Q.53 Phosphoglucoisomerase catalyzes the following reaction:
Glu-6-P ⇌ Fru-6-P
If 0.05% of the original concentration of Glu-6-P remains at equilibrium, then the equilibrium constant of this reaction is________.
Understanding the Question
Phosphoglucoisomerase catalyzes the reversible isomerization:
Glu‑6‑P ⇌ Fru‑6‑P
At the start, only Glu‑6‑P is present with some initial concentration C₀.
At equilibrium, only 0.05% of the original Glu‑6‑P remains unconverted.
This means:
- Fraction of Glu‑6‑P left = 0.05% = 0.05/100 = 5×10⁻⁴
- Fraction converted to product Fru‑6‑P = 1−5×10⁻⁴ = 0.9995
Step-by-Step Solution
Let the initial concentration of Glu‑6‑P = C₀ and initial Fru‑6‑P = 0.
At equilibrium:
- [Glu‑6‑P]eq = 0.0005 C₀ (because only 0.05% remains).
- The amount converted to Fru‑6‑P is C₀ − 0.0005 C₀ = 0.9995 C₀, so
- [Fru‑6‑P]eq = 0.9995 C₀.
For the reaction
Glu‑6‑P ⇌ Fru‑6‑P,
the equilibrium constant expression is
K = [Fru‑6‑P]eq / [Glu‑6‑P]eq.
Substitute the equilibrium concentrations (the C₀ cancels):
K = (0.9995 C₀) / (0.0005 C₀) = 0.9995 / 0.0005 ≈ 1999 ≈ 2.0×10³.
So, the equilibrium constant K is about 2×10³.
This large value means the reaction strongly favors Fru‑6‑P at equilibrium, with almost all Glu‑6‑P converted.
SEO-Friendly Explanation
In biochemical thermodynamics, calculating the phosphoglucoisomerase equilibrium constant for Glu‑6‑P to Fru‑6‑P helps quantify how strongly a reaction favors product formation. In this example, only 0.05% of glucose‑6‑phosphate is left at equilibrium, so almost all substrate is converted into fructose‑6‑phosphate.
Because the equilibrium constant is defined as the ratio of product concentration to reactant concentration, K = [Fru‑6‑P]/[Glu‑6‑P], the very small remaining fraction of Glu‑6‑P leads to a very high K value of about 2×10³. This high equilibrium constant clearly indicates that, under standard conditions, the phosphoglucoisomerase reaction is strongly product‑favored toward fructose‑6‑phosphate.


