27/07/2014

ATP - cell's rechargeable battery

ATP, or adenosine triphosphate, could be put in an analogy of a mini rechargeable battery that cells are using to feed the energy for many different processes within the body. It contains three basic parts.  The adenine molecule, sugar molecule (ribose), and three phosphate groups - which are really one phosphorus atom surrounded by four oxygen atoms.

The energy we talk about here is in the form of high-energy bond between those phosphate groups. When they separate, the energy is released, and then used. To put back on that last phosphate group, and therefore recharging it, it requires the energy which the body needs to get from the food we eat. This principle is explained on this picture.


 
When you take away that last phosphate group, you create the molecule called ADP - adenosine diphosphate (only 2 phosphate groups). That would be the representation of empty battery in this analogy. Rotating those two chemical reactions, then provides the means of an empty and full battery, which are moving from the place of using up to the place of recharging it. And back again and again cyclically.
 
For example, one molecule of glucose can bring up the production of as much as 38 ATPs, provided there is an oxygen present in the process. This is called an aerobic respiration. In the absence of oxygen, however, only two ATPs can be made - the process called anaerobic respiration. For more detailed view of how and where ATPs are made in the body, this flow diagram does a great job.

 

Here you can see that some ATPs are made in mitochondrion, some in the cytosol, and some in the gut - where happens the basic breaking down of food from the meals we eat. In the gut, the proteins, complex carbohydrates, and lipids are digested into the final products, which are in form of amino acids, glucose, fatty acids, and glycerol respectively.
 
First round of freshly made ATPs is happening in the cytosol, where the glucose and the glycerol are used for creating it. Cytosol is semi-fluid matrix inside of the cells, in which all the organelles are suspended. Mitochondrion is a special organelle for making ATPs and many other functions. There in the middle, there is a cyclical sequence of chemical reactions called TCA, or Krebs cycle (or citric acid cycle). This represents the biggest system for ATP production in the body.

 

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