In biological systems, anabolic and catabolic reactions are "coupled" (or linked) by: Krebs cycle The Electron Transport Chain Photosynthesis Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) Glycolysis

Human Anatomy & Physiology (11th Edition)
11th Edition
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Author:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
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Chapter1: The Human Body: An Orientation
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In biological systems, anabolic and catabolic reactions are "coupled" (or linked) by:
Krebs cycle
The Electron Transport Chain
Photosynthesis
Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP)
Glycolysis
Transcribed Image Text:In biological systems, anabolic and catabolic reactions are "coupled" (or linked) by: Krebs cycle The Electron Transport Chain Photosynthesis Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) Glycolysis
The complete aerobic respiration of glucose yields far more energy stored in ATP than glycolysis alone for all of the following reasons EXCEPT:
Krebs cycle generates some additional ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation
None of the other four answers (all are reasons that aerobic respiration yields more energy than glycolysis alone)
Electron transport chain (terminal respiratory pathway) produces many ATPs through oxidative phosphorylation using electron carrier molecules (NADH
and FADH₂)
Glycolysis only partially oxidizes the glucose molecule to pyruvic acid
Krebs cycle generates reduced electron carrier molecules (NADH and FADH₂)
Transcribed Image Text:The complete aerobic respiration of glucose yields far more energy stored in ATP than glycolysis alone for all of the following reasons EXCEPT: Krebs cycle generates some additional ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation None of the other four answers (all are reasons that aerobic respiration yields more energy than glycolysis alone) Electron transport chain (terminal respiratory pathway) produces many ATPs through oxidative phosphorylation using electron carrier molecules (NADH and FADH₂) Glycolysis only partially oxidizes the glucose molecule to pyruvic acid Krebs cycle generates reduced electron carrier molecules (NADH and FADH₂)
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