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2. The Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) Pyruvate CO 2
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2. The Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) The sequence of events: Step 1: C-C bond formation to make citrate Step 2: Isomerization via dehydration/rehydration Steps 3–4: Oxidative decarboxylations to give 2 NADH Step 5: Substrate-level phosphorylation to give GTP Step 6: Dehydrogenation to give reduced FADH 2 Step 7: Hydration Step 8: Dehydrogenation to give NADH
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2. The Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) List of enzymes involved: 1.Synthase Catalyzes a synthesis process 2.Aconitase A stereo-specific isomerization 3.Dehydrogenase Removes hydrogen as H 2 4.Synthetase Links two molecules by using the energy of cleavage of a pyrophosphate group 5.Fumarase Catalyzes reversible hydration/rehydration of fumarate to malate
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Step 1: C-C Bond Formation by Condensation of Acetyl-CoA and Oxaloacetate
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Citrate Synthase Reaction- Condensation of acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate The only reaction with C-C bond formation Rate-limiting step of CAC Mechanism- Uses Acid/Base Catalysis –Carbonyl of oxaloacetate is a good electrophile –Methyl of acetyl-CoA is NOT a good nucleophile but is activated by deprotonation Highly thermodynamically favorable/irreversible –Regulated by substrate availability and product inhibition –Activity largely depends on [oxaloacetate]
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Induced Fit in the Citrate Synthase Citrate Synthase has two subunits that create two binding sites for binding both oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA. Binding is very conformation dependent: A. Open conformation Free enzyme does not have a binding site for acetyl-CoA B. Closed conformation Binding of OAA enables binding for acetyl-CoA The conformation avoids hydrolysis of thioester in acetyl-CoA Protects reactive carbanion
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Induced Fit in the Citrate Synthase
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Mechanism of Citrate Synthase: Acid/Base Catalysis
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Mechanism of Citrate Synthase: Acid/Base Catalysis
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Mechanism of Citrate Synthase: Hydrolysis of Thioester
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Step 2: Isomerization by Dehydration/ Rehydration
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Aconitase Key points: Elimination of H 2 O from citrate gives a cis C=C bond –Lyase Citrate, a tertiary alcohol, is a poor substrate for oxidation –Isocitrate, a secondary alcohol, is a good substrate for oxidation Addition of H 2 O to cis-aconitate is stereospecific Thermodynamically unfavorable/reversible –Product concentration kept low to pull forward
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Iron-Sulfur Center in Aconitase Water removal from citrate and subsequent addition to cis-aconitate are catalyzed by the iron-sulfur center: sensitive to oxidative stress.
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Aconitase is stereospecific Only R-isocitrate is produced by aconitase Distinguished by three-point attachment to the active site
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Aconitase is stereospecific Only R-isocitrate is produced by aconitase because citrate is prochiral with respect to binding to the active site. -Distinguished by three-point attachment to the active site
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Step 3: Oxidative Decarboxylation #2
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Isocitrate Dehydrogenase Key points: Oxidative decarboxylation –Lose a carbon as CO 2 –Oxidation of the alcohol to a ketone –Transfers a hydride to NAD + generating NADH Cytosolic isozyme uses NADP + as a cofactor Highly thermodynamically favorable/irreversible –Regulated by product inhibition and ATP
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Mechanisms of Isocitrate Dehydrogenase: Metal Ion Catalysis (Oxidation) +2 0
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Mechanisms of Isocitrate Dehydrogenase: Metal Ion Catalysis (Decarboxylation) Carbon lost as CO 2 did NOT come from acetyl-CoA.
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Mechanisms of Isocitrate Dehydrogenase: Rearrangement and Product Release
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Step 4: Final Oxidative Decarboxylation
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-Ketoglutarate Dehydrogenase Key points: Last oxidative decarboxylation –Net full oxidation of all carbons of glucose Carbons not directly from glucose because carbons lost came from oxaloacetate Succinyl-CoA is another higher-energy thioester bond Highly thermodynamically favorable/irreversible –Regulated by product inhibition
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-Ketoglutarate Dehydrogenase Complex similar to pyruvate dehydrogenase –Same coenzymes, identical mechanisms –Active sites different to accommodate different-sized substrates
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Origin of C-atoms in CO 2 Both CO 2 carbon atoms derived from oxaloacetate. At this point in the metabolic pathway, a total of 6 CO 2 are produced.
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Step 5: Generation of GTP through Thioester
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Succinyl-CoA Synthetase Key points: Substrate level phosphorylation Energy of thioester allows for incorporation of inorganic phosphate Goes through a phospho-enzyme intermediate Produces GTP, which can be converted to ATP Slightly thermodynamically favorable/reversible –Product concentration kept low to pull forward
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Mechanism of Succinyl-CoA Synthetase
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GTP Converted to ATP Catalyzed by nucleoside diphosphate kinase.
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Step 6:Oxidation of an Alkane to Alkene
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Succinate Dehydrogenase Key points: Bound to mitochondrial inner membrane –Part of Complex II in the electron-transport chain Reduction of the alkane to alkene (reverse reaction) requires FADH 2 –Reduction potential of NAD is too low FAD is covalently bound, which is unusual Near equilibrium/reversible –Product concentration kept low to pull forward
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Step 7: Hydration Across a Double Bond
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Fumarase Key points: Stereospecific –Addition of water is always trans and forms L-malate –OH- adds to fumarate and then H + adds to the carbanion –Cannot distinguish between inner carbons, so either can gain –OH Slightly thermodynamically favorable/reversible –Product concentration kept low to pull reaction forward
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Stereospecificity of Fumarase
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Step 8: Oxidation of Alcohol to a Ketone
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Malate Dehydrogenase Key points: Final step of the cycle Regenerates oxaloacetate for citrate synthase Highly thermodynamically UNfavorable/reversible –Oxaloacetate concentration kept VERY low by citrate synthase Pulls the reaction forward
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3. One Turn of the Citric Acid Cycle
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3A. Net Result of the Citric Acid Cycle Net oxidation of two carbons to CO 2 –Equivalent to two carbons of acetyl-CoA –but NOT the exact same carbons Energy captured by electron transfer to NADH and FADH 2 Generates 1 GTP, which can be converted to ATP Acetyl-CoA + 3NAD + + FAD + GDP + P i + 2 H 2 O 2CO 2 + 3NADH + FADH 2 + GTP + CoA + 3H +
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3B. Direct and Indirect ATP Yield
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