It's called the Krebs Cycle; anaerobic glycolysis, b oxidation and removal of acetyl CoA
by the Krebs Cycle all generate ATP.
The substrate level phosphorylation is the processes that is used to the ATP produced by glycolysis. This is because ATP is formed by the substrate or glucose.
Nothing, pyruvic acid is the primary substrate used in gluconeogenesis or reverse glycolysis.
2
2 ATP molecules are used, therefore 4 produced.
No, CO2 is not used in glycolysis.
There is a gross of four ATP produced during glycolysis, and two are used, which leaves a net gain of two. Therefore, two ATP are used in glycolysis.
Nothing, pyruvic acid is the primary substrate used in gluconeogenesis or reverse glycolysis.
2
2 ATP molecules are used, therefore 4 produced.
More ATP is produced than is used.
Glycolysis produces large quantities of NADH producing large amounts of energy. Glycolysis can also be carried out throughout the cell, which gives it an advantage over the TCA and Oxidative phosphorylation cycles that occur in the mitochondria. (:
In aerobic respiration, one molecule of glucose yields 38 ATP molecules, eight produced during glycolysis, six from the link reaction and 24 from the Krebs cycle. The net gain is 36 ATP, as two of the ATP molecules produced from glycolysis are used up in the re-oxidation of the hydrogen carrier molecule NAD. Therefore; There are 38 ATP molecules produced but net gain is 36 ATP
Glycolysis takes 2 ATP and creates 4 ATP. The net ATP production of Glycolysis is 2ATP.
The efficiency of glycolysis is not very good. For every molecule of ATP used, only TWO molecules of ATP are produced.
More ATP is produced than is used.
No, CO2 is not used in glycolysis.
2 molecules of ATP are used and 4 molecules of ATP are produced.
Glycolysis (for cellular respiration) and cooking (to make food sweet).