Citric acid cycle
In
biochemistry, the
citric acid cycle is a series of chemical reactions of central importance in all living
cellss that utilize
oxygen as part of
cellular respiration. It is also known as the
tricarboxylic acid cycle, the
TCA cycle, or the
Krebs cycle after
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs (1900-1981), who proposed the key elements of this pathway in 1937 and was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Medicine for its discovery in
1953.
It is a series of chemical reactions of central importance in all living cellss that utilize oxygen as part of cellular respiration.
In these aerobic organisms, the citric acid cycle is a metabolic pathway that forms part of the break down of carbohydrates, fats and proteins into carbon dioxide and water in order to generate energy. It also provides precursors for many compounds such as certain amino acids, and some of its reactions are therefore important even in cells performing fermentation.
The citric acid cycle takes place within the mitochondria in eukaryotes, and within the cytoplasm in prokaryotes.
The citric acid cycle forms part of carbohydrate catabolism, protein catabolism and fat catabolism. All these three processes produce acetyl-CoA, a two-carbon acetyl group bound to coenzyme A. Acetyl-CoA is the main input to the citric acid cycle.
Citrate is both the first and the last product of the cycle (Fig. 1), and is regenerated by the condensation of oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA.
Figure 1 : Schematic drawing of the citric acid cycle.
| Molecule |
Enzyme |
Reaction Type |
Reactants/
Coenzymes |
Products/
Coenzymes |
| I. Citrate |
1. Aconitase |
Dehydration |
|
H2O |
| II. cis-Aconitate |
2. Aconitase |
Hydration |
H2O |
|
| III. Isocitrate |
3. Isocitrate Dehydrogenase |
Oxidation |
NAD+ |
NADH+H+ |
| IV. Oxalosuccinate |
4. Isocitrate Dehydrogenase |
Decarboxylation |
|
|
| V. α-Ketoglutarate |
5. α-Ketoglutarate
Dehydrogenase |
Oxidative Decarboxylation |
NAD+
CoA-SH |
NADH+H+
CO2 |
| VI. Succinyl-CoA |
6. Succinyl-CoA Synthetase |
Hydrolysis |
GDP Pi |
GTP CoA-SH |
| VII. Succinate |
7. Succinate Dehydrogenase |
Oxidation |
FAD |
FADH2 |
| VIII. Fumarate |
8. Fumarase |
Addition (H2O) |
H2O |
|
| IX. L-Malate |
9. Malate Dehydrogenase |
Oxidation |
NAD+ |
NADH+H+ |
| X. Oxaloacetate |
10. Citrate Synthase |
Condensation |
|
|
| XI. Acetyl-CoA |
|
|
|
|
The sum of all reactions in the citric acid cycle is :
- Acetyl-CoA + 3NAD+ + FAD + ADP + Pi ⇒
CoA-SH + 3NADH + H+ + FADH2 + ATP + 2CO2
Two carbons are
oxidized to CO
2, and the energy from these reactions is stored in
ATP (ATP is the "universal energy currency" of the cell), NADH and FADH
2. NADH and FADH
2 are coenzymes (molecules that enable or enhance enzymes) that store energy and can release it when needed.
Major metabolic pathways converging on the TCA cycle
|
|
Figure 2: Schematic drawing of the major metabolic pathways associated with the citric acid cycle.
- Protein catabolism
- Fat catabolism
- Carbohydrates
- Amino Acids
- Acetyl-CoA
- Pyruvate
- Citric Acid Cycle
|
The citric acid cycle is the second step in carbohydrate catabolism (the breakdown of sugars). Glycolysis breaks glucose (a six-carbon-molecule) down into pyruvate (a three-carbon molecule). In eukaryotes, pyruvate moves into the mitochondria. It is converted into acetyl-CoA and enters the citric acid cycle.
In protein catabolism, proteins are broken down by protease enzymes into their constituent amino acids. These amino acids are brought into the cells and can be a source of energy by being funnelled into the citric acid cycle.
