If DNA is your phone’s hard drive, ATP is the battery. And you’d be dead in seconds without it. ATP is a small, unassuming molecule made of adenine (a nucleobase), ribose (a sugar), and three phosphate groups in a chain. Those phosphates are the key: they’re negatively charged and hate being crowded together, like three people who all want to sit in the same tiny chair.
Here’s a short, engaging blog post written in the voice of ChemWord — a hypothetical chemistry blog that makes molecular science fun and accessible. The Unexpected Molecule That Runs Your Life (It’s Not DNA) chemword
So what’s the real workhorse? — adenosine triphosphate. If DNA is your phone’s hard drive, ATP is the battery
Now go eat a snack. Your ATP needs fuel. 😉 What molecule would you like ChemWord to tackle next? Drop a comment below — yes, even pyridinium chlorochromate counts. Those phosphates are the key: they’re negatively charged
You probably think the most important molecule in your body is DNA. And sure, DNA gets all the glory—double helix, genetic code, the blueprint of life. But here’s the thing: DNA is just a storage device. It sits there. It doesn’t do much on its own.