No
No. Cellular respiration uses NADH as an electron carrier. NADPH is used in photosynthesis.
Cellular respiration uses oxygen.
Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are both cellular processes organisms use to obtain energy.
Cellular Respiration Relationship In plants, plants use the outputs of photosynthesis (sugar, oxygen) as the inputs of cellular respiration. They then use the outputs of cellular respiration as the inputs of photosynthesis. It is a cycle.
Glucose is the primary raw material / reactant required to generate pyruvate, which is then used in the Krebs cycle. In the process of cellular respiration, oxygen is introduced into the Krebs cycle to generate NADPH and ATP for energy for cells.
No. Cellular respiration uses NADH as an electron carrier. NADPH is used in photosynthesis.
ATP and NADPH.
The oxidative phase of the pentose phosphate pathway
NADPH becomes oxidized to NADP+, losing the electrons it carried. The electrons are typically used in cellular processes, such as in photosynthesis or cellular respiration, and NADP+ can then pick up more electrons to become NADPH again.
3 or 6
NADPH electrons are ultimately derived from the high-energy electrons transferred from nutrients such as glucose during cellular respiration. These electrons are transferred through a series of reactions that generate NADPH in the cell.
Through cellular respiration
Cellular respiration uses oxygen.
Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are both cellular processes organisms use to obtain energy.
Cellular Respiration Relationship In plants, plants use the outputs of photosynthesis (sugar, oxygen) as the inputs of cellular respiration. They then use the outputs of cellular respiration as the inputs of photosynthesis. It is a cycle.
No
Glucose is the primary raw material / reactant required to generate pyruvate, which is then used in the Krebs cycle. In the process of cellular respiration, oxygen is introduced into the Krebs cycle to generate NADPH and ATP for energy for cells.