Step 1: Understanding substrate-level phosphorylation.
Substrate-level phosphorylation is a process where a phosphate group is directly transferred from a substrate molecule to ADP, forming ATP. This occurs without the involvement of the electron transport chain or oxidative phosphorylation.
Step 2: Analyzing the options.
(A)ATP to phosphoenolpyruvate: Correct — In this reaction, a phosphate group is transferred to phosphoenolpyruvate, a key step in glycolysis and other metabolic pathways, illustrating substrate-level phosphorylation.
(B)GTP to ADP: This is a transfer of phosphate but not from a substrate molecule directly to ADP, making it incorrect for substrate-level phosphorylation.
(C)ATP to lipids: This is not a case of phosphorylation; it is related to lipid synthesis, making it incorrect.
(D)phosphoenolpyruvate to ADP: While phosphoenolpyruvate is involved in a phosphorylation reaction, it's not the correct form of substrate-level phosphorylation as described in this question.
Step 3: Conclusion.
The correct answer is (A)ATP to phosphoenolpyruvate, as it exemplifies substrate-level phosphorylation.
Which one of the following matches is CORRECT between the inhibitors given in Group A with their modes of action in Group B?
\[\begin{array}{|c|c|} \hline Group A & Group B \\ \hline \text{(P) Antimycin A} & \text{(i) Inhibits cytochrome c oxidase} \\ \hline \text{(Q) Amytal} & \text{(ii) Blocks electron transfer from cyt b to cyt c1} \\ \hline \text{(R) Carbon monoxide} & \text{(iii) Inhibits adenine nucleotide translocase} \\ \hline \text{(S) Atractyloside} & \text{(iv) Prevents electron transfer from Fe-S centers of complex 1 to ubiquinone} \\ \hline \end{array}\]