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Yes. Two carbon dioxide molecules for each molecule of glucose entering glycolysis.
80%
carbon dioxide :p
carbon dioxideCarbon Dioxide
carbon dioxideAerobic- Carbon Dioxide and WaterAnaerobic- Carbon Dioxide and Alcohol
The breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide and water occurs during glycolysis and aerobic respiration in cellular respiration. The carbon dioxide is a waste product.
Yes. Two carbon dioxide molecules for each molecule of glucose entering glycolysis.
80%
Glycolysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycolysis
During the Krebs cycle, pyruvic acid from glycolysis is used to make carbon dioxide, NADH, ATP, and FADH2.
During the Krebs cycle, pyruvic acid from glycolysis is used to make carbon dioxide, NADH, ATP, and FADH2.
Carbon dioxide is released in aerobic respiration during the second stage of reactions. Enzymes break down the pyruvate created during glycolysis (the first stage) into C02. The second stage is also called the Krebs Cycle
In glycolisis six-carbon sugar glucose are oxidized into two three-carbon compounds with the production of a small amount of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Glycolysis has two basic functions in the cell. First, it metabolizes simple six-carbon sugars to smaller three-carbon compounds that are then either fully metabolized by the mitochondria to produce carbon dioxide and a large amount of ATP or used for the synthesis of fat for storage. Second, glycolysis functions to producea small amount of ATP, which is essential for some cells solely dependent on that pathway for the generation of energy.
enzyme-assisted anaerobic process that breaks down one six-carbon molecule of glucose to two three-carbon pyruvates
yes. NO. Glycolysis does not produce carbon dioxide. In aerobic respiration, carbon dioxide is produced in the citric acid (or Krebs cycle) which is a different step of the metabolic breakdown of glucose.
Glycolysis is the process during which glucose is broken in half, and produces pyruvic acid (3-carbon compound)
carbon dioxide :p