Biology, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

shot note on kreb cycle​

Answers

Answered by jlaugh770
2

Answer:The Krebs cycle happens in the mitochondrial lattice and creates a pool of compound vitality (ATP, NADH, and FADH2) from the oxidation of pyruvate, the final result of glycolysis.

Explanation:

Krebs Cycle

The Krebs cycle happens in the mitochondrial lattice and creates a pool of compound vitality (ATP, NADH, and FADH2) from the oxidation of pyruvate, the final result of glycolysis.

Pyruvate is moved into the mitochondria and loses carbon dioxide to shape acetyl-CoA, a 2-carbon particle. At the point when acetyl-CoA is oxidized to carbon dioxide in the Krebs cycle, compound vitality is discharged and caught as NADH, FADH2, and ATP.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The Krebs Cycle, also called the citric acid cycle, is the second major step in oxidative phosphorylation. After glycolysis breaks glucose into smaller 3-carbon molecules, the Krebs cycle transfers the energy from these molecules to electron carriers, which will be used in the electron transport chain to produce ATP.

Explanation:

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