In fat catabolism, triglycerides are hydrolyzed to break them into fatty acids and glycerol. In the liver the glycerol can be converted into glucose via dihydroxyacetone phosphate and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate by way of gluconeogenesis. In many tissues, especially heart, fatty acids are broken down through a process known as beta oxidation which results in acetyl-CoA which can be used in the citric acid cycle. Sometimes beta oxidation can yield propionyl CoA which can result in further glucose production by gluconeogenesis in liver.
The citric acid cycle is always followed by oxidative phosphorylation. This process extracts the energy from NADH and FADH2, recreating NAD+ and FAD, so that the cycle can continue. The citric acid cycle itself does not use oxygen, but oxidative phosphorylation does.
The total energy gained from the complete breakdown of one molecule of glucose by glycolysis, the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation equals about 38 ATP molecules.
In the News
Medical/Bioengineering Researchers Show Titanium Debris Sabotage Arti Microscopic titanium particles weaken the bonding of hip, knee, and other joint replacements, according to research published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by researchers at the UCSD School of Medicine and the Jacobs School of Engineering. The team demonstrated that titanium implants are safe in large blocks, but at the microscopic level, wear and tear can generate micrometer-sized particles. Blocking Cell Suicide Switch Fails To Stop Prion Damage In Mouse Brain Researchers knew that prions, the misfolded proteins that cause mad cow disease and other brain disorders, were killing off a class of important brain cells in a transgenic mouse model. But when they found a way to rescue those cells, they were astonished to discover the mice still became sick. Mapping the Pacific Coast: Coronado to Lewis and Clark, the Quivira Co Companion to an exhibition of "maps, books and illustrations, dated 1544 through 1802, of the west coast of North America."View annotated map images (some with audio clips) on topics such as early explorers, California as an island, secret Russian exploration in the Pacific, Captain James Cook's voyages to the north Pacific, and overland to the Pacific in the late 1700s. From the Sonoma County (California) Museum and a California winery. Neglected Tropical Diseases Burden Those Overseas, But Travelers Also A new paper by NIAID scientist Thomas Nutman, M.D., and colleagues reviews network data collected between 1997 and 2004 to determine demographic and travel characteristics of travelers diagnosed with parasitic worm (filarial) infections. One-third Of Spam Is 'Health'-related A new study has found that a third of all spam messages advertise health products such as drugs and natural health products and that it is easy to purchase prescription drugs and controlled substances advertised in these messages. Scientists studied e-mail messages sent to three accounts over a one month period. The three accounts received 4,153 spam messages (82% of the total messages received), and a third of this spam was health-related. [Ironic] LONDON: A jailed cocaine dealer is working as Santa Claus on John Tams, who dons beard, boots and red suit to work in a cafe's Christmas grotto, said he wanted to give something back to the community... Researchers Find A Mutation In LRRK2 Gene Causes Parkinson's Disease I Neuroscientists at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., leading a team of researchers in the United States and Europe, have discovered that a novel mutation in the recently identified LRRK2 gene causes parkinsonism in several North American and European families. Volunteers Sought For Avian Flu Vaccine Study; Vaccine Would Be First Vanderbilt University Medical Center is enrolling volunteers in a study to test a new vaccine that targets avian flu, the first such vaccine against the virus. The Vanderbilt trial, led byKathryn Edwards, M.D., will test the new vaccine in nearly 100 individuals 65 years of age and over. It is the second phase of a national study led by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. [Odd] A Romanian couple has named their son Yahoo as a sign of gratitu Daily Libertatea said on Thursday Cornelia and Nonu Dragoman, both from Transylvania, met and decided they were meant for each other following a three-month relationship over the net.They married and had a baby this Christmas, whom they decided to name after one of the worldwide web's most popular portals."We named him Lucian Yahoo after my father and the net, the main beacon of my life,"Cornelia Dragoman was quoted as saying. Depressed Patients Experience Excessive Inflammation During Stressful Individuals with major depression have an exaggerated inflammatory response to psychological stress compared to those who do not suffer from depression, according to a study by researchers at Emory University School of Medicine. Because an overactive inflammatory response may contribute to a number of medical disorders as well as to depression, the findings suggest that increased inflammatory responses to stress in depressed patients may be a link between depression and other diseases, including heart disease, as well as contributing to depression itself.
MP3 Music Downloads
Preview songs, Download Free Music,Burn CDs at ITunes.com

|