ATP Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main biological energy requiring processes?

A
  • synthesis (e.g. proteins)
  • transport (e.g. active transport)
  • movement (e.g. muscle contraction)
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2
Q

What makes up an ATP molecule?

A
  • 3 phosphate heads (can be added or removed)
  • ribose sugar
  • nitrogenous base adenine
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3
Q

Why is ATP known as the universal energy currency?

A

It’s used for energy transfer in all cells of all living things.

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4
Q

How does ATP release energy?

A
  • small amount of energy needed to break weak bond holding last phosphate group in ATP
  • a lot more energy is released: 30.6kJ
  • hydrolysis reaction as water needed
  • hydrolysed into adenine diphosphate (ADP) and a phosphate ion
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5
Q

How is ATP created?

A
  • reattaching a phosphate group to an ADP molecule
  • condensation reaction as water removed
  • called phosphorylation
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6
Q

Why is it better that cells have ATP as an intermediate energy source rather than using glucose?

A
  • ATP releases its energy instantly in a single reaction

- hydrolysis of ATP releases a small amount of energy, ideal for fuelling reactions in the body

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7
Q

How is ATP ideally suited to carry out its function in energy transfer in cells?

A
  • small so easy to move in and out of cells/organelles (mitochondria)
  • water soluble (energy requiring processes happen in aqueous environment)
  • bond between phosphates with intermediate energy (large enough to be useful for cellular reactions but not too large that energy is wasted as heat)
  • releases energy in small quantities
  • easily regenerated
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8
Q

Why don’t cells store large amounts of energy as ATP? How are large amounts of energy stored instead?

A
  • ATP relatively unstable
  • energy stored as fats and carbohydrates
  • during cellular respiration fats and carbohydrates are broken down releasing energy used to make ATP
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