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ATP
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ATP

Nucleotide molecule found in all cells. It can yield large amounts of energy, and is used to drive the thousands of biological processes needed to sustain life, growth, movement, and reproduction. Green plants use light energy to manufacture ATP as part of the process of photosynthesis. In animals, ATP is formed by the breakdown of glucose molecules, usually obtained from the carbohydrate component of a diet, in a series of reactions termed respiration. It is the driving force behind muscle contraction and the synthesis of complex molecules needed by individual cells.

In metabolism the food's energy is ‘captured’ in the form of ATP, to be used later when needed. Thus ATP is often called the ‘energy currency’ of the cell. When it is used, its chain of three phosphate groups is shortened to two, resulting in the compound ADP (adenosine diphosphate) and inorganic phosphate.

ATP is also required as a building block for the synthesis of RNA, along with the nucleotides CTP, GTP, and UTP.



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RELATED ARTICLE: Nitric--oxide bioactivity depletion: An added storage lesion in banked blood By Faon Rodriguez, MS, and Diana Ramirez, MS There is more to a blood transfusion than to increase the oxygen-carrying capacity of red-blood cells (RBCs).
These issues have heightened the search for alternatives that reduce or eliminate the need for donor blood in elective surgeries and are not subject to the storage lesion effect.
 
 
 
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