Krebs Cycle Flashcards
What happens in the Krebs cycle?
Happens in the matrix
Made of enzyme catalysed reactions which oxidises acetylcoenzyme A to 2 molecules of carbon dioxide (per acetylCoA) and releases ATP
What happens to the acetyl group?
Acetyl group is released from acetyl CoA.
The group is then added to a 4CARBON oxaloacetate, producing CITRATE
How are 6 reduced NAD produced?
- Citrate is dehydrogenated and 2 hydrogen atoms are picked up by NAD. This happens again because for every glucose, the kreb’s cycle happens twice.
- The 2 x 5C compound that dehydrogenated citrate produces is also dehydrogenated/decarboxylated which forms 2 reduced NAD and 2 carbon dioxide molecule. 5C becomes a 4C compound
- 2 x 4C is dehydrogenated twice and regenerated to produce oxaloacetate. 2 reduced NAD are produced.
2 +2 + 2 = 6 reduced NAD
How are 2 reduced FAD produced?
2 x 4C is dehydrogenated the first time and the hydrogen atoms are accepted by 2 FAD coenzymes.
How are 2 ATP’s produced?
2x 4C is added to coenzyme A which produces 2x ATP in substrate level phosphorylation.
How are 4 CO2 produced?
Citrate is decarboxylated, making 2CO2 molecules
2 x 5C is decarboxylated producing 2 carbon molecules
What are the products of Kreb’s cycle?
2 reduced FAD
6 reduced NAD
4 CO2
2 ATP