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Why Does CoA Come Back to the TCA Cycle? | MWM Energy Metabolism Cliff Notes #9

Why Does CoA Come Back to the TCA Cycle? | MWM Energy Metabolism Cliff Notes #9

Mastering Nutrition · Chris Masterjohn, PhD

September 4, 20179m 4s

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Show Notes

This lesson addresses the curious case of why CoA makes a brief cameo in the citric acid cycle during the formation of succinyl CoA only to leave again in the next step. We dig into the chemistry underlying the high-energy thioester bond that CoA forms with acyl groups, which explains more broadly one of the key roles of sulfur in energy metabolism. We conclude by looking at how the appearance of CoA allows us to harness energy released during the decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate to form ATP directly during "substrate-level phosphorylation," or, alternatively, to use energy from ATP to invest in the synthesis of heme.

chrismasterjohnphd.com/mwm/2/9

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Chris Masterjohn, PhD, is the Founder and Scientific Director of the mitochondria test Mitome.