Metabolism - Lecture Thirty Flashcards

Acetyl-CoA and The Citric Acid Cycle

1
Q

Where does the Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) occur?

A

In the mitochondria

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2
Q

Citric Acid Cycle arranged into two parts

A

Release of carbon

Regeneration of the starting molecule

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3
Q

Key reaction in. the Citric Acid Cycle

A

Condensation of acetyl-CoA with oxaloacetate

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4
Q

Condensation of acetyl-CoA with oxaloacetate

A

Two carbon entering the Citric Acid Cycle as acetyl-CoA is attached to four carbon oxaloacetate to produce six carbon citrate

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5
Q

Where does the energy for the condensation of acetyl-CoA with oxaloacetate reaction come from?

A

Hydrolysis of CoA from acetyl-CoA

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6
Q

Isomerisation of citrate

A

Rearrangement of citrate to isocitrate makes the molecule susceptible to decarboxylation, both steps are catalysed by aconitase

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7
Q

Isomerisaiton of citrate: conversion of citrate to isocitrate

A

Makes the molecule susceptible to decarboxylation

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8
Q

Isomerisation of citrate: fluorocitrate

A

Binds to and inhibits aconitase (competitive, then inactivation)

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9
Q

Removal of the 1st carbon

A

An oxidative decarboxylation

Reaction occurs in two steps: oxidation then decarboxylation Energy captured in NADH

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10
Q

Removal of the 2nd carbon

A

A second oxidative decarboxylation

Very similar to the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction Energy captured in NADH

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11
Q

Succinyl-CoA to succinate

A

The removal of the CoA releases enough energy to drive the synthesis of GTP (equivalent of ATP)

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12
Q

Substrate-level phosphorylation

A

The DIRECT use of energy from a substrate molecule to drive the synthesis of ATP

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13
Q

Succinate to oxaloacetate

A

The reactions used to convert succinate to oxaloacetate are very similar to β-oxidation

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14
Q

A shared reaction

A

The succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) reaction is shared between the CAC and the electron transport chain (ETC)

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15
Q

Succinate dehydrogenase location

A

Inner mitochondrial membrane and uses FAD

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16
Q

Flavin enzymes

A

Are tightly bound to the proteins with which they interact (flavoproteins)