glycolysis
Glucose
Pyruvic acid, also called pyruvate, is produced during glycolysis when the glucose molecule is split.
The glucose is split into 2 molecules of a three carbon compound
Glucose
When you split a disaccharide, such as sucrose or lactose, you will gain two monosaccharides as products. For example, splitting sucrose will yield glucose and fructose, while splitting lactose will yield glucose and galactose.
Its when glucose is split up into 2 three carbon sugars
During Glycolysis, Glucosemolecules are split into two pyruvates during a sequence of enzyme-controlled reactions. This occurs in both aerobic and anaerobic respiration.
It occurs 2x per glucose molecules.. But the thing is, I didn't know how that happen
The oxygen atoms in glucose primarily come from water molecules during the process of photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants take in water from the soil, split the water molecules, and release oxygen as a byproduct. The oxygen released is used in glucose synthesis.
The 3-carbon sugar formed when glucose is split in half during the Krebs cycle is called pyruvate. Pyruvate is a key intermediate in cellular respiration and is further broken down to generate energy in the form of ATP.
Disaccharides are easily split into monosaccharides in the intestine and absorbed.
at the end of glycolysis, there is 2 G3P molecules. there is also 2 CO2, 2ATP, 2 NADH