Glycogen phosphorylase, concerned with the breakdown of glycogen, is activated by phosphorylation and inactivated by dephosphorylation. By using common kinases and phosphatases, glycogen synthase can be activated when glycogen phosphorylase is inactivated, and vice versa.
There is an excellent linear correlation between the activity of glycogen synthase a (active form) and the rate of glycogen synthesis in liver. This positive correlation is also observed in fast-twitch skeletal muscle, where glycolysis from glycogen is a vital source of ATP for contraction.
(Medical Sciences - Jeannette Naish, Patricia Revest & Denise Syndercombe Court, p. 102)
I'm not sure if I understand the last sentence. How can glycolysis be a source for ATP if glycolysis is a process by which, indeed, ATP is produced, but it is not a substance. Glucose is a source which can be obtained from glycogen by glycogenolysis, which subsequently can be used to produce ATP.
Can anyone elaborate on this quote from one of my textbooks? I don't really 'get' it, especially the underlined part. My understanding of biochemistry is fairly limited.
Thank you in advance.