because it is
Fermentation allows glycolosis to take place. Glycolysis is a process during which, 2 ATP are used to produce 4 ATP, for a net profit of 2 ATP. When oxygen is not present, fermentation allows Glycolysis to continue by creating 2 ATP which are then used to restart the process of glycolysis. Even though the amount of ATP created is small, the process is still able to continue.
glycolysis
because from glycolisis comes pyruvate, and then it is turned into acetylCoA. Without acetylCoA, nothgn will be able to enter the Krebs Cycle, otherwise known as the Citric acid cycle. Once the AcetylCoA comes in, after the prep cycle, it can then bind to RuBp, turnign into a six carbon sugar.
Fermentation is anaerobic respiration. Glycolysis is part of aerobic respiration. The pathways for both processes, however, are almost identical to each other.
everything is true execpt th e "NADPH" part. It's NADH not NADPH. hope this helps:)
Two NADH molecules are produced in glycolysis for each glucose molecule that is catabolized. NADH is generated through the reduction of NAD+ during the conversion of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate as part of the glycolytic pathway.
Glycolysis. In fermentation, glycolysis is the primary means by which energy is created. In cellular respiration, glycolysis creates pyruvic acid, which then enters the mitochondria and is further processed to create more ATP. Note, glycolysis is not a very efficient means of creating ATP (the primary source of energy in cells). Glycolysis only creates two ATP, while cellular respiration can create as much as 38.
Glycolysis is the metabolic pathway within cellular respiration that breaks down glucose into pyruvate. This process takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell and generates ATP and NADH as energy molecules.
Question ispartiallywrong as fermentation is part of cellular respiration, question should be about similarities and differences in aerobic and anaerobic respiration. Cellular respiration is comprised of 3 stages , 1 glycolysis , 2 Krebs cycle and 3 electron transport chain .Fermentation is approximately similar to glycolysis except last step .
It takes place in the cytoplasm.It yields two ATPS,two NADH and two pyruvates
Fermentation is not as efficient as aerobic respiration in producing ATP, as it only yields 2 ATP per glucose molecule compared to 36 ATP in aerobic respiration. However, fermentation can be useful in anaerobic conditions when oxygen is limited, allowing cells to continue producing ATP to sustain basic cellular functions.
Glycolysis is NOT a pathway in the oxidation of glucose. Glycolysis is actually the first step in the breakdown of glucose and serves to produce pyruvate, which can then enter either the aerobic citric acid cycle or anaerobic fermentation pathways for further oxidation.