-
Citric acid is an
organic compound with the
formula C6H8O7. It is a
colorless weak
organic acid. It
occurs naturally in
citrus fruits. In biochemistry...
- The
citric acid cycle—also
known as the
Krebs cycle, Szent–Györgyi–Krebs cycle, or TCA
cycle (tricarboxylic
acid cycle)—is a
series of
biochemical reactions...
- cycle, the
glyoxylate cycle,
amino acid synthesis,
fatty acid synthesis and the
citric acid cycle.
Oxaloacetic acid undergoes successive deprotonations...
-
enzymes in the
matrix play a
large role in the
citric acid cycle and
oxidative phosphorylation. The
citric acid cycle produces NADH and FADH2
through oxidation...
-
fatty acids yield the most ATP on an
energy per gram basis, when they are
completely oxidized to CO2 and
water by beta
oxidation and the
citric acid cycle...
-
Isocitric acid is a
structural isomer of
citric acid.
Since citric acid and
isocitric acid are
structural isomers, they
share similar physical and chemical...
- organisms,
including humans,
other than
anaerobic microorganisms,
namely the
citric acid cycle and the urea cycle. The former,
often eponymously known as the...
-
amino acid alanine and can be
converted into
ethanol or
lactic acid via fermentation.
Pyruvic acid supplies energy to
cells through the
citric acid cycle...
- difference, the more the overlap. In the case of
citric acid, the
overlap is
extensive and
solutions of
citric acid are
buffered over the
whole range of pH 2...
-
tricarboxylic acid is
citric acid.
Citric acid, a type of
tricarboxylic acid, is used in the
citric acid cycle – also
known as the
tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle...