ATP Flashcards
what is atp
Stands for adenine triphosphate and is a phosphorylated macromolecule. This is because it has three parts
What is the structure of ATP (three parts)
It has:
-Adenine= nitrogenous base
-ribose= sugar molecule with a 5 carbon ring structure
-phosphate- 3 phosphate groups
what happens during ATP hydrolysis
The phosphate bond between the 3 phosphates are unstable and therefore have a lower activation energy which means they can be easily broken. ATP splits by hydrolysis (addition of water) and forms ADP, an inorganic phosphate and energy
It is catalysed by ATP hydrolase. When the phosphate bond breaks it releases energy
What happens at ATP synthesis
Involves adding a phosphate group to ADP to revert it back to ATP. It is catalysed by ATP synthase and involves removing water molecule (condensation reaction) It occurs in three ways :
-photophosphorylation
-oxidative phosphorylation
-substrate level phosphorylation
Role of ATP
Due to unstable phosphate bonds between three phosphate groups it allows ATP to become an immediate energy source. The hydrolysis of ATP to ADP is also a single reaction so immediate energy source.
Importance of Complementary shapes
In ATP there are two enzymes involved:
ATP hydrolase
ATP synthase
ATP hydrolase has specific tertiary structure so that substrate can bind to the specific active site to form e-s complexes. If no comp then ATP wouldn’t be able to break the phosphate bonds to release energy. Then talk about effects of less energy in body
ATP synthase
used in LDR for photosynthesis to form ATP. Needs to be comp as it allows the proton to facilitate diffuse through an this energy allows ADP+Pi to form ATP