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Citric Acid Cycle 1 C483 Spring 2013
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Citric Acid Cycle 1

Dec 31, 2015

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Megan Ware

Citric Acid Cycle 1. C483 Spring 2013. 1. The net effect of the eight steps of the citric acid cycle is to A) completely oxidize an acetyl group to carbon dioxide. B) convert pyruvate to Acetyl CoA. C) produce a citrate molecule D) produce 8 ATP for every pass through the cycle . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Citric Acid Cycle 1

C483 Spring 2013

Page 2: Citric Acid Cycle 1

1. The net effect of the eight steps of the citric acid cycle is toA) completely oxidize an acetyl group to carbon dioxide.B) convert pyruvate to Acetyl CoA.C) produce a citrate moleculeD) produce 8 ATP for every pass through the cycle.E) More than one of the above

2. The order of prosthetic groups as they act in the three proteins of the PDH(pyruvate dehydrogenase) complex is:A) FAD → thiamine pyrophosphate → NAD+B) FAD → thiamine pyrophosphate → dihydrolipoamideC) thiamine pyrophosphate → dihydrolipoamide → FADD) NAD+ → FAD → dihydrolipoamide

3. Which might you expect to have a higher than normal blood concentration in an individual with thiamine deficiency? A) Isocitrate. B) Pyruvate. C) Oxaloacetate. D) Acetyl CoA.

Page 3: Citric Acid Cycle 1

4. About how many total ATP equivalents are generated by the complete oxidation of one molecule of acetyl CoA?A) 1.5B) 2.5C) 3D) 10E) 30 5. Which product of the citric acid cycle produces the most ATP equivalents?A) NADH.B) QH2.C) GTP.D) CO2.

Page 4: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Overview

• Compartmentalization– Glycolysis: Cytosol– Citric Acid Cycle: mitochondria

Page 5: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Overview

• Glycolysis• Pyruvate dehydrogenase

complex– Commitment of carbon away

from carbohydrates• Citric acid cycle

Page 6: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex

• Three distinct enzymes—in a massive complex• Five chemical steps• What cofactors needed?

Page 7: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Pyruvate Dehydrogenase (E1)

• TPP cofactor: draw mechanism of decarboxylation

Page 8: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Dihydrolipoamide Acyltransferase (E2)

• Transfer catalyzed by E1• Mechanism of redox

Page 9: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Step 3: transfer

• Maintenance of high energy bond• Acetyl CoA product is made• Lipoamide still reduced—not catalytically

viable at this point

Page 10: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (E3)

• Redox of prosthetic FAD/FADH2

• Still not a regenerated catalyst!

Page 11: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Step 5: NADH produced

• Prosthetic group is restored• Step 1 uses proton, step 5 regenerates• Oxidation of one carbon atom used to– Produce high energy thioester– Produce NADH

Page 12: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Overall Reaction

Page 13: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Fate of Acetyl CoA

• Citric Acid Cycle (in muscle)—energy production (high potential electrons)

• Other tissues use intermediates in many ways– Amphibolic

Page 14: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Citric Acid Cycle

• Major points: carbon cycle, reaction types, reaction logic, energy harvest, selected enzyme reactions

• Minor points: enzyme names, substrate names, order of reactions

Page 15: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Energy Flow

• Decarboxylation or alcohol oxidation = NADH

• Double bond formation = QH2

• Dehydrogenases• High energy bond =

substrate phosphorylation

Page 16: Citric Acid Cycle 1

ATP Harvest: Net equations

Page 17: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Net ATP Harvest from Glucose

• Glycolysis = 2 ATP– Plus 3 or 5 ATP from

NADH– In humans, cytosolic

NADH leads to production of 3 ATP

• Pyruvate DH = 5 ATP• Citric Acid Cycle = 20

ATP• Total: 30 ATP/glucose

in humans

Page 18: Citric Acid Cycle 1

Answers

1. A2. C3. B4. D5. A