Glycolysis
Glycolysis
Glycolysis
What is glycolysis?
Glycolysis describes the breakdown of a 6-carbon carbohydrate to two molecules of a 3-compound carboxylic acid(pyruvate) The roles of glycolysis are to produce energy (both directly and by supplying substrate for citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation) and to produce intermediates for biosynthetic pathways. Consumes 2 ATP molecules, and produces 4 ATP and 2 NADH molecules.
Takes place in cytosol
Enolase catalyzes the dehydration of 2-phosphoglycerate to phospho3-Phosphoglycerate is converted to 2-phosphoglycerate by phosphoglycenolpyruvate (PEP). Reaction converts the low-energyphosphate group to erate mutase. The reaction is a movement of the phosphate ester bonddifferent carbon atom within the same molecule. a of 2-phosphoglycerate into the high-energy phosphate bond of PEP.
In the last reaction, pyruvate kinase catalyzes the physiologically irreversible transfer of the phosphoryl group from PEP to ADP to form ATP and pyruvate.
Pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA by the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase and the acetyl CoA then enters the citric acid cycle. The pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction is an oxidative decarboxylation:
Pyruvate dehydrogenase
Energy yield
Early in glycolysis, two ATPs are required for the conversion of glucose to glucose 6-phosphate by hexokinase and for the conversion of fructose 6-phosphate to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate by PFK. However, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate then gives rise to two three-carbon units, each of which generates two ATPs in subsequent steps (catalyzed by phosphoglycerate kinase and pyruvate kinase) giving a net yield of two ATPs per original glucose molecule. The overall reaction is: Glucose + 2 P i + 2 ADP + 2 NAD 2 pyruvate + 2 ATP + 2 NADH + 2 H+ 2 HO Note that, under aerobic conditions, the two NADH molecules that are synthesized are reoxidized via the electron transport chain generating ATP. Given the cytoplasmic location of these NADH molecules, each is reoxidized via the glycerol 3-phosphate shuttle and produces approximately two ATPs during oxidative phosphorylation or via the malateaspartate shuttle and produces approximately three ATPs during oxidative phosphorylation.
Regulation of glycolysis
-The main control step is that catalyzed by PFK but hexokinase and pyruvate kinase are additional control sites. -PFK is allosterically inhibited by ATP, but this inhibition is relieved by AMP. Citrate also inhibits PFK. The build up of fructose 6-phosphate stimulates the formation of fructose 2,6bisphosphate that in turn stimulates PFK. The enzyme that synthesizes fructose 2,6 bisphosphate (phosphofructokinase 2; PFK2) and the enzyme that hydrolyzes it back to fructose 6-phosphate (fructose bisphosphatase 2; FBPase2) are also regulated hormonally by glucagon that causes glycolysis to slow down when the blood glucose level falls. PFK is also inhibited by H+ ions, thus preventing excessive formation of lactate under anaerobic conditions.