation happens. The MPC complex carries a proton along with pyruvate (which is known as proton symport). Since pyruvate is negatively charged this means the overall transport process is charge-neutral across the inner membrane.
In general, compounds diffuse from regions of high concentration to regions of low concentration. Since pyruvate is consumed in the mitochondrial matrix, the concentration will be lower there, so pyruvate will diffuse inside if the proper transport proteins are present. In absence of oxygen, pyruvate won't be oxidized in the mitochondrial matrix, so this concentration gradient would be much lower (or absent entirely).