Oxidative deamination is the first step to breaking down the amino acids so that they can be converted to sugars. The process begins by removing the amino group of the amino acids. The amino group becomes
ammonium as it is lost and later undergoes the
urea cycle to become urea, in the liver. It is then released into the blood stream, where it is transferred to the kidneys, which will secrete the urea as urine. The remaining portion of the amino acid becomes oxidized, resulting in an α-
keto acid. The alpha-keto acid will then proceed into the TCA cycle, in order to produce energy. The acid can also enter
glycolysis, where it will be eventually converted into
pyruvate. The pyruvate is then converted into
acetyl-CoA so that it can enter the TCA cycle and convert the original pyruvate molecules into
ATP, or usable energy for the organism. Transamination leads to the same result as deamination: the remaining acid will undergo either glycolysis or the TCA cycle to produce energy that the organism's body will use for various purposes. This process transfers the amino group instead of losing the amino group to be converted into ammonium. The amino group is transferred to
α-ketoglutarate, so that it can be converted to
glutamate. Then glutamate transfers the amino group to
oxaloacetate. This transfer is so that the oxaloacetate can be converted to aspartate or other amino acids. Eventually, this product will also proceed into oxidative deamination to once again produce alpha-ketoglutarate, an alpha-keto acid that will undergo the TCA cycle, and ammonium, which will eventually undergo the urea cycle.
Transaminases are enzymes that help catalyze the reactions that take place in transamination. They help catalyze the reaction at the point when the amino group is transferred from the original amino acid, like glutamate to α-ketoglutarate, and hold onto it to transfer it to another α-ketoacid. == Factors determining protein half-life ==