TCA Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

1) Where does TCA cycle occur and what is its function?

A
  • Mitochondrial matrix

- Energy trapping and biosynthesis of intermediates

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2
Q

2) Describe the Link Reaction

A

CH3COOH + CoASH –> CH3CO-SCoA + CO2
- enzyme: pyruvate dehydrogenase
- cofactor: NAD+ –> NADH + H+
(CoA forms thioester bonds with carboxylic acids)

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3
Q

3) Reaction#1: condensation reaction

A

Oxaloacetate –> Citrate

  • enzyme: citrate synthase
  • addition of Acetyl CoA
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4
Q

4) Reaction#2: isomerisation reaction

A

Citrate –> Isocitrate

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5
Q

5) Reaction#3: first CO2 loss

A

Isocitrate –> alpha-ketoglutarate/ 2-oxo glutarate

  • enzyme: isocitrate dehydrogenase
  • NAD+ –> NADH + H+
  • CO2 produced
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6
Q

6) Reaction#4: second CO2 loss

A

Alpha-ketoglutarate –> Succinyl CoA

  • enzyme: alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
  • addition of CoA-SH (coenzyme A)
  • NAD –> NADH+ + H+
  • CO2 produced
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7
Q

7) Reaction#5: trapping thioester bond energy as GTP

A

Succinyl CoA –> Succinate

  • loss of coenzyme A
  • GDP + Pi –> GTP
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8
Q

8) Reaction#6: conversion of succinate to fumarate

A

Succinate –> Fumarate
[succinate dehydrogenase]
- FAD –> FADH2

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9
Q

9) Reaction #7: conversion of fumarate to malate

A

Fumarate –> Malate

-addition of H20

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10
Q

10) Reaction #8: conversion of malate to oxaloacetate

A

Malate –> Oxaloacetate
[malate dehydrogenase]
- NAD+ –> NADH + H+

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11
Q

11) Total energy yield of TCA cycle?

A

3 x NADH (2.5)
1 x FADH2 (1.5)
[NADH and FADH2 reduced cofactors are produced by dehydrogenase enzymes]

1 x GTP (1)
= 10 ATP

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12
Q

12) What are the 3 irreversible (regulatory) reactions?

A
  • Citrate synthase
  • Isocitrate dehydrogenase (co2 produced)
  • alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (co2 produced)
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13
Q

13) What are inhibitors for citrate synthase?

A
  • ATP, NADH, succinyl-CoA
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14
Q

14) Inhibitors and activator of isocitrate dehydrogenase?

A
  • ATP, NADH

- activated by ADP

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15
Q

15) Inhibitors of alpa-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase?

A
  • NADH, succinyl-CoA
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16
Q

16) What can oxaloacetate, alpha-ketoglutarate and succinyl-coa be transaminated/ converted into? (production of biosynthetic precursors)

A
  • oxaloacetate –> aspartate
  • alpha-ketoglutarate –> glutamate
  • succinyl-coa –> haem
17
Q

17) Which 2 reactions allow anaplerotic ‘topping up’ of the TCA cycle?

A
  • pyruvate –> oxaloacetate (pyruvate carboxylase enzyme)
    (oxaloacetate converted to phosphoenol pyruvate by PEP carboxylase enzyme, which forms glucose)
  • pyruvate –> malate (via malic enzyme)