Gtp

10H16N5O14P3
a href="/encyclopedia/Molecular-weight" title="Molecular weight">Molecular weight 523.18
GTP (also known as guanylyl imidodiphosphate, guanosine-5'-triphosphate, or guanosine triphosphate) is a chemical compound (nucleotide) that is incorporated into the growing RNA chain during synthesis of RNA and used as a source of energy during synthesis of proteins. GTP is also essential to signal transduction in living cells, where it is converted to GDP through GTPases.

Energy transfer

GTP is involved in energy transfer within the cell. For instance, one GTP molecule is generated for every turn of the citric acid cycle. This is tantamount to the generation of one molecule of ATP since GTP is readilty converted to ATP.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
isidore geoffroy saint hilaire
local zeta function
osi (band)
logia lautaro
euler equations
cowbell
tienne geoffroy saint hilaire
oakworth hall
stanislaw ignacy witkiewicz
yeovil junction railway station
stanislaw witkiewicz
henri edmond cross
cut la roc
lne viru county
dietary reference intake
wire recording
dri
casti connubii
contact (mathematics)
vesper george art school
paul t. hellyer
virtua tennis
bernard germain tienne de la ville, comte de lacpde
london socialist alliance
strangelite
list of people from new brunswick
office of strategic influence (album)
subtropical
larruperz
formal system
edvin loach
guanosine diphosphate
dominator
progress quest
office of special investigations
pam ayres
yellow sign
rae armantrout
anne perry
sid field
mayville
iwasawa theory
dev anand
theodoor hendrik van de velde