citric acid cycle Flashcards
What happens in the citric acid cycle?
Energy carriers (NADH and FADH2) are produced under aerobic conditions inside mitochondria.
2 acetyl CoA (per 1 glucose) results in 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, and 1 GTP (converted to ATP).
The citric acid cycle regenerates oxaloacetate, releases 2 CO2, doesn’t directly use O2, but requires it for the regeneration of NAD+ and FAD.
Step 1
Citrate synthase catalyzes synthesis of citrate from oxaloacetate
irreversible.
Step 2
Aconitase catalyzes formation of isocitrate from citrate.
Step 3
First of four oxidation steps.
Isocitrate dehydrogenase catalyzes formation of alpha ketogluterate from isocitrate.
Yields CO2 and NADH.
Irreversible.
Step 4
2nd oxidation step of four
a-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex catalyzes formation of succinyl CoA from a-ketoglutarate
Yields NADH, CO2, and compound with high energy thioester bond. Irreversible.
Step 5
Succinyl CoA synthase catalyzes formation of succinate from succinyl-CoA.
Phosphate displaces CoA to make high energy intermediate.
Phosphate passed to GDP to make GTP (converted to ATP).
Step 6
Succinate dehydrogenase catalyzes formation of fumarate from succinate.
Third of Four oxidation steps.
Yields FADH2.
Step 7
Fumarase catalyzes conversion of fumarate to L-malate.
Step 8
Malate dehydrogenase catalyzes formation of oxaloacetate (regenerated) from L-Malate
NAD+ reduced to NADH