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Bacteria. It uses the process called chemosynthesis to produce glucose.
its a gram negative anaerobic bacteria used to ferment glucose and produce ethanol.
The are gram negative bacillus shaped bacteria. They are facultative anaerobic bacteria. They ferment the glucose to produce acid and gas. They ferment the sulfur containing amino acids to produce H2S gas. They do not ferment the lactose.
Most, if not all, organisms can produce glucose. Humans and other animals can produce glucose when necessary from other carbohydrates and intermediates (such as glycogen, lactate and pyruvate). This requires, at some point, consumption of autotrophs, to provide the energy and carbon required to produce glucose. Autotrophs can produce glucose (directly or indirectly) from inorganic molecules (i.e., not from eating other organisms). Photosynthetic organisms (photoautotrophs) are autotrophs that specifically produce glucose from light energy. This includes plants, algae and some bacteria (e.g. cyanobacteria).
Bacteria take glucose through food or photosynthesis.Virus do not get glucose.
Glucose does not produce photosynthesis, you have it backwards. Photosynthesis produces glucose.
Genetically modified bacteria can be used to produce. This is a transgenic bacteria.
Simple sugars, such as glucose and fructose, are most rapidly metabolized by plaque.
microbial plaque(Bacteria) + time period + Food ( Glucose ) comprise decay triangle which produce lactic acid and can cause demineraliztion.
because if we do not have glucose we cannot produce a glucose..
No. Glucose is a polysaccharide (also called a sugar). Bacteria are living organisms that are classified as prokaryotes because they do not have a nucleus.
Yes. Bacteria do produce toxins. Usually gram positive bacteria produce exo-toxins and gram negative bacteria produce endo-toxins.