Glucose is a pivotal monosaccharide in biochemistry, serving as the primary energy source for cells. It is a hexose sugar with the molecular formula C6H12O6, characterized by six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms, and six oxygen atoms.
Chemical Structure and Forms
Glucose predominantly exists in two structural forms: an open-chain aldehyde and cyclic hemiacetal forms. The open-chain form features a six-carbon unbranched chain with an aldehyde group at the first carbon and five hydroxyl (-OH) groups attached to the other carbons. In aqueous solution, glucose cyclizes to form mainly a six-membered pyranose ring, with some presence of five-membered furanose forms. The ring formation stabilizes the molecule and is fundamental for its biological function.
Transport and Cellular Uptake
Glucose transport across cell membranes is facilitated by specialized transport proteins since glucose is not permeable to lipid bilayers due to its polarity and size. In most cells, glucose enters via facilitated diffusion mediated by GLUT family transporters, with GLUT1 common in nerve cells and GLUT4 in muscle and fat cells. In the intestine and kidney proximal tubules, glucose is absorbed actively through sodium-glucose co-transporters (SGLTs).
Metabolic Pathways
Upon cellular entry, glucose is phosphorylated to glucose-6-phosphate by hexokinase or glucokinase, trapping it inside the cell. Glucose-6-phosphate serves as a central metabolic hub: it can enter glycolysis for ATP production, the pentose phosphate pathway for NADPH production and nucleotide synthesis, or be stored as glycogen in liver and muscle cells.
Physiological Relevance
Glucose homeostasis is tightly regulated by hormonal signals, principally insulin and glucagon. Insulin promotes glucose uptake and storage after meals, while glucagon triggers glucose release during fasting. Dysregulation of glucose metabolism is central to diseases such as diabetes mellitus.
Glucose is a central biochemical fuel with a well-defined chemical structure and diverse roles in energy metabolism, biosynthesis, and energy storage. Its transport mechanisms and enzymatic transformations reflect an evolutionarily optimized system for cellular energy management.

