a carrier protein
The reactions of anaerobic respiration take place in the cytoplasm.
The anaerobic phase of cellular respiration is known as glygolysis. This is where glucose molecules are broken down into pyruvic acid.During this process, 2 molecules of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is produced.
Glycolysis does not happen in the mitochondria. It takes place in the cytoplasm. Therefore those organisms (prokaryotes) are also capable of glycolysis that do not actually have mitochondria. In the biological oxidation of glucose, glycolysis is the first step of three, and the only one that is possible without mitochondria. The last two steps, that is the citric acid cycle (Krebs-cycle) and terminal oxidation occur in the mitochondria.
No, glycolysis does not require oxygen. It is the process of breaking down glucose into pyruvate to produce a small amount of ATP and occurs in the cytoplasm of cells, independent of oxygen availability.
Glucose. Without the glucose the plants starve.
The reactions of anaerobic respiration take place in the cytoplasm.
No.
Not without expending an absurd amount of money
In human, it starts from mitochondria, then goes to the cytoplasm, and the actual glucose is made in the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum. The process is long and most of it is the reverse of glycolysis.
Every single cell on this Earth has cytoplasm. Without cytoplasm cells would not be able to transport vital materials.
They ride in "thermals," updrafts of air.
The cell membrane - without which cytoplasm is meaningless - serves to contain cytoplasm just as a wall would contain a city.
The cell membrane surrounds the cytoplasm of a cell and defines the boundaries of the cell.
In anaerobic respiration, glucose is partially broken down into pyruvate through glycolysis. Pyruvate is then converted into lactic acid in animals or ethanol in microorganisms, with no oxygen required for this process. This allows for the production of ATP in the absence of oxygen.
The anaerobic phase of cellular respiration is known as glygolysis. This is where glucose molecules are broken down into pyruvic acid.During this process, 2 molecules of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is produced.
No, in anaerobic respiration, the first step is glycolysis, which occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell. This process converts glucose into pyruvate and generates ATP without the need for oxygen.
glucose is oxidised in 2 ways -with oxygen (aerobic) -without oxygen(anaerobic) aerobic respiration takes place in mitochondria . glucose in cytoplasm forms pyruvic acid is converted into carbon di oxide 38 ATP of energy and water anaerobic respiration may take place in muscle cells or RBCs in this glucose is converted into pyruvic acid in cytoplasm which changes to -lactic acid, water and 2 ATP of energy in muscle cells and RBCs -in yeast anaerobic respiration takes place pyruvic acid formed from glucose is converted to form alchohol and water as well as 2 ATP of energy