Waiting
Login processing...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove

3.22: Réactions couplées

TABLE DES
MATIÈRES
JoVE Core
Cell Biology

A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.

Education
Réactions couplées
 
TRANSCRIPTION

3.22: Réactions couplées

Cellular processes such as building and breaking down complex molecules occur through stepwise chemical reactions. Some of these chemical reactions are spontaneous and release energy, whereas others require energy to proceed. Cells often couple the energy-releasing reaction with the energy-requiring one to carry out important cell functions. 

Energy in adenosine triphosphate or ATP molecules is easily accessible to do work. ATP powers the majority of energy-requiring cellular reactions. Cells couple the ATP hydrolysis' with endergonic reactions allowing them to proceed. One example of energy coupling using ATP involves a transmembrane ion pump that is extremely important for cellular function. This sodium-potassium pump (Na+/K+ pump) drives sodium out of the cell and potassium into the cell. A large percentage of a cell's ATP powers this pump, because cellular processes bring considerable sodium into the cell and potassium out of it. The pump constantly works to stabilize cellular concentrations of sodium and potassium.

Often during cellular metabolic reactions, such as nutrient synthesis and breakdown, certain molecules must alter slightly in their conformation to become substrates for the next step in the reaction series. One example is during the very first steps of cellular respiration, when a sugar glucose molecule breaks down in glycolysis. In the first step, ATP is required to phosphorylate glucose, creating a high-energy but unstable intermediate. This phosphorylation reaction powers a conformational change that allows the phosphorylated glucose molecule to convert to the phosphorylated sugar fructose. Fructose is a necessary intermediate for glycolysis to move forward. Here, ATP hydrolysis' exergonic reaction couples with the endergonic reaction of converting glucose into a phosphorylated intermediate in the pathway. Once again, the energy released by breaking a phosphate bond within ATP was used for phosphorylyzing another molecule, creating an unstable intermediate and powering an important conformational change.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Biology 2e, Section 6.1: Energy and Metabolism , section 6.3: The Laws of Thermodynamics, and 6.4 ATP: Adenosine Triphosphate.

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter