The pentose phosphate pathway is an alternative metabolic pathway for glucose oxidation in which no ATP is generated. Its principal products are NADPH, a reducing agent required in several anabolic processes, and ribose-5-phosphate, a structural component of nucleotides and nucleic acids. The pentose phosphate pathway occurs in the cytoplasm in two phases: oxidative and nonoxidative. In the oxidative phase of the pathway, the conversion of glucose-6-phosphate to ribulose-5-phosphate is accompanied by the production of two molecules of NADPH. The nonoxidative phase involves the isomerization and condensation of a number of different sugar molecules. Three intermediates in this process that are useful in other pathways are ribose-5-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, and gly ceraldehyde-3-phosphate.