glucose production will stop.
The mitochondria in the cell yields NADPH as well as ATP. NADPH is used to turn carbon dioxide into glucose.
Oxygen is produced as a by-product while energy carriers, NADPH and ATP, are produced for the next step in the process, the Calvin cycle.
In the Calvin cycle, ATP and NADPH are generated during the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis. These reactions occur in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts, where light energy is captured and used to split water molecules, releasing oxygen and producing ATP and NADPH through electron transport chains. The ATP provides the energy, while NADPH supplies the reducing power needed for the synthesis of glucose from carbon dioxide.
NADPH is created in the stroma of the chloroplasts during the light reactions of photosynthesis. It accumulates in the stroma where it is used in the Calvin cycle to help convert carbon dioxide into sugars.
The Reactants for the Light-Independent Cycle(Calvin Cycle) are ATP, CO2, and NADPH
NADPH is reduced NADP (Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate) and is used as a reducing agent. NADPH oxidises to form NADP. In plants, NADP is reduced in the last step of the electron chain of the light reactions of photosynthesis. The NADPH produced is then used as a reducing agent in the Calvin cycle of photosynthesis. NADPH is used in catabolic processes.
The mitochondria in the cell yields NADPH as well as ATP. NADPH is used to turn carbon dioxide into glucose.
Oxygen is produced as a by-product while energy carriers, NADPH and ATP, are produced for the next step in the process, the Calvin cycle.
there are two products. those are NADPH and ATP.
ATP and NADPH
proteins
NADPH becomes oxidized to NADP+, losing the electrons it carried. The electrons are typically used in cellular processes, such as in photosynthesis or cellular respiration, and NADP+ can then pick up more electrons to become NADPH again.
In the Calvin cycle, ATP and NADPH are generated during the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis. These reactions occur in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts, where light energy is captured and used to split water molecules, releasing oxygen and producing ATP and NADPH through electron transport chains. The ATP provides the energy, while NADPH supplies the reducing power needed for the synthesis of glucose from carbon dioxide.
After light hits photosystem I, its energy is used to produce NADPH through the process of photochemical reduction. NADPH is an important molecule that plays a key role in carrying and transferring electrons for various metabolic reactions in the cell.
NADPH is the key reducing agent formed in the pentose phosphate pathway during glucose oxidation. NADPH is used to fuel biosynthetic pathways and antioxidant defenses in the cell.
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ATP and NADPH