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A.) Citric acid
B.) Lactate
C.) FAD
D.) Oxaloacetate

2007-12-06 01:55:52 · 4 answers · asked by D.J 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

4 answers

d) oxaloacetate

2007-12-06 02:39:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a million.The citric acid cycle starts off with Acetyl-CoA transfering its 2-carbon acetyl group to the 4-carbon acceptor compound, oxaloacetate, forming citrate, a six-carbon compound. 2.The citrate then is going by using a series of chemical changes, dropping first one, then a 2nd carboxyl group as CO2. 3.most of the capability made available by using the oxidative steps of the cycle is transferred as capability-rich electrons to NAD+, forming NADH. for each acetyl group that enters the citric acid cycle, 3 molecules of NADH are produced. 4.Electrons are additionally transferred to the electron acceptor FAD, forming FADH2. 5.on the top of each cycle, the 4-carbon oxaloacetate has been regenerated, and the cycle keeps. products of the 1st turn of the cycle are one GTP, 3 NADH, one FADH2, and a couple of CO2. 6.because of the fact 2 acetyl-CoA molecules are made from each glucose molecule, 2 cycles are required in line with glucose molecule. 7.on the top of all cycles, the products are 2 ATP, six NADH, 2 FADH2, 4 CO2. the 1st CO2 is shaped from Oxalosuccinate and 2nd from alpha ketoglutarate

2016-10-19 09:41:20 · answer #2 · answered by henshaw 4 · 0 0

A. That's why it is called the Citric Acid Cycle.

2007-12-06 02:05:24 · answer #3 · answered by hcbiochem 7 · 0 0

D. This is how you make citrate.

2007-12-06 02:07:56 · answer #4 · answered by DE 2 · 0 0

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