Energy production in cells

Energy is stored in a molecule called adenosine triphosphate (ATP).

Campbell and Reece

There should be some familiar pieces here.

Adenine is one of the nucleic acid bases.

Ribose is the middle piece of RNA.

Phosphates also appear in RNA.

So ATP, amazingly, looks a lot like RNA. ATP has more phosphates, and you don't make a polymer out of them.

Do you think it could be a coincidence that two critically important biomolecules have very similar structures and compositions while having totally different uses?

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