BCH210H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 35: Decarboxylation, Oxaloacetic Acid, Glycogenolysis

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BCH210H1 Full Course Notes
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BCH210H1 Full Course Notes
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If we have ioxaloacetate, acetyl coa binds with citrate to enter the citric acid cycle. If we have lots of e(cid:374)erg(cid:455), that (cid:272)a(cid:374) i(cid:374)hi(cid:271)it the cac, like nadh keto(cid:374)e (cid:271)od(cid:455) produ(cid:272)tio(cid:374) happe(cid:374)s (cid:449)he(cid:374) (cid:449)e do(cid:374)"t ha(cid:448)e enough acetyl coa, and they can be formed from pyruvate. When some aas are broken down, we can use the carbon skeleton and metabolize them into other molecules. The pink ones can be metabolized to diff intermediates in the cac or gluconeogenesis and it forms oxaloacetate which can form pyruvate and they can be used to form glucose. Some amino acids can form ketobodies if they are converted into acetyl coa. These are made in the liver in the mitochondrial matrix. We convert aetyl coa into the ketone bodies and they are exported so they can be used by other cells. Acetoacetate and b can both be used as an energy source. When they are converted back into acetyl coa they can form energy.

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