Metabolite Card

Formula: C6H13O9P (260.0297)
SMILES: OC1O[C@H](COP(O)(O)=O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H]1O

Synonyms [en]

D-Glucose 6-phosphate; Glucose 6-phosphate; Robison ester; 6-O-phosphono-D-glucopyranose; Glc6P; a-D-glucose 6- phosphate

Reviewed

Last reviewed on 2024-06-28.

Cite this Page

D-Glucose 6-phosphate. 数据之源,洞见之始. SMRUCC genomics institute, a synthetic life researcher from China. https://biocad_registry.innovation.ac.cn/s/(-)-arctiin (retrieved 2026-01-03) (CAD Registry RN: BioCAD00000009350). Licensed under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).

Note

Glucose 6-phosphate (G6P, sometimes called the Robison ester) is a glucose sugar phosphorylated at the hydroxy group on carbon 6. Glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) has two anomers: the alpha anomer and the beta anomer. Glucose 6-phosphate is an ester of glucose with phosphoric acid, made in the course of glucose metabolism by mammalian and other cells. It is a normal constituent of resting muscle and probably is in constant equilibrium with fructose 6-phosphate (Stedman, 26th ed). When glucose enters a cell, it is immediately phosphorylated to G6P. This is catalyzed with hexokinase enzymes, thus consuming one ATP. A major reason for immediate phosphorylation of the glucose is so that it cannot diffuse out of the cell. The phosphorylation adds a charged group so the G6P cannot easily cross cell membranes. G6P can travel down two metabolic pathways: glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway. In addition to the metabolic pathways, G6P can also be stored as glycogen in the liver if blood glucose levels are high. If the body needs energy or carbon skeletons for syntheses, G6P can be isomerized to fructose 6-phosphate and then phosphorylated to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. Note, the molecule now has 2 phosphoryl groups attached. The addition of the 2nd phosphoryl group is an irreversible step, so once this happens G6P will enter glycolysis and be turned into pyruvate (ATP production occurs). If blood glucose levels are high, the body needs a way to store the excess glucose. After being converted to G6P, phosphoglucose mutase (an isomerase) can turn the molecule into glucose 1-phosphate. Glucose 1-phosphate can then be combined with uridine triphosphate (UTP) to form UDP-glucose. This reaction is driven by the hydrolysis of pyrophosphate that is released in the reaction. Now, the activated UDP-glucose can add to a growing glycogen molecule with the help of glycogen synthase. This is a very efficient storage mechanism for glucose since it costs the body only 1 ATP to store the 1 glucose molecule and virtually no energy to remove it from storage. It is important to note that glucose 6-phosphate is an allosteric activator of glycogen synthase, which makes sense because when the level of glucose is high the body should store the excess glucose as glycogen. On the other hand, glycogen synthase is inhibited when it is phosphorylated by protein kinase during times of high stress or low blood glucose levels.

Entity Information

DBLinks

Other DBLinks
  • CAS Registry Number: 103192-55-8
  • CAS Registry Number: 299-31-0
  • CAS Registry Number: 56-73-5
  • PubChem: 5958
  • ChEBI: ChEBI:15954
  • ChEBI: ChEBI:4170
  • HMDB: HMDB0001401
  • KEGG: C00092
  • BioCyc: D-glucose-6-phosphate
  • Wikipedia: Glucose_6-phosphate
  • DrugBank: DB03581
  • RefMet: RM0136106
  • MoNA: BAF_UVA_POS000729
  • MoNA: BAF_UVA_POS000730
  • MoNA: BAF_UVA_POS000731
  • MoNA: BAF_UVA_POS000732
  • MoNA: CCMSLIB00000577968
  • MoNA: CCMSLIB00000578202
  • MoNA: CCMSLIB00005464431
  • MoNA: CCMSLIB00005464453
  • MoNA: CCMSLIB00005464482
  • MoNA: EMBL_MCF_2_0_HRMS_Library000517
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_c_ms_1927
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_c_ms_1930
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_c_ms_1948
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_ms_ms_1556
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_ms_ms_1557
  • MoNA: HMDB0001401_ms_ms_1558
  • MoNA: KO000809
  • MoNA: KO000810
  • MoNA: KO000811
  • MoNA: KO000812
  • MoNA: KO000813
  • MoNA: KO002914
  • MoNA: KO002915
  • MoNA: KO002916
  • MoNA: KO002917
  • MoNA: KO002918
  • MoNA: KO009109
  • MoNA: KO009110
  • MoNA: KO009111
  • MoNA: KZ000202
  • MoNA: KZ000203
  • MoNA: MoNA024151
  • MoNA: MoNA024183
  • MoNA: PR100547
  • MoNA: PS020901
  • MoNA: PS020902
  • MoNA: PS020907
  • MoNA: PS020908
  • MoNA: PS020909
  • MoNA: PS020910
  • MoNA: RP023701
  • MoNA: RP023702
  • MoNA: RP023703
  • MoNA: RP023711
  • MoNA: RP023712
  • MoNA: RP023713
  • Metlin: METLIN_145
  • Coconut NaturalProduct: CNP0209092.2
  • Coconut NaturalProduct: CNP0209092.6

