Concept explainers
Characterizing Glycolysis List the reactions of glycolysis that
a. are energy consuming (under standard-stale conditions),
b. are energy yielding (under standard-state conditions),
c. consume ATP.
d. yield ATP
e. are strongly influenced by changes in concentration of substrate and product because of their molecularity.
f. are at or near equilibrium in the erythrocyte (see Table 18.2).
(a)
To write: The reaction of glycolysis which are energy consuming under standard-state conditions.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value of
Explanation of Solution
The first step of Glycolysis is energy-consuming in nature.
The following reactions of glycolysis are energy consuming reactions:
Thus, the above reaction consumes energy and has positive value for both energies of the reaction.
(b)
To write: The reaction of glycolysis which are energy releasing under standard-state conditions.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value of
Explanation of Solution
The following reactions of glycolysis are energy-releasing reactions:
Thus, the above reaction release energy and have a negative value for both energies of the reaction.
(c)
To write: We need to demonstrate the reaction of glycolysis which consumes ATP.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value
Explanation of Solution
The following reactions of glycolysis consume ATP reactions:
Thus, the above reaction consumes ATP in the process of Glycolysis.
(d)
To write: the reaction of glycolysis which yields ATP.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value
Explanation of Solution
The following reactions of glycolysis that yield ATP:
Thus, the above reaction yields ATP in the process of glycolysis. For each molecule of glucose, the above reaction will take place twice.
(e)
To write: The reaction of glycolysis which is strongly influenced by the changes in concentration of the substrate and product because of their molecularity.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value
Explanation of Solution
This question can be answered in two ways: The closer the Gibb’s free energy is to Zero, the reaction is closer to the equilibrium state. This indicates that the products and reactants will affect the direction of the reaction. The following reactions of glycolysis are influenced by the changes in concentration of the substrate and product:
The second step is the change in Gibb’s free energy with the change in the concentrations. Gibb’s free energy changes with the formula
The equilibrium constant can be easily changed when there is a change in the concentration of products as compared to reactants. These change reactions occur in two steps:
Thus, the above two steps are strongly influenced by the changes in concentration of the substrate and product because of their molecularity.
(f)
To write: The reaction of glycolysis which is at or near equilibrium in the erythrocytes.
Introduction: Glycolysis is a series of chemical reaction in the body which synthesizes energy in the form of ATP by breaking down glucose molecules. Glycolysis is an extramitochondrial chemical reaction and takes place in the cytoplasm to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Reactions that consume energy to complete would have a positive value
Explanation of Solution
The following reactions of glycolysis are the reaction of glycolysis which is at or near equilibrium in the erythrocytes:
The closer the Gibb’s free energy to Zero, the reaction is closer to the equilibrium state. The following reactions indicate that under cellular conditions the free energy is very small and doesn’t require regulation.
Thus, the above reactions are at or near equilibrium in the erythrocytes.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 18 Solutions
Biochemistry
- Which of the two set ups shall generate higher amount of energy in terms of net ATP generated? Set up A. The one containing 1 mole of trimyristin being catabolized and completely oxidized. Set up B. The one containing combined fatty acids (1mole each) that comprise trymiristin.arrow_forwardThe first reaction in glycolysis that results in the formation of an energy-rich compound (i.e., a compound whose hydrolysis or oxidation has a highly negative ΔG'°) is catalyzed by: a. glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. b. hexokinase. c. phosphofructokinase-1. d. phosphoglycerate kinase. e. triose phosphate isomerase.arrow_forwardPhosphofructokinase-1 is the main flux controlling enzyme for glycolysis. It is inhibited by high [ATP]. There exist metabolic circumstances in which the inhibition by ATP is overridden. Draw velocity vs. [S] graphs showing the inhibition of PFK-1 activity by ATP and the circumstance in which the inhibition by ATP is overridden.arrow_forward
- ATP production is limited from glycolysis in strenuously exercising muscle or when yeast are fermenting carbohydrates in closed vessels. The limiting factor is Select one: a. the increased acidity from lactic acid causing muscle damage b. the accumulation of CO, c. the lack of ATP to continue glycolysis d. the lack of organic fuel molecules to oxidize e. the need to regenerate NAD+arrow_forwardConsider a 24:1 △cis-9 fatty acid in the mitochondrion. For each fatty acid given, determine the following. 1. Gross ATP from b-oxidation cycles 2. Gross ATP from acetyl CoA produced 3. Gross ATP from conversion of propionyl CoA (if applicable) 4. Total number of ATP deducted 5. Total net ATParrow_forwardb and e are wrong, please give the correct answer and explanarrow_forward
- NADH and succinate are substrates that can be oxidized and will consume oxygen. Rotenone and cyanide are inhibitors of the electron transport chain and can block oxidation. Match each description of the effector to the appropriate oxygen consumption. A plot may match more than one description. Some plots will not match any description. (At least one of the matches in the image was incorrect)arrow_forwardOne of the allosteric molecules of Hemoglobin is 2,3-BPG. This molecule is formed in the glycolysis cycle. During which of the following conversions could it be shunted out (diverted) to be formed? a. 3-phosphoglycerate to 2-phosphoglycerate b. 1,3--bisphosphoglycerate to 2-phosphoglycerate c. 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate to 3-phosphoglyceratearrow_forwardIn the first stage of glycolysis, the hydroxyl group on C6 of glucose is phosphorylated to form glucose-6-phosphate (G6P). In this reaction, which of the following statements is true? a. O b. d. e. Glucose kinase is used to catalyze the reaction. Hexokinase is used to catalyze the reaction. A molecule of NADH is synthesized. One ATP is synthesized. Fructose kinase is used to catalyze the reaction.arrow_forward
- According to Table 17.1, four reactions have positive ΔG values. How can this be explained?arrow_forwardIn oxidative phosphorylation.... 1. Succinate contributes 2e- to Complex II and 2H+ to the mitochondrial proton gradient. 2. NADH in the matrix passes 2 e- to coenzyme Q via Complex I. 3. Complexes I, II, III, and IV each contribute to the matrix proton gradient. 4. O2 stabilizes the catalytically active conformation of Complex V. 5. Reversible protonation of c subunits leads to rotation of the Complex V gamma subunit. 6. Each β subunit can bind ATP tightly under the right conditions. 7. For every 3 protons that pass across the inner mitochondrial membrane, 1 ATP is produced. Choose all options that are true.arrow_forwardIf the enzyme that catalyzed the reaction that converts pyruvate to acetyl-CoA and carbon dioxide is inhibited: a. the production of ATP would decreases but the production of electron carriers would be unaffected b. the concentration of pyruvate would decrease c. the citric acid cycle will not be affected d. ATP production in the electron transport chain/oxidative phosphorylation will increase e. the concentration of acetyl Co A would decreasearrow_forward
- BiochemistryBiochemistryISBN:9781305577206Author:Reginald H. Garrett, Charles M. GrishamPublisher:Cengage Learning