Three phases are there in cellular respiration, those are Glycolysis, Krebs cycle or TCA cycle and ETS (Electron transport system), glycolysis occurs in cytocol or cytoplasm, Krebscycle occurs in mitochondrial matrix and the electron transport occrus in cristae of mitochondira.
Short Answer 34. In eukaryotes, where do the reactions of cellular respiration occur?
1. What is the overall goal of cellular respiration? What are the reactants of cellular respiration? What are the products of cellular respiration? 2. Why is cellular respiration also called aerobic respiration? 3. Is glucose oxidized or reduced? Is oxygen oxidized or reduced? 4. Why is it important that there are many small intermediate steps in cellular respiration rather than one or two short bursts of metabolic energy? 5. What critical role does NAD+ and FAD play in cellular respiration?...
why is the total ATP generated from cellular respiration different for prokaryotes compared to eukaryotes?
5. What critical role does NAD+ and FAD play in cellular respiration? 6. List the major reactions of cellular respiration. Where does each reaction occur inside the cell? 7. What two types of reactions are anaerobic? What is the difference between glycolysis and fermentation? 8. What are the advantages and disadvantages of fermentation? What is the difference between bacterial fermentation and yeast fermentation?
What will occur if oxygen is not available in great enough quantity during cellular respiration? O A) Cellular respiration will shift towards anaerobic respiration. OB) The number of ATP produced will increase. c) Oxygen will start to diffuse at a greater rate in order to make up for the deficiency. O D) Nothing will change since oxygen is not required for cellular respiration. E) CO2 will not be able to fix itself to the Calvin cycle.
Ch. 9 11) What are the four steps of cellular respiration? What are the initial reactants and final products from each of these steps (include NADH and FADH2)? Where do they occur in the cell/mitochondria? 12) Why is the pyruvate processing step necessary? Why not go straight to the citric acid cycle? 13) What is homeostasis? How does cellular respiration play a role in anabolic reactions (think intermediates)? 14) How are the first three steps of cellular respiration regulated? 15)...
Question 6 During aerobic respiration, which of the following answer choices correctly models the flow of electrons through cellular respiration? Select only ONE answer choice. food → citric acid cycle ATP NAD+ food →NADH → electron transport chain → H2O glucose ATP → electron transport chain → NADH food → glycolysis →citric acid cycle → ATP → NADHQuestion 7 At the end of the Citric Acid Cycle, where is most of the energy that was contained in the chemical bonds of glucose? Select only ONE answer choice. In...
The cellular respiration can occur with (aerobic) or without (anaerobic) the presence of oxygen. Under what condition might our own cells use anaerobic respiration and why?
Where is oxygen used? Where’s CO2 released in cellular respiration? 6.Where is most of the ATP made? 7.What is the point/purpose of fermentation? 8.Why does bread have holes? 9.How is beer/wine made? What is the live organism that does this? 10.Do humans do fermentation? Why? 11.What limits us from doing cellular respiration?
Categorize dehydration synthesis reactions, hydrolysis reactions, photosynthesis and cellular respiration as either exergonic or endergonic
BIOL200, Exercise 11+12 Fill in the table below for cellular respiration and each stage of cellular respiration Stage Products Where Does it Occur Starting Molecules Co, released? (Y/N) 0, Used? (Y/N) Cellular Respiration Glycolysis Pyruvate Processing/Oxidation Krebs Cycle Oxidative Phosphorylation Electron Transport Chemiosmosis 1. What would happen if you stopped cellular respiration in an animal? Briefly explain your answer 4. What would happen to each of the following if we add a chemical that destroys the H+ gradient across the...