Biology, asked by eitanpritzkeroffical, 1 year ago

Which process connects glycolysis and the citric acid cycle? lactic acid formation acetyl CoA formation electron transport Krebs cycle

Answers

Answered by aliya346
42

hello

here is your answer.....

Through a process called oxidative decarboxylation, the transition reaction converts the two molecules of the 3-carbon pyruvate from glycolysis (and other pathways) into two molecules of the 2-carbon molecule acetyl Coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) and 2 molecules of carbon dioxide.

Answered by pankajpal6971
0

Answer:

The transition process links glycolysis to the Krebs cycle of citric acid. Two molecules of the 3-carbon pyruvate from glycolysis (and other pathways) are changed by the transition reaction into two molecules of the 2-carbon acetyl Coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) and two molecules of carbon dioxide.

Explanation:

  • A coenzyme that carries out the Krebs cycle and glycolysis to produce energy. Energy is transported by NADH to the electron transport chain and then stored in ATP. the reaction that connects glycolysis to the citric acid cycle by oxidizing pyruvate and producing carbon dioxide as well as acetyl CoA.
  • A set of chemical processes known as the citric acid cycle remove high-energy electrons and employ them in the electron transport chain to produce ATP. Every time the cycle turns, one molecule of ATP (or an equivalent) is created.

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