Citric‐acid cycle, 50 years on
- 1 October 1988
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 176 (3), 497-508
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1988.tb14307.x
Abstract
Many anaerobic bacteria can completely oxidize organic matter to CO2 with either sulfur, sulfate, or protons as electron acceptor. The sulfur-reducing bacteria and one genus of sulfate reducers use a modified citric-acid cycle with a novel anaplerotic sequence as pathway of terminal respiration. All other anaerobes use an alternative pathway, in which carbon monoxide dehydrogenase is a key enzyme and in which acetyl-CoA is cleaved into two C1 units at the oxidation level of CH3OH and CO. Thus almost 50 years after the discovery of the citric acid cycle by Hans Krebs in 1937, a second pathway for acetyl-CoA oxidation was found.Keywords
This publication has 118 references indexed in Scilit:
- Methane formation from acetyl phosphate in cell extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri Dependence of the reaction on coenzyme AFEBS Letters, 1988
- Isolation of Extremely Thermophilic Sulfate Reducers: Evidence for a Novel Branch of ArchaebacteriaScience, 1987
- The acetyl-CoA pathway of autotrophic growthFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1986
- ATP-driven succinate oxidation in the catabolism of Desulfuromonas acetoxidansArchiv für Mikrobiologie, 1986
- Non-aceticlastic methanogenesis from acetate: acetate oxidation by a thermophilic syntrophic cocultureArchiv für Mikrobiologie, 1984
- Die Entwicklung der Erdatmosphäre und ihre Wechselbeziehung zur Entwicklung der Sedimente und des LebensThe Science of Nature, 1981
- Archaebakterien und Phylogenie der OrganismenThe Science of Nature, 1981
- Struktur und Funktion des energieumwandelnden Systems der MitochondrienAngewandte Chemie, 1980
- The Enzymic Interconversion of Acetate and Acetyl-coenzyme A in Escherichia coliJournal of General Microbiology, 1977
- The stereospecificity of the (R)-citrate synthase in the presence of p-chloromercuribenzoateBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1969