- Glyoxylate cycle
The glyoxylate cycle is a
metabolic pathway occurring inplant s, certainvertebrate s, and severalmicroorganism s, such asE. coli andyeast .The glyoxylate cycle allows these organisms to use
fat s for the synthesis ofcarbohydrate s. This sequence of enzyme-catalyzed chemical conversions is absent in mostvertebrate s, includinghuman s.The relationship between citric acid and glyoxylate cycles and gluconeogenesis
Fatty acid s fromlipid s are commonly used as energy source by vertebrates via degradation bybeta oxidation into acetate molecules. This acetate, bound to the active thiol group ofcoenzyme A , enters the "citric acid cycle " (TCA cycle) where it is fully oxidized tocarbon dioxide . This pathway thus allows cells to obtainenergy from fat. To utilize acetate from fat for biosynthesis of carbohydrates, the glyoxylate cycle, whose initial reactions are identical to the TCA cycle, is used.Cell-wall containing organisms, such as
plant s, fungi, andbacteria , duringgrowth require very large amount ofcarbohydrate s for biosynthesis of complex structuralpolysaccharides , such ascellulose ,glucan s, andchitin . In these organisms, in the absence of available carbohydrates (for example, in certain microbial environments or duringseed germination in plants), the glyoxylate cycle permits synthesis of glucose from lipids via acetate generated in fatty acid β-oxidation.The glyoxylate cycle bypasses the steps in the citric acid cycle where carbon is lost in the form of CO2. The two initial steps of glyoxylate cycle are identical to those in the citric acid cycle: "acetate → citrate → isocitrate". In the next step, catalyzed by the first glyoxylate cycle enzyme,
isocitrate lyase , isocitrate undergoes cleavage intosuccinate andglyoxylate (the latter gives the cycle its name). Glyoxylate condenses with acetyl-CoA (a step catalyzed bymalate synthase ), yieldingmalate . Bothmalate andoxaloacetate can be converted intophosphoenolpyruvate , which is the substrate ofphosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase the first enzyme ingluconeogenesis . The net result of the glyoxylate cycle is therefore the production of glucose from fatty acids. Succinate generated in the first step can enter into the citric acid cycle to eventually form oxaloacetate.In plants the glyoxylate cycle occurs in special
peroxisome s which are calledglyoxysome s. Vertebrates cannot perform this cycle because they lack its two keyenzyme s, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase.
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