Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
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Image:NADplus.png Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) are two important coenzymes found in cells. NADH is the reduced form of NAD, and NAD+ is the oxidized form of NAD. It forms NADP with the addition of a phosphate group to the 2' position of the adenosyl nucleotide through an ester linkage.
NAD is used extensively in glycolysis and the citric acid cycle of cellular respiration. The reducing potential stored in NADH can be converted to ATP through the electron transport chain or used for anabolic metabolism.
Image:NADPplus.png NADP is used in anabolic reactions, such as fatty acid and nucleic acid synthesis, that require NADPH as a reducing agent. In chloroplasts, NADP is an oxidising agent important in the preliminary reactions of photosynthesis. The NADPH produced by photosynthesis is then used as reducing power for the biosynthetic reactions in the Calvin cycle of photosynthesis.
- MH2 + NAD+ → NADH + H+ + M: + energy, where M is a metabolite.
Two hydrogen ions (a hydride ion and an H+ ion) are transferred from the metabolite. One electron is transferred to the positively-charged nitrogen, and one hydrogen attaches to the carbon atom opposite to the nitrogen.
See also
References and external links
fr:Nicotinamide adénine dinucléotide fr:Nicotinamide adénine dinucléotide phosphate ko:니코틴아미드 아데닌 디뉴클레오타이드 인산 he:NAD lt:NADP nl:NADH ja:ニコチンアミドアデニンジヌクレオチド pl:NAD