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
calcium
Muscle requires glucose, and so there is not the same concentration of glucose in blood entering and exiting a muscle. The exiting blood will be lower in glucose.
A type of bal that can't be degraded.
carrier proteins transport glucose into a muscle cell
no
glucose
The degraded condition of the old building made it unsafe for occupancy.
It lacks the enzyme glucose 6-phosphatase.
nonrenewable
4 molecules of ATP are produced per molecule of glucose in glycolysis, but 2 are needed (used, degraded, etc.) to start the reaction, so there is really only a net gain of 2 ATP in the process of glycolysis.
Glycolosis (in the cytoplasm) and aerobic metabolism (in the mitochondria) are used to generate ATP from glucose in muscle cells.
Glucose is also converted to energy in muscle cells. When it comes to producing energy from glucose, muscle cells are, well, double-jointed