
The citric acid cycle - Khan Academy
Overview and steps of the citric acid cycle, also known as the Krebs cycle or tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle.
The citric acid cycle (article) | Khan Academy
The citric acid cycle captures the energy stored in the chemical bonds of acetyl CoA (processed glucose) in a step-by-step process, trapping it in the form of high-energy intermediate molecules.
Krebs / citric acid cycle (video) | Khan Academy
Overview of the Krebs or citric acid cycle, which is a series of reactions that takes in acetyl CoA and produces carbon dioxide, NADH, FADH2, and ATP or GTP.
Pyruvate oxidation | Cellular respiration (article) | Khan Academy
How pyruvate from glycolysis is converted to acetyl CoA so it can enter the citric acid cycle. Pyruvate is modified by removal of a carboxyl group followed by oxidation, and then attached …
Regulation of cellular respiration (article) | Khan Academy
Entry into the citric acid cycle is largely controlled through pyruvate dehydrogenase (above), the enzyme that produces acetyl CoA. However, there are two additional steps in the cycle that …
Regulation of Krebs-TCA cycle (video) | Khan Academy
The citric acid cycle, always active to varying degrees, is crucial for ATP production. Acetyl-CoA enters the cycle, undergoes oxidations, and exits as carbon dioxide, producing FADH2 and …
Steps of cellular respiration | Biology (article) | Khan Academy
Cellular respiration is a metabolic pathway that breaks down glucose and produces ATP. The stages of cellular respiration include glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, the citric acid or Krebs …
Krebs Cycle / Citric Acid Cycle (practice) | Khan Academy
Explore the citric acid cycle and its role in cellular respiration with Khan Academy's detailed biology lessons.
柠檬酸循环 (文章) | 丙酮酸氧化与柠檬酸循环 | 可汗学院
图片来源:修改自 "Oxidation of pyruvate and citric acid cycle: Figure 2" by OpenStax College, Biology, CC BY 3.0 无论你喜欢叫它什么,柠檬酸循环是细胞呼吸的核心驱动。
Connections between cellular respiration and other pathways
Amino acids, lipids, and other carbohydrates can be converted to various intermediates of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, allowing them to slip into the cellular respiration pathway …