Understanding the Citric Acid Cycle - Biology

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Question

What are the products of the citric acid cycle?

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Answer

The citric acid cycle is the process by which acetyl-CoA (a two-carbon molecule) is completely broken down to carbon dioxide and energy. Acetyl-CoA loses its CoA and is attached to oxaloacetate (OAA) to produce citrate, which is converted to isocitrate. From there the following occurs:

  • Isocitrate (6C) is converted to -ketoglutarate (5C), 1 CO2, and 1 NADH
  • -ketoglutarate (5C) is converted to succinyl-CoA (4C), 1 CO2, and 1 NADH
  • Succinyl-CoA (4C) is converted to succinate (4C) and 1 GTP (similar to ATP)
  • Succinate (4C) is converted to fumarate (4C) and 1 FADH2
  • Fumarate (4C) is converted to malate (4C)
  • Malate (4C) is converted to OAA (4C) and 1 NADH

The net result is 3 NADH, 2 CO2, 1 FADH2, and 1 GTP (similar to ATP) per round. Since one glucose molecule produces two pyruvate molecules, which produce two Acetyl-CoA, the cycle occurs twice per glucose molecule.

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