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The Oxidative Decarboxylation of Pyruvate Leads to Acetyl-CoA

Decarboxylation of an a-keto acid like pyruvate is a difficult reaction for the same reason as are the ketol condensations (see fig. 12.33) Both kinds of reactions require the participation of an intermediate in which the carbonyl carbon carries a negative charge. In all such reactions that occur in metabolism, the intermediate is stabilized by prior condensation of the carbonyl group with thiamine pyrophosphate. In figure 13.5 thiamine pyrophosphate and its hydroxyethyl derivative are written in the doubly ionized ylid form rather than the neutral form because this is the form that actually participates in the reaction even though it is present in much smaller amounts. [Pg.287]

In the first step of the conversion catalyzed by pyruvate decarboxylase, a carbon atom from thiamine pyrophosphate adds to the carbonyl carbon of pyruvate. Decarboxylation produces the key reactive intermediate, hydroxyethyl thiamine pyrophosphate (HETPP). As shown in figure 13.5, the ionized ylid form of HETPP is resonance-stabilized by the existence of a form without charge separation. The next enzyme, dihydrolipoyltransacetylase, catalyzes the transfer of the two-carbon moiety to lipoic acid. A nucleophilic attack by HETPP on the sulfur atom attached to carbon 8 of oxidized lipoic acid displaces the electrons of the disulfide bond to the sulfur atom attached to carbon 6. The sulfur then picks up a proton from the environment as shown in figure 13.5. This simple displacement reaction is also an oxidation-reduction reaction, in which the attacking carbon atom is oxidized from the aldehyde level in HETPP to the carboxyl level in the lipoic acid derivative. The oxidized (disulfide) form of lipoic acid is converted to the reduced (mer-capto) form. The fact that the two-carbon moiety has become an acyl group is shown more clearly after dissocia- [Pg.287]

Further transfer of the acyl group to coenzyme A is catalyzed by the same enzyme. This displacement reaction produces reduced lipoic acid. A third enzyme, dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase, catalyzes oxidation of this product back to the disulfide form. The electrons lost in that oxidation are transferred first to an enzyme-bound flavin (not shown in the figure) and then to NAD +.  [Pg.287]

The overall equation for the conversion catalyzed by the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is [Pg.287]

The standard free energy change for this conversion is about — 8 kcal/mol. [Pg.287]


See other pages where The Oxidative Decarboxylation of Pyruvate Leads to Acetyl-CoA is mentioned: [Pg.282]    [Pg.287]   


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Acetyl oxide

Acetyl-CoA

Acetyl-CoA acetylation

Decarboxylation of pyruvate

Decarboxylation oxide

Decarboxylative oxidation

Lead oxidation

Oxidation acetyl-CoA

Oxidation of lead

Oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA

Oxidation oxidative decarboxylation

Oxidative decarboxylation

Oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate

Oxides of Lead

Pyruvate decarboxylation

Pyruvate oxidative decarboxylation

Pyruvate to acetyl-CoA

The oxides of lead

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