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In biochemistry, a metabolic pathway is a series of chemical reactions occurring within a cell, catalyzed by enzymes, resulting in either the formation of a metabolic product to be used or stored by the cell, or the initiation of another metabolic pathway (then called a flux generating step). Many pathways are elaborate, and involve a step by step modification of the initial substance to shape it into the product with the exact chemical structure desired.

Overview


Metabolic pathways often have these properties:

Major metabolic pathways


Cellular respiration

Several distinct but linked metabolic pathways are used by cells to transfer the energy released by breakdown of fuel molecules to ATP. These occur within all living organisms in some forms:

  1. Glycolysis
  2. Anaerobic respiration
  3. Krebs cycle / Citric acid cycle
  4. Oxidative phosphorylation

Other pathways occurring in (most or) all living organisms include:

Creation of energetic compounds from non-living matter:

See also


External links


Biochemistry | Metabolism

Stoffwechselweg | Ruta metabólica | Voie métabolique | เมตาโบลิก พาทเวย์

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Metabolic pathway".

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