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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Describe the overall result in terms of molecules produced in the breakdown of glucose by glycolysis
  • Compare the output of glycolysis in terms of ATP molecules and NADH molecules produced

Intoduction to glycolysis

You are about to begin a series of modules that focus on the oxidation of carbon compounds. This process serves two distinct purposes for any cell. The first is the generation of metabolic substrates , small carbon based molecules that all cells need in order to "build" or synthesize larger complexes such as monomers which lead to the formation of macromolecules or polymers, such as proteins, or polysaccharides. All cells need twelve (12) basic building blocks or metabolic substrates. In the next few modules we will learn where these metabolic substrates come from and how cells synthesize them. The second purpose is the generation of cellular energy. This can be in the form of ATP (or ATP equivalents) or the formation of reducing power . This is primarily in the form of NADH , NADPH or FADH 2 .

A note from the instructor as to what is expected of you to know from the reading and lecture

There is a lot of material. I do not expect you to memorize specific names of compounds or enzymes. However, I will give you those names for completeness. For exams I will always provide you with the pathways we discuss in class and in the BioStax Biology text modules. What you need to be able to do is understand what is going on in each reaction. We will go over in lecture, problems that will be similar to those I will ask of you on exams. Do not be overwhelmed with specific enzyme names and specific structures. What you should know are the general types of enzymes used and the types of structures found. For example you do not need to know that that the enzyme that converts glyceraldhyde-3-phosphate to 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate is called glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. You should know what type of reaction a dehydrogenase catalyzes and while you do not need to memorize the structures of glyceraldhyde-3-phosphate and 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate; you should know that one is an aldehyde    (is says so in the name) and the other is an organic acid (the term "ate" denotes an acid). That is the level of understanding I expect. If you have any questions please ask.

Glycolysis: an overview

So what is glycolysis: it is the process of oxidizing 1 molecule of glucose to 2 pyruvate molecules and the generation of 2 NADH molecules and 2 ATP molecules. Cells can generate cellular energy from the process, 2 ATP molecules are obtained for every molecule of glucose entering the pathway as well as 2 molecules of NADH are generated. In many organism, the oxidation of glucose ends with the generation of pyruvate. For these organisms, for every 1 molecule of glucose oxidized, cells generate only 2 ATP molecules. In other words, these organisms only utilize or extract a small amount of the total potential energy within the glucose molecule. However, for many other organisms, including us humans, the end product pyruvate can be further oxidized by a series of additional reactions, which will be discussed later. In general, these organisms first oxidize pyruvate to acetate or acetyl~CoA, and then the acetyl~CoA is completely oxidized to CO 2 by the Tricarboxylic acid cycle or TCA cycle .

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Source:  OpenStax, Ucd bis2a intro to biology v1.2. OpenStax CNX. Sep 22, 2015 Download for free at https://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11890/1.1
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