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Oxidation of Pyruvate and the Citric Acid Cycle
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Acetyl CoA to CO2

The acetyl carbons of acetyl CoA are released as carbon dioxide in the citric acid cycle.

Learning Objective

  • Describe the fate of the acetyl CoA carbonsĀ in the citric acid cycle


Key Points

    • The citric acid cycle is also known as the Krebs cycle or the TCA (tricarboxylic acid) cycle.
    • Acetyl CoA transfers its acetyl group to oxaloacetate to form citrate and begin the citric acid cycle.
    • The release of carbon dioxide is coupled with the reduction of NAD+ to NADH in the citric acid cycle.

Terms

  • Krebs cycle

    a series of enzymatic reactions that occurs in all aerobic organisms; it involves the oxidative metabolism of acetyl units and serves as the main source of cellular energy

  • TCA cycle

    an alternative name for the Krebs cycle or citric acid cycle

  • oxaloacetate

    a four carbon molecule that receives an acetyl group from acetyl CoA to form citrate, which enters the citric acid cycle


Full Text

Acetyl CoA to CO2

Acetyl CoA links glycolysis and pyruvate oxidation with the citric acid cycle. In the presence of oxygen, acetyl CoA delivers its acetyl group to a four-carbon molecule, oxaloacetate, to form citrate, a six-carbon molecule with three carboxyl groups. During this first step of the citric acid cycle, the CoA enzyme, which contains a sulfhydryl group (-SH), is recycled and becomes available to attach another acetyl group. The citrate will then harvest the remainder of the extractable energy from what began as a glucose molecule and continue through the citric acid cycle.

In the citric acid cycle, the two carbons that were originally the acetyl group of acetyl CoA are released as carbon dioxide, one of the major products of cellular respiration, through a series of enzymatic reactions . For each acetyl CoA that enters the citric acid cycle, two carbon dioxide molecules are released in reactions that are coupled with the production of NADH molecules from the reduction of NAD+ molecules.

Acetyl CoA and the Citric Acid Cycle

For each molecule of acetyl CoA that enters the citric acid cycle, two carbon dioxide molecules are released, removing the carbons from the acetyl group.

In addition to the citric acid cycle, named for the first intermediate formed, citric acid, or citrate, when acetate joins to the oxaloacetate, the cycle is also known by two other names. The TCA cycle is named for tricarboxylic acids (TCA) because citric acid (or citrate) and isocitrate, the first two intermediates that are formed, are tricarboxylic acids. Additionally, the cycle is known as the Krebs cycle, named after Hans Krebs, who first identified the steps in the pathway in the 1930s in pigeon flight muscle.

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