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The Complete Biology Respiration in Plants | Glycolysis

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Glycolysis Pathway for ATP production. Enzymes Involved during the process.
1
1/5
(28) Ratings
180 students
Created by Education wave
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What you'll learn

  • Biology Respiration
  • Glycolysis and ATP synthesis
  • Enzyme PFK-1 & PFK-2
  • Complete Glycolysis and MCQ Questions on Glycolysis
  • Kreb’s Cycle
This course includes:
1 total hour on-demand video
0 articles
0 downloadable resources
5 lessons
Full lifetime access
Access on mobile and TV
Certificate of completion
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Course content

Requirements

  • Basic understanding of Biology

Description

The NEW course with everything you need to know about Respiration in Plants | Glycolysis and learn deep understanding of Glycolysis is the process in which glucose is broken down to produce energy. It produces two molecules of pyruvate, ATP, NADH and water. The process takes place in the cytoplasm of a cell and does not require oxygen. It occurs in both aerobic and anaerobic organisms.

Glycolysis has ten steps, and depending on your interests—and the classes you’re taking—you may want to know the details of all of them. However, you may also be looking for a greatest hits version of glycolysis, something that highlights the key steps and principles without tracing the fate of every single atom. Let’s start with a simplified version of the pathway that does just that.

In organisms that perform cellular respiration, glycolysis is the first stage of this process. However, glycolysis doesn’t require oxygen, and many anaerobic organisms—organisms that do not use oxygen—also have this pathway.

Suppose that we gave one molecule of glucose to you and one molecule of glucose to Lactobacillus acidophilus—the friendly bacterium that turns milk into yogurt. What would you and the bacterium do with your respective glucose molecules?

Glycolysis has ten steps, and depending on your interests—and the classes you’re taking—you may want to know the details of all of them. However, you may also be looking for a greatest hits version of glycolysis, something that highlights the key steps and principles without tracing the fate of every single atom. Let’s start with a simplified version of the pathway that does just that.

Who this course is for:

  • Biology enthusiast.
  • Beginners in Biology.
  • Those preparing for board and competitive exams State Board, CBSE, ICSE , IGCSE, MHT-CET & NEET
  • NET & NEET Aspirants
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