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According to my knowledfe Photorespiration is the respiration from the organ level to the cellular level.
This is anaerobic respiration, also called fermentation or substrate level phosphorylation
substrate-level phosphorylationoxidative phosphorylationphotophosphorylation
Yes, actually. Algae at different depths below sea level have adapted over time to use the available light for cell respiration.
Oxidative phosphorylation (contrast substrate-level phosphorylation) is the process of ATP generation during aerobic cellular respiration. It is accomplished through a process of chemiosmosis, wherein H+ ions are concentrated on one side of mtichondrial membranes, creating an electrochemical gradient which is equilibrated when hydrogen ions (protons) pass through the enzyme ATP synthase, resulting in rotation of the protein and phosphorylation of ADP to ATP.
According to my knowledfe Photorespiration is the respiration from the organ level to the cellular level.
6mol
If a cell's mitochondrium fails, glycolysis is the only means of energy production via substrate level phosphorylation.
This is anaerobic respiration, also called fermentation or substrate level phosphorylation
Cellular respiration
Nutrition, Digestion, Response, Excretion, Cellular Respiration, etc.
ATP is produced by substrate level phosphorylation during glycolisis. There is no oxidative phosphorylation in fermentation since it's an anaeorobic respiration.
substrate-level phosphorylationoxidative phosphorylationphotophosphorylation
In glycolysis, ATP molecules are produced by? a- oxidative phosphorylation b-substrate-level phosphorylation c-cellular respiration d-photophosphorylation e-photosynthesis
explain how respiration (breathing) is related to cellular respiration in terms of equilibrium what the heck kind of answer is that it just rephrases the question
Aerobic respiration occurs in the presence oxygen and creates a maximum of 38 ATP, while anaerobic respiration occurs in the absence of oxygen and creates a maximum of 2 ATP. aerobic respiration has both substrate level and oxidative phosphorylation while anaerobic respiration has only substrate level phosphorlyation. also, but use glycolysis. in anaerobic respiration, the final electron acceptor is an organic molecule such as pyruvate or acetaldehyde, but in respiration, the final acceptor is oxygen.
100%. Substrate level phosphorylation accounts for about 10% of ATP generated by respiration. The other 90% is generated by oxidative phosphorylation.