7.3 Oxidation of Pyruvate and the Citric Acid Cycle
7.3 Oxidation of Pyruvate and the Citric Acid Cycle
- This step is catalyzed by an isomerase.
- The ninth step is enolase's job.
- The dehydration reaction caused by this enzyme leads to the formation of a double bond that increases the potential energy in the remaining phosphate bond and the production ofPEP.
- The last step in glycolysis involves the reverse reaction of pyruvate's conversion into PEP and the production of a second ATP molecule by the compound pyruvic.
- The reverse reactions are named for the enzymes that can do both forward and reverse reactions.
- You can see the process in action to gain a better understanding of the breakdown of sugar.
- Two pyruvate molecule, four new ATP molecule, and two molecule of NADH are produced by Glycolysis.
- If the cell can't catabolize the pyruvate molecule further, it won't be able to harvest any more of the sugar.
- The process in which organisms convert energy in the presence of oxygen is their sole source of energy.
- These cells lose their ability to maintain their pumps if glycolysis is interrupted.
- If pyruvate kinase is not available in sufficient quantities, the last step will not happen.
- In this situation, the entire pathway will go on, but only two of them will be made in the second half.
- pyruvate kinase is a rate-limiting enzyme.
- Aerobic respiration will go forward if oxygen is available.
- The pyruvate molecule produced at the end of glycolysis is transported into the mitochondria, which are the sites of cellular respiration.
- There, pyruvate is transformed into an acetyl group that will be picked up and activated by a carrier compound called CoA.
- CoA is derived from pantothenic acid.
- The major function of Acetyl CoA is to deliver the acetyl group from pyruvate to the next stage of the pathway.
- To enter the next pathway, pyruvate must undergo several changes.
- The conversion is a three-step process.
- A molecule of carbon dioxide is released when a carboxyl group is removed from pyruvate.
- The two-carbon hydroxyethyl group is bound to the pyruvate dehydrogenase.
- This is the first carbon from the original molecule to be removed.
- The hydroxyethyl group is oxidation to an acetyl group, and the electrons are picked up by NAD+.
- The high-energy electrons from NADH will be used later.
- A molecule of acetyl CoA is produced when the acetyl group is transferred to CoA.
- A multienzyme complex converts pyruvate into acetyl CoA when it enters the mitochondrial matrix.
- One molecule of NADH is formed when carbon dioxide is released.
- One of the major end products of cellular respiration is carbon dioxide, which is produced when a carbon atom is removed.
- In the presence of oxygen, acetyl CoA delivers its acetyl (2C) group to a four-carbon molecule, oxaloacetate, to form citrate, a sixcarbon molecule with three carboxyl groups.
- The citric acid cycle is similar to the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA.
- The only exception to the fact that almost all of the citric acid cycle's enzymes aresoluble is the one that is embedded in the innerchondrion.
- The last part of the pathway regenerates the compound used in the first step of the citric acid cycle.
- The eight steps of the cycle are a series of dehydration, hydration, and decarboxylation reactions that produce two carbon dioxide molecules, one GTP/ATP, and the reduced carriers.
- The NADH and FADH2 produced must transfer their electrons to the next pathway in the system in order to be considered an aerobic pathway.
- The oxidation steps of the citric acid cycle do not occur if this transfer does not occur.
- The citric acid cycle does not directly consume oxygen.
- The acetyl group from acetyl CoA is attached to a four-carbon oxacetatealo molecule to form a six-carbon citrate molecule.
- The acetyl group is fed into the cycle through a series of steps.
- One FAD molecule is reduced to FADH2, and one ATP or GTP is produced, depending on the cell type.
- The citric acid cycle runs continuously because the first reactant is the final product.
- A transitional phase occurs when pyruvic acid is converted to acetyl CoA.
- The condensation step combines the two-carbon acetyl group with a four-carbon oxaloacetate molecule to form a six-carbon molecule of citrate.
- CoA diffuses away to combine with another acetyl group.
- This step is irreversible because it is exergonic.
- The rate of the reaction is controlled by the amount of ATP available.
- The rate of this reaction will decrease if the levels of ATP increase.
- The rate increases if the supply is short.
- In step two, citrate is converted into its isomer, isocitrate, as it loses one water molecule.
- A five-carbon molecule, a-ketoglutarate, along with a molecule of CO2 and two electrons, is produced by isocitrate in step three.
- This step is regulated by negative feedback and a positive effect ofADP.