Lecture 3: Central Metabolism, The Citric Acid Cycle and the Glyoxylate Cycle - Exam 4 Flashcards
In the ED pathway, when is there NO NADPH created in the ED pathway?
When organisms are growing on gluconate (not glucose), the first two steps are bypassed. Instead, gluconate is phosphorylated to 6-P-gluconate by another enzyme, glucokinase, and NO NADPH is created.
What are the three possible fates of Acetyl-CoA?
Aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration, and fermentation.
What is the TCA cycle? Who has it? What is the starting product and where does it come from?
The TCA cycle is a central driver of cellular respiration used by all aerobic organisms. The TCA cycle takes acetyl CoA – produced by the oxidation of pyruvate and originally derived from glucose – as its starting material and, in a series of redox reactions, harvests much of its bond energy in the form of NADH, FADH2, and GTP (or ATP).
Why is the TCA cycle so important to respiring organisms?
The TCA cycle (and other central metabolic pathways) are important for oxidation of acetyl CoA to CO2 but also for generation of precursors and intermediates for biosynthesis of other macromolecules including amino acids.
What are the reduced electron carriers generated in the TCA cycle? What will they do?
NADH and FADH2 will pass their electrons into the electron transport chain and, through oxidative phosphorylation, will generate most of the ATP produced in cellular respiration.
How many oxidations occur in the TCA cycle? How many NADH and FADH2 are produced as a result? How many substrate level phosphorylations? How many irreversible reactions?
4 oxidations –> 3 NADH & FADH2
1 substrate level phosphorylation –> 1 GTP (or ATP in some cases)
3 irreversible reactions:
Citrate synthase (step 1)
Isocitrate dehydrogenase (step 3)
alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (step 4)
What happens in the first step of the TCA cycle?
The enzyme citrate synthase catalyzes the formation of citrate (6 Carbon) from acetyl CoA and a four carbon acceptor molecule oxaloacetate.
-This step is IRREVERSIBLE
What happens in the second step of the TCA cycle?
A quick rearrangement converts citrate to isocitrate.
What happens in steps 3&4 of the TCA cycle?
Isocitrate releases two of its carbons as CO2 in two oxidation reactions, each one producing a molecule of NADH.
The enzymes that catalyze these reactions are isocitrate dehydrogenase and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. These are key regulators of the citric acid cycle, speeding it up or slowing it down based on the cell’s energy needs.
What happens in steps 5-8 in the TCA cycle?
The succinyl CoA undergoes a series of additional reactions.
Step 5: Succinyl CoA -> Succinate
a GTP is produced.
Step 6: Succinate -> Fumarate
-The electron carrier FAD is reduced to FADH2
Step 7: Fumarate -> Malate
Step 8: Malate -> Oxaloacetate
The final step of the TCA cycle generates…?
What does this set of reactions generate?
The final steps generates another ATP.
This set of reactions regenerates the starting molecule of the TCA cycle, oxaloacetate, so the cycle can repeat.
For every glucose molecule, how many times does the TCA cycle run?
What is the total yield per mol glucose?
Twice
2 ATP (GTP), 2 FADH2, and 6 NADH
During respiratory growth, TCA cycle is coupled to..?
PMF generation and ATP synthesis via ATP Synthase.
The TCA cycle provides precursors for ____ of the 20 amino acids found in proteins.
10
Because the TCA cycle intermediates are constantly being removed to provide precursors for biosynthesis, they must be replaced. If not, what happens?
If not, the decrease in oxaloacetate level that is required for the citrate synthase reaction would result in stoppage of the cycle.