Contents

Search


succinyl coenzyme A

Function: - succinyl CoA is an intermediate in the citric acid cycle. - it is formed from alpha-ketoglutarate via alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase in a reaction that feeds electrons into the electron transport chain via NADH - enzyme: alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase - substrates: alpha-ketoglutarate + NAD+ + coenzyme-A - products: succinyl-CoA + CO2 + NADH - it is hydrolyzed to form succinate by succinyl CoA synthase - enzyme: succinyl-CoA synthetase - substrates: succinyl-CoA + GDP + H2PO4- - products: succinate + coenzyme-A + GTP - succinyl CoA also serves as a port of entry into the citric acid cycle, from methylmalonyl CoA in a vitamin B12-dependent reaction catalyzed by methylmalonyl CoA mutase. * see citric acid cycle for role of succinyl CoA in citric acid cycle - succinyl CoA serves as an intermediate in the catabolism of odd chain fatty acids, cholesterol & the amino acids methionine, valine & isoleucine - succinyl CoA & glycine condense to form delta-aminolevulinate in the first step of the biosynthesis of heme in a reaction catalyzed by delta-aminolevulinate synthase within mitochondria.

Interactions

molecular events

Related

citric acid cycle, Krebs cycle or tricarboxylic acid [TCA] cycle heme synthesis

General

acyl Coenzyme A intermediary metabolite succinate; succinic acid

Properties

COMPARTMENT: mitochondrial matrix

Database Correlations

PUBCHEM correlations

References

  1. Biochemistry, L. Stryer, WH Freeman & Co, New York, 1988, pg 376, 506, 594
  2. Wikipedia: Succinyl-CoA https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succinyl-CoA