After glycolysis (the splitting of one glucose molecule, first step in cellular respiration in the mitochondria of a cell) the Krebs cycle, and going through the electron transport chain and ATP synthase...one glucose molecule can yield 38 ATP molecules.
To produce one molecule of glucose, six molecules of G3P are required.
Acetyl coenzyme A is produced twice from one molecule of glucose in the process of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. Each glucose molecule is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate during glycolysis, and each pyruvate molecule is converted to one molecule of acetyl CoA before entering the citric acid cycle.
2 ATP are produced in anaerobic respiration(fermentation)
Six molecules of G3P are required to produce one molecule of glucose during the Calvin cycle.
6 molecules of carbon dioxide can form 6 molecules of glucose through the process of photosynthesis.
In anaerobic respiration one glucose molecule produces a net gain of two ATP molecules (four ATP molecules are produced during glycolysis but two are required by enzymes used during the process). In aerobic respiration a molecule of glucose is much more profitable in that a net worth of 34 ATP molecules are generated (32 gross with two being required in the process).
If cellular respiration begins with two molecules of glucose, a total of about 76 molecules of ATP can be generated through the process of glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation. This is because each molecule of glucose yields approximately 38 molecules of ATP through the complete process of cellular respiration.
Six oxygen molecules are released when one glucose molecule is formed.
To produce one molecule of glucose, six molecules of G3P are required.
Acetyl coenzyme A is produced twice from one molecule of glucose in the process of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. Each glucose molecule is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate during glycolysis, and each pyruvate molecule is converted to one molecule of acetyl CoA before entering the citric acid cycle.
During the Krebs cycle, one molecule of water (H2O) is produced for each round of the cycle. At the end of the cycle, a total of two molecules of water per molecule of glucose are generated.
There are 2 FAD and NAD and molecules. This is to breakdown each glucose molecule.
It takes 2 monosaccharide molecules to form a maltose molecule. Those are 2 glucose molecules. So 2 glucose molecules join together to make 1 maltose molecule.
One molecule of glucose is capable of being metabolized into 6 molecules of CO2.
About 36 ATP molecules for every glucose molecule.
2
Two monosaccharides are needed to form one maltose molecule. Specifically, maltose is comprised of two glucose molecules joined together through a condensation reaction, which releases a molecule of water.