Questions re. respiration/metabolism

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The discussion centers on the evolution of glycolysis and metabolic pathways. It raises questions about the initial development of glycolysis and enzyme synthesis, suggesting that both likely evolved concurrently rather than in a linear sequence. The conversation also explores why different organisms developed either the ethanol or lactic acid fermentation pathways under anaerobic conditions, attributing this to varying environmental factors and energy needs. Lastly, the distinction between ATP and other nucleotides like GTP is examined, with ATP being recognized as a more energy-dense molecule that serves as an immediate energy source, while GTP is seen as less energy-rich and more regulatory in nature.
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Hi everyone, just a few questions I've been wondering on...

1) Glycolysis is catalyzed by enzymes. Enzyme synthesis requires energy (presumably from glycolysis). Seems there's a bit of a chicken-and-egg situation here: I'm wondering which would've developed first and why?

2) In anaerobic conditions why did the ethanol pathway evolve in some organisms and the lactic acid pathway in others?

3) ATP provides an immediate source of energy in most metabolic processes, whereas GTP, UTP etc. are more specific in the reactions they activate--why is this?

Thanks in advance for any answers...
 
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I'm certainly no expert, but I'll makes some guesses.

1. I'm not sure you can talk in terms of one concept evolving first or second. "Glycolysis" is a human construct, not one in which nature said "OK, I've finished this process, now let's do the next." They probably evolved jointly with similar and mutable processes preceding both of them.

2. My guess would be environmental conditions and the nutrients/energy requirements required for different organisms.

3. Again I'll guess. ATP is probably more energy rich and harder to control. GTP is probably less energy rich but easier to control its reactions, so it's used in regulation more than energy production.
 
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