pathways involved in the breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide and water?
What are three pathways involved in the complete breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide and water? What reaction is needed to join two of these pathways? WHat are the substrates and propducts of this reaction and where does it take place?
Filed under: Blood Glucose
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Haha, ive got that same question on my lab report.
The three pathways involved in the breakdown of glucose to CO2 and H2O are glycolysis, citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain).
There are a few reactions that join these two pathways, one could be redox reactions, but the probable answer is the transition reaction. The substrates would be pyruvate acid, coenzyme A, and NAD+. The products would be NADH, Acetyl Coenzyme A, and CO2. It takes place inside the mitochondria.
1. glycolysis, TCA( aka. Krebs Cycle or The Citric Acid Cycle), and the Electron Transport Chain ( aka Oxidative Phosphorilation)
2. the Tranition Reaction is required to link Glycolysis to TCA. this reaction converts Pyruvate to Acetal CoA which then enters into TCA
3. The Transition Reaction takes place in the Mitochondira.
Pyruvate is the substrate Pyruvate Dehydrogenase is the enzyme and TPP, Mg2+, Lipoic Acid, NADH, and FAD are coenzymes. the product is Acetyl CoA 4. glycolysis takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell TCA and Ox Phos take place in the mitochondira