Citric acid cycle

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Citric acid cycle

Biochemistry

Biochemistry

Glycolysis
Citric acid cycle
Electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation
Gluconeogenesis
Glycogen metabolism
Pentose phosphate pathway
Physiological changes during exercise
Amino acid metabolism
Nitrogen and urea cycle
Fatty acid synthesis
Fatty acid oxidation
Ketone body metabolism
Cholesterol metabolism
Essential fructosuria
Hereditary fructose intolerance
Galactosemia
Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Lactose intolerance
Glycogen storage disease type I
Glycogen storage disease type II (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type III
Glycogen storage disease type IV
Glycogen storage disease type V
Leukodystrophy
Metachromatic leukodystrophy (NORD)
Krabbe disease
Gaucher disease (NORD)
Niemann-Pick disease types A and B (NORD)
Fabry disease (NORD)
Tay-Sachs disease (NORD)
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 1 (Hurler syndrome) (NORD)
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 2 (Hunter syndrome) (NORD)
Hartnup disease
Alkaptonuria
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
Phenylketonuria (NORD)
Cystinuria (NORD)
Homocystinuria
Maple syrup urine disease
Abetalipoproteinemia
Familial hypercholesterolemia
Hypertriglyceridemia
Hyperlipidemia
Disorders of carbohydrate metabolism: Pathology review
Disorders of fatty acid metabolism: Pathology review
Dyslipidemias: Pathology review
Glycogen storage disorders: Pathology review
Lysosomal storage disorders: Pathology review
Disorders of amino acid metabolism: Pathology review
Carbohydrates and sugars
Fats and lipids
Proteins
Folate (Vitamin B9) deficiency
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
Fat-soluble vitamin deficiency and toxicity: Pathology review
Water-soluble vitamin deficiency and toxicity: B1-B7: Pathology review
Zinc deficiency and protein-energy malnutrition: Pathology review

Flashcards

Citric acid cycle

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Questions

USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

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During normal respiration, oxygen is absorbed into the bloodstream and carbon dioxide is released. The latter is generated during each turn of the citric acid cycle. Which of the following best describes the location of the citric acid cycle in the cell?  

Transcript

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For cells to perform any function, any work, they must have energy.

You can’t go jogging or lifting weights if you’re tired, because a cell won’t work without the help of chemical energy.

The main energy currency in the cells is adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, but any nucleoside triphosphate, like guanosine triphosphate, GTP, will do.

For cells to make ATP, a process generating electricity has to take place in our mitochondria.

Electricity is power!

And thanks to this electricity, ATP is made.

Now to create electricity, electron rich molecules must deliver electrons to a chain of complexes, the electron transport chain, which move them to a final acceptor, a molecule of oxygen.

And there are two electron donor molecules: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, or NADH, and flavin adenine dinucleotide, or FADH2.

But of course, the cell has to produce NADH and FADH2 in the first place, and they’re produced by critical enzymes called dehydrogenases.

Dehydrogenases are the main enzymes found in the citric acid cycle or Kreb’s cycle.

In fact, the citric acid cycle is a set of 8 enzymatic reactions that start with a molecule called acetyl-CoA, and four of the enzymes, half of them, are dehydrogenases.

And in this process, AcetylCoA gets converted into carbon dioxide.

Acetyl-CoA comes from various sources depending on whether you’ve just eaten or are starving.

Let’s say that you’re hungry and a bit angry - so you’re feeling hangry.

That’s when stress hormones like glucagon, epinephrine, and cortisol start to rise.

In this hangry state, fatty acids from triglycerides become the primary source of acetyl-CoA.

Now, let’s say you have a bowl of delicious French onion soup, everything changes - insulin is plentiful and you have plenty of acetyl-CoA from breaking down glucose, fructose, and galactose -with glucose playing the biggest role.

Now, alcohol is also a source of Acetyl-CoA in the liver where it’s metabolized.

In addition, proteins can also help contribute to acetyl-CoA production.

But in the case of glucose, after a meal, one glucose, a 6-carbon molecule, splits into two 3 carbon pyruvate molecules through glycolysis, which occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell.

Each of the pyruvate molecules then enter the mitochondria.

In the mitochondria, an enzyme called pyruvate dehydrogenase snatches a carbon and two oxygens, from pyruvate, and adds coenzyme A, making acetyl-CoA.

In the process two electrons are also transferred to a nearby NAD+, in the form of a hydride ion, making NADH, while the carbon and two oxygens are released to form carbon dioxide or CO2.

This step links glycolysis to the citric acid cycle, but really isn’t considered part of either process.

Yet, it is a source of NADH and CO2 and shares some similarity with enzymes of the citric acid cycle.

As we go through the citric acid cycle, we’ll keep track of our total GTP, NADH, FADH2, and CO2 count with these energy counters.

And remember that this cycle has many dehydrogenases.

Okay, citric acid cycle starts when acetyl-CoA is joined to a 4-carbon molecule called oxaloacetate by an enzyme called citrate synthase, making a 6-carbon molecule - citrate.

This process also releases coenzyme A.

Next, another enzyme, aconitase, rearranges the chemical shape of citrate to make its isomer, isocitrate, without adding or removing any carbon molecules.

So far we haven’t made anything related to energy.

But here comes the first dehydrogenase, called isocitrate dehydrogenase, which removes a carbon and two oxygens from isocitrate.

In the process two electrons are also transferred to a nearby NAD+, in the form of a hydride ion, making our first NADH, and the carbon and oxygens give us our first CO2, leaving us with a 5-carbon molecule called alpha ketoglutarate.

High levels of ATP and NADH in the cell can inhibit isocitrate dehydrogenase, signaling the cycle to slow down since the cell has plenty of energy.

Key Takeaways

The citric acid cycle, also known as the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle or the Krebs cycle, is a series of chemical reactions in aerobic organisms' cells. The TCA cycle generates energy in the form of ATP from nutrients able to give acetyl-CoA molecules. These include carbohydrates, lipids, alcohol, and ketogenic amino acids. Molecules.

The citric acid cycle begins with pyruvate oxidation to acetyl-CoA by the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase. Acetyl-CoA is then transported into the mitochondrial matrix and enters the TCA cycle, where it is oxidized by succinyl-CoA synthase to succinyl-CoA, which is then oxidized by Succinate dehydrogenase to fumarate. Fumarate is then hydrated by fumarase to malate, and malate is oxidized by malate dehydrogenase to oxaloacetate. Oxaloacetate is then reduced by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase to phosphoenolpyruvate. Phosphoenolpyruvate is then dehydrogenated by pyruvate kinase to pyruvate.