Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing glucose to pyruvate
improvement Glucose is starting molecule for glycolysis.
The starting products of glycolysis are glucose and 2 ATP molecules.
Glucose is not a product of glycolysis. Glucose is the starting molecule in the glycolysis pathway, and through a series of enzymatic reactions, it is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate along with ATP and NADH being generated.
Two molecules of pyruvate are the end product of glycolysis.
It has 2 ATP molecules.
ATP molecules.
The starting products of glycolysis are glucose and 2 ATP molecules.
The starting molecule for glycolysis is glucose. Glucose is a simple sugar that enters the glycolysis pathway to be broken down into smaller molecules, generating energy through a series of chemical reactions.
Glucose is not a product of glycolysis. Glucose is the starting molecule in the glycolysis pathway, and through a series of enzymatic reactions, it is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate along with ATP and NADH being generated.
Four
Water is not a product of glycolysis. Glycolysis produces 2 molecules of pyruvate, 2 molecules of NADH, and also 2 molecules of ATP.
The product of glycolysis is pyruvic acid.
The net end products of glycolysis are two Pyruvate, two NADH, and two ATP.
Two molecules of pyruvate are the end product of glycolysis.
In glycolysis, glucose is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate. The substances involved in glycolysis include glucose, ATP, NAD, and ADP. The end product of glycolysis is two molecules of pyruvate, along with a net gain of two ATP molecules and two NADH molecules.
It starts off with glucose and exits glycolysis with 2 Pyruvic Acid molecules.
Glycolysis produces a net of 2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule.
It has 2 ATP molecules.