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achiever q7 test 2.
how the heck is atp exergonic if it is breaking a phosphate bond. to break bonds, you need to aborb energy thus it is endothermic. so how is it exergonic? thanks
Here is their explantion:
ATP + H2O+ ADP + Pi ∆G = -7.3 kcal/mol
From the above reaction, it is crystal clear that ATP can be regenerated via the reverse (non-spontaneous) path where ∆G is positive in value. In an exergonic reaction, the reactant(s) (ATP in this case) involved can never be thermodynamically more stable than the product(s) formed. ATPs are prime energy sources driving cellular metabolic processes, by coupling their exergonic (spontaneous) reactions to essentially any endergonic (non-spontaneous) reactions you could ever think of!
how the heck is atp exergonic if it is breaking a phosphate bond. to break bonds, you need to aborb energy thus it is endothermic. so how is it exergonic? thanks
Here is their explantion:
ATP + H2O+ ADP + Pi ∆G = -7.3 kcal/mol
From the above reaction, it is crystal clear that ATP can be regenerated via the reverse (non-spontaneous) path where ∆G is positive in value. In an exergonic reaction, the reactant(s) (ATP in this case) involved can never be thermodynamically more stable than the product(s) formed. ATPs are prime energy sources driving cellular metabolic processes, by coupling their exergonic (spontaneous) reactions to essentially any endergonic (non-spontaneous) reactions you could ever think of!