Glycolysis
Definition
Glycolysis is a metabolic pathway (i.e., a series of controlled chemical reactions occurring in a cell) that starts with glucose and converts it to pyruvic acid ), or equivalently pyruvate ions and protons ( ions).
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Type of cells in which glycolysis occurs | includes cells of all aerobic organisms, but also many anaerobic organisms. |
| Substrate (input or reactant) for the process | Glucose (glucose is a monosaccharide, i.e., a simple sugar) |
| Products of the process | Pyruvic acid in ionized form |
| Energy change | The process releases energy (how much?). The released energy is stored chemically by converting ADP to ATP. |
| Phases of glycolysis pathway | There are two phases: the preparatory phase where energy needs to be provided (the energy is provided by converting ATP to ADP) and the pay-off phase where energy is released (the released energy is stored by converting ADP to ATP). The energy released in the pay-off phase is greater than the energy used in the preparatory phase, so overall we have more ATP and less ADP in the end than in the beginning. |
| Types of glycolysis pathways | Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway (EMP pathway) (this is the one found in most organisms), Entner–Doudoroff pathway, and some others. By default, when we talk of glycolysis, we refer to the EMP pathway. |