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carrier proteins transport glucose into a muscle cell
Glycogen is the storage form of glucose in the muscle cell. Glycogen can be used for energy.
according to what i read online it's the blood glucose, as the muscle leaves this blood for the brain use, because brain doesn't store glucose or glycogen as liver and muscle, and the only supply of glucose to brain is via blood glucose
Mitochondria in the cell use oxygen when breaking down glucose.
In a eukaryotic cell, the mitochondria make chemical energy found in glucose molecules available for use by the cell.
carrier proteins transport glucose into a muscle cell
Glucose
The glucose goes through the intesine wall, into the blood and is carried around until it reaches the calf muscle cells. Once there it will taken in the cells by carrier proteins which are embedded in the cell membrane (this is because it is not lipid soluable and can't not simply go through the cell membrane like water, oxgen, carbon dioxide etc). The glucose will then be used the mitondria in the cell.
Glucose is a supplier of energy to the cells. Cells use the glucose as well as fats for fuel.
the highway to hell
Yeast can use glucose as their primary energy source.
conversion of glucose to energy, glucose molecule. Muscle and brain cells like this, because they use lots of ATP.