From the intermembrane space to the inner matrix
The molecule formed when hydrogen ions flow down the electrochemical gradient through ATP synthesis complexes in mitochondria is adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This process is known as oxidative phosphorylation, and it involves the production of ATP from the energy released by the flow of hydrogen ions through ATP synthase.
Protons (H+) flow across the thylakoid membrane during photosynthesis, creating a proton gradient. This gradient is used by ATP synthase to generate ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate.
once hydrogen ions are outside the membrane they are allowed to flow back in. this flow is changed to energy that is stored in the bonds of new molecules.
sunlight
RNA does not have thymine in its structure because it uses uracil instead. Thymine is replaced by uracil in RNA to maintain the genetic information flow from DNA to RNA during protein synthesis.
Protons (H+) accumulate in the outer compartment of the mitochondria during electron transport phosphorylation. This forms an electrochemical gradient that drives ATP synthesis as protons flow back into the mitochondrial matrix through ATP synthase.
The molecule formed when hydrogen ions flow down the electrochemical gradient through ATP synthesis complexes in mitochondria is adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This process is known as oxidative phosphorylation, and it involves the production of ATP from the energy released by the flow of hydrogen ions through ATP synthase.
During cellular respiration, hydrogen ions are moved across the inner mitochondrial membrane through the electron transport chain. This movement creates an electrochemical gradient that drives ATP synthesis through ATP synthase. The flow of hydrogen ions back through ATP synthase powers the phosphorylation of ADP to ATP.
Mitochondria utilize facilitated diffusion to generate energy by allowing hydrogen ions (H⁺) to flow through a membrane protein known as ATP synthase. This process occurs during oxidative phosphorylation, where the flow of H⁺ ions down their concentration gradient drives the synthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. The movement of these ions is aided by the electrochemical gradient established by the electron transport chain.
Downhill would be the only sure answer. Depending on the river they will flow in many different directions during the course of their travels. The Nile moves North, the Mississippi moves South, the Amazon goes mostly East.
Mitochondria use facilitated diffusion for the transport of hydrogen ions (H⁺) through a protein known as ATP synthase. This process occurs during oxidative phosphorylation, where the flow of H⁺ ions down their concentration gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane drives the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This mechanism is crucial for energy production in aerobic respiration.
The top part of ATP synthase uses the energy from the flow of hydrogen ions to rotate a rotor, which in turn causes conformational changes in the enzyme that drive the synthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. This process is known as chemiosmosis and is a vital step in cellular respiration for producing energy in the form of ATP.
It flows NORTH
yes.. the nile does
Fatty
The flow of information from DNA to mRNA during gene expression is called transcription. During this process, an RNA polymerase enzyme reads the DNA template and synthesizes a complementary strand of messenger RNA (mRNA). This mRNA then serves as a template for protein synthesis during translation.
DNA to RNA to protein