Glycolysis
Glycolysis
Glycolysis
REACTIONS OF GLYCOLYSIS
The conversion of glucose to pyruvate occurs in two stages (Figure 8.11). The first
five reactions of glycolysis correspond to an energy–investment phase in which the
phosphorylated forms of intermediates are synthesized at the expense of ATP. The
subsequent reactions of glycolysis constitute an energy–generation phase in which
a net of two molecules of ATP are formed by substrate-level phosphorylation (see
p. 102) per glucose molecule metabolized.
A. Phosphorylation of glucose
I. Dehydration of 2-phosphoglycerate
The conversion of PEP to pyruvate is catalyzed by pyruvate kinase (PK), the third
irreversible reaction of glycolysis. The high-energy enol phosphate in PEP is used
to synthesize ATP from ADP and is another example of substrate-level
phosphorylation (see Figure 8.18).
The tissue-specific expression of PK in RBCs and the liver is the result of
differential promoter utilization in transcription (see p. 422) of the gene that
encodes both isozymes.
The oxygen debt is often related to patient morbidity or mortality. In many clinical
situations, measuring the blood levels of lactic acid allows the rapid, early
detection of oxygen debt in patients and the monitoring of their recovery.
Despite the production of some ATP during glycolysis, the end product, pyruvate
or lactate, still contains most of the energy originally contained in glucose. The
TCA cycle is required to release that energy completely (see p. 109).