Class / Ontology

Metabolic Network
ID EC Number Name
KEGG:R00299 2.7.1.1 ATP:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R00303 3.1.3.9 D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase
KEGG:R00725 2.7.1.1 ITP:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R00771 5.3.1.9 D-glucose-6-phosphate aldose-ketose-isomerase
KEGG:R00834 1.1.1.200 D-sorbitol 6-phosphate:NADP+ 1-oxidoreductase
KEGG:R00835 1.1.1.49 D-glucose-6-phosphate:NADP+ 1-oxidoreductase
KEGG:R00836 2.4.1.15 UDP-glucose:D-glucose-6-phosphate 1-alpha-D-glucosyltransferase
KEGG:R00837 3.2.1.93 alpha,alpha-trehalose-6-phosphate phosphoglucohydrolase
KEGG:R00838 3.2.1.122 maltose-6'-phosphate 6-phosphoglucohydrolase
KEGG:R00839 3.2.1.86 6-phospho-beta-D-glucosyl-(1->4)-D-glucose 6-phosphoglucohydrolase
KEGG:R00850 2.7.1.142 sn-glycerol-3-phosphate:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R01139 2.7.1.1 dATP:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R02168 2.4.1.36 GDPglucose:D-glucose-6-phosphate 1-alpha-D-glucosyltransferase
KEGG:R02185 2.7.1.63 polyphosphate:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R03921 3.2.1.26 sucrose 6-phosphate fructohydrolase
KEGG:R05767 2.4.1.216 trehalose 6-phosphate:phosphate b-D-glucosyltransferase
KEGG:R05804 2.7.1.147 ADP:D-glucose 6-phosphotransferase
KEGG:R06043 2.4.1.15 UDP-glucose:D-glucose-6-phosphate 1-alpha-D-glucosyltransferase
KEGG:R06044 2.4.1.216 trehalose 6-phosphate:phosphate beta-D-glucosyltransferase
KEGG:R06112 3.2.1.86 G10518 + C00001<=>C00031 + C00092
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Organism Source

Taxonomy Source

  1. Arabidopsis thaliana [ncbi taxid: 3702]
  2. Escherichia coli [ncbi taxid: 562]

Pathway Synthetic

pathway id name
BioCyc:HUMAN_OXIDATIVEPENT-PWY pentose phosphate pathway (oxidative branch)
BioCyc:HUMAN_PWY-5661-1 GDP-glucose biosynthesis II
BioCyc:HUMAN_PWY66-400 glycolysis
BioCyc:META_PWY-4661 1D-myo-inositol hexakisphosphate biosynthesis III (Spirodela polyrrhiza)
BioCyc:META_PWY-5659 GDP-mannose biosynthesis
BioCyc:META_PWY-5941 glycogen degradation II
BioCyc:META_PWY66-422 D-galactose degradation V (Leloir pathway)
BioCyc:META_PWY-6317 D-galactose degradation I (Leloir pathway)
BioCyc:META_P341-PWY glycolysis V (Pyrococcus)
BioCyc:META_ANAGLYCOLYSIS-PWY glycolysis III (from glucose)
BioCyc:META_PWY-621 sucrose degradation III (sucrose invertase)
BioCyc:META_PWY-622 starch biosynthesis
BioCyc:META_SUCSYN-PWY sucrose biosynthesis I (from photosynthesis)
BioCyc:META_P122-PWY heterolactic fermentation
BioCyc:META_PWY-7328 superpathway of UDP-glucose-derived O-antigen building blocks biosynthesis
BioCyc:META_OXIDATIVEPENT-PWY pentose phosphate pathway (oxidative branch) I
BioCyc:META_PWY-2301 myo-inositol biosynthesis
BioCyc:ECO_GLUCOSE1PMETAB-PWY glucose and glucose-1-phosphate degradation
BioCyc:ECO_TRESYN-PWY trehalose biosynthesis I
BioCyc:ECO_GLUCONEO-PWY gluconeogenesis I
View All Pathways