Substrate-level phosphorylation
- Substrate-level phosphorylation
Substrate-level phosphorylation is a type of
chemical reaction that results in the formation ofadenosine triphosphate (ATP) by the direct transfer of aphosphate group toadenosine diphosphate (ADP) from areactive intermediate . In cells, it occurs primarily in thecytoplasm (inglycolysis ) under both and conditions.Unlike
oxidative phosphorylation , here theoxidation &phosphorylation is not coupled.In the pay-off phase of glycolysis, four ATP are produced by substrate-level phosphorylation: two
1,3-bisphosphoglycerate are converted to3-phosphoglycerate by transferring a phosphate group to ADP by the enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase; fourphosphoenolpyruvate are converted topyruvate by the transfer of their phosphate groups to ADP by the enzyme pyruvate kinase.In the
citric acid cycle , oneguanosine triphosphate (GTP) (which can donate a phosphate group to ADP or UDP, forming the respective triphosphates (a near equilibrium reaction catalyzed by nucleoside diphosphate kinase)) is produced by substrate-level phosphorylation (per cycle, with 3 cycles per glucose molecule) whensuccinyl-CoA synthetase convertssuccinyl-CoA tosuccinate . This reaction occurs in the mitochondria, as does the rest of the citric acid cycle.Substrate-level phosphorylation is also seen in working skeletal muscles and the brain.
Phosphocreatine is stored as a readily available high-energy phosphate supply, and the enzymecreatine phosphokinase transfers a phosphate from phosphocreatine to ADP to produce ATP. Then the ATP releases giving chemical energy.An alternative way to create ATP is through
oxidative phosphorylation , which takes place during the process of aerobiccellular respiration , in addition to the substrate-level phosphorylation that occurs during glycolysis and the Krebs Ridstoryed cycle. During oxidative phosphorylation NADH is oxidized to NAD+ yielding 2.5 ATPs, and FADH2 yields 1.5 ATPs when it is oxidized.
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