10.3 Phosphorus-Containing Compounds
LEARNING GOALS
After   Chapter 10.3,   you will    be  able    to:Recognize   the traits  that    make    inorganic   phosphate   a   useful  molecule    for energy  transfer
Explain why phosphoric  acids   are good    buffers
Recall  what    makes   a   molecule    an  organic phosphatePhosphoric  acid    is  an  extremely   important   molecule    biochemically.  This    molecule    forms   the high-
energy  bonds   that    carry   energy  in  adenosine   triphosphate    (ATP).
DESCRIPTION
In  a   biochemical context,    phosphoric  acid    is  sometimes   referred    to  as  a   phosphate   group   or
inorganic   phosphate,  denoted Pi. At  physiological   pH, inorganic   phosphate   includes    molecules   of
both hydrogen phosphate and dihydrogen phosphate
In  addition    to  the energy-carrying nucleotide  phosphates, phosphorus  is  also    found   in  the backbone
of  DNA in  phosphodiester  bonds   linking the sugar   moieties    of  the nucleotides,    as  shown   in  Figure
10.9.
