Cori Cycle
krebs cycle
gluconeogenesis or glyconeogenesis. It happens in the cori cicle, for instance - during exercise the muscles use the accumulated glucose to produce energy, producing lactate. Then the lactate goes in the blood stream and is used (mainly) in the liver to produce glucose again
Albert Szent-Györgyi received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1937 for his discoveries on vitamin C and the citric acid cycle, key components of the biochemical pathway that produces glucose.
Fermentation
Glycolysis is the metabolic pathway that turns glucose into pyruvate and can also produce glucose FROM pyruvate when working in reverse. The major details of this pathway were illuminated largely by three men: Jakub Karol Parnas, Gustav Embden, and Otto Meyerhof. Of these men, only Meyerhof would receive a Nobel Prize.
The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded for significant contributions to peace, not for scientific discoveries. The biochemical pathway used by plants to make glucose is called photosynthesis, and it is fundamental to the survival of all plants. However, no individual specifically received a Nobel Peace Prize for discovering this process.
Photosynthesis is referred to as a biochemical pathway because it involves a series of chemical reactions that occur within plant cells. These reactions convert light energy into chemical energy stored in the form of glucose. The process is highly regulated and involves multiple steps that are catalyzed by specific enzymes.
Nope. It forms ethanol (the stuff that gets you drunk). Vitamin C is formed in an extremely complicated biochemical pathway.
Photosynthesis is referred to as a biochemical pathway because it is a series of chemical reactions that take place in living organisms involving multiple enzymes and molecules to convert sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen. It is a complex process that involves various biochemical reactions within the cells of plants and other photosynthetic organisms.
The anaerobic pathway cellular respiration is known as glycolysis. In glycolysis, glucose molecules are broken down into two pyruvate molecules.Glycolysis is the only stage of cellular respiration which can occur without oxygen. The theoretical yield of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is 2 molecules for this first stage.
Feedback Inhibition
Enzymes involved in the formation of glucose include glucose-6-phosphatase, which converts glucose-6-phosphate to glucose, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, which catalyzes the conversion of oxaloacetate to phosphoenolpyruvate in the gluconeogenesis pathway. These enzymes play a crucial role in maintaining blood glucose levels during fasting or starvation.