Biology, asked by HelloMrBreezyIamABig, 5 months ago

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Both anaerobic and aerobic respiration use _________ to produce ATP and NADH. In anaerobic respiration, NADH is regenerated to NAD+ by ___________, while in aerobic respiration, electrons from NADH are deposited in the ____________ to regenerate NAD+. Anaerobic respiration produces ____________ ATP per molecule of glucose compared to aerobic respiration.

Answers

Answered by dikshitamanik
2

Answer:

in first ,.disappear, and nadh is regenrated to nad by

Answered by sudhub46
9

Answer:

1. Glycolysis

2. Fermentation pathways

3. Electron Transport chain

4. Less ATP

Explanation:

Anaerobic respiration involves breakdown of glucose molecule to produce energy in the absence of oxygen, while during aerobic respiration, glucose completely breaks down to produce energy, and carbon dioxide and water as byproducts.

'Both aerobic and anaerobic respiration involve 'the process of glycolysis' to produce ATP and NADH molecules' as glycolysis is a universal process that takes place in all living organisms.

In anaerobic respiration, NAD+ molecules, used in glycolysis are regenerated from NADH by 'fermentation pathways' while in aerobic respiration NAD+ are regenerated from NADH during 'electron Transport chain'

During anaerobic respiration, partial oxidation of glucose takes place that produce a 'less amount of ATP molecules' than aerobic respiration. It produces only 2 ATP molecules per molecule of glucose while aerobic respiration produces 32 ATP molecules per molecule of glucose.

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