Cytokinesis
the kreb's cycle
fermentation will occur.
During the second stage of aerobic respiration (Krebs cycle), two carbons are removed in the form of carbon dioxide at each turn of the cycle. This occurs during the conversion of isocitrate to alpha-ketoglutarate and then from alpha-ketoglutarate to succinyl-CoA.
The two stages of respiration, glycolysis and cellular respiration (Krebs cycle and electron transport chain), occur in different parts of the cell. Glycolysis takes place in the cytoplasm, while the Krebs cycle and electron transport chain occur in the mitochondria.
Mutations can occur at any point during the cell cycle, but they are most likely to happen during the DNA replication phase, which is part of the interphase stage.
The second stage of cellular respiration, after glycolysis, occurs in the mitochondria. All of the stages of cellular respiration (after glycolysis in the cytoplasm) occur in the mitochondria.
The second stage of respiration is the Krebs cycle, also known as the citric acid cycle. During this stage, acetyl-CoA is broken down to produce carbon dioxide, ATP, and high-energy electrons. These high-energy electrons are then used in the last stage of respiration, the electron transport chain, to generate more ATP.
Ya, it is the second stage in respiration.
Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm during the first stage of respiration.
citric acid cycle or kreb's cycle
The second stage of cellular respiration is the transition phase. It links glycolysis with the Kreb's cycle. At this stage, the pyruvic acid is broken down into carbon dioxide in a series of energy-extracting reactions.
During the preparation steps in the second stage of aerobic respiration (Krebs cycle), two carbons depart as carbon dioxide in the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA. In the cycle proper, all six carbons that entered are released as carbon dioxide molecules in the form of three molecules of CO2.