Pyrophosphate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
In chemistry,
pyrophosphate, or
PPi is an anion observed in living systems, usually formed by the
hydrolysis of
ATP into
AMP.
The pyrophosphate anion has the structure P
2O
74-, and is an
acid anhydride of
phosphate. It is unstable in
aqueous solution and rapidly
hydrolyzess into inorganic phosphate:
or in shorthand notation:
This hydrolysis to inorganic phosphate effectively renders the cleavage of ATP to AMP and PP
i irreversible, and biochemical reactions coupled to this hydrolysis are irreversible as well.
From the standpoint of high energy phosphate accounting, the hydrolysis of ATP to AMP and PPi will cost 2 high energy phosphates, as to reconstitute AMP from ATP will require 2 phosphorylation reactions.
- AMP + ATP → 2 ADP
- 2 ADP + 2 Pi → 2 ATP
In biology, the term
pyrophosphate may also be used as the name of the bond formed by the
condensation of a phosphorylated biological compound with inorganic phosphate. This bond is also referred to as a
high energy phosphate bond.