Two Co2 molecules are produced per citric acid cycle. Since the citric acid cycle occurs twice with every molecule of glucose metabolized, a total of 4 C02 molecules are produces for every glucose molecule
During the Krebs cycle, one molecule of water (H2O) is produced for each round of the cycle. At the end of the cycle, a total of two molecules of water per molecule of glucose are generated.
6
In a complete Krebs Cycle, 24 ATP are produced. Every glucose molecule produces 2 ATP, and there are 12 glucose molecules.
2ATP+6NADH2+2FADH2+4CO2 per glucose molecule
The Krebs cycle produces a total of 2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule.
Acetyl coenzyme A is produced twice from one molecule of glucose in the process of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. Each glucose molecule is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate during glycolysis, and each pyruvate molecule is converted to one molecule of acetyl CoA before entering the citric acid cycle.
The maximum number of ATP molecules that can be produced from each glucose molecule in aerobic respiration is 36-38 ATP molecules. This occurs through glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain.
The Krebs cycle produces 1 ATP molecule per cycle through substrate-level phosphorylation. Since the cycle completes twice for each glucose molecule entering glycolysis, a total of 2 ATP molecules are generated from the Krebs cycle per glucose molecule metabolized.
During glycolysis, 2 NADH molecules are produced. During the citric acid cycle, 6 NADH molecules are produced. Therefore, a total of 8 NADH molecules are produced during the complete breakdown of one molecule of glucose.
The Krebs cycle runs twice for each molecule of glucose consumed.
In aerobic respiration, one glucose molecule typically produces 36-38 ATP molecules through glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and the electron transport chain. In anaerobic respiration, such as fermentation, the number of ATP molecules produced is lower, around 2 ATP molecules.