What are the main differences among anerobic respiration, aerobic respiration an
ID: 78298 • Letter: W
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What are the main differences among anerobic respiration, aerobic respiration and fermentation? How many molecules of ATP will you get from complete oxidation of a C-4 fatty acid? Study the light reaction and the electron transport chain in the thylakoid membrane, charge speartion, generation of oxidant and reductant in PSI and PSII, composition of a reaction center. How is the proton transport across thylakoid membrane linked to ATP synthesis/degradation in chloroplast (note the direction of the proton movement across the mebrane)? Can it be called photophosphorylation? When does DNA replication occur in cell division? What is the function of S-cdk and how does it perform this function? How does DNA damage, halt progression of cell cycle at G1(know all the steps)? What is one unreplicated and replicated chromosome made up of? How many DNA molecule/s is/are there in one chromatid? Is there any difference between one chromatid and chromosome? How many chromatids are there in a duplicated homologous pair? How does actin play a role in cell division? What is a Kinetochore? When is it formed? What is/are the characteristic features of Anaphase A and Anaphase B? When does the nuclear membrane break down and reform in cell division? What causes the nuclear membrane to be degraded or reformed? What is a phragmoplast? What is its function? Where is it present? Cell wall materials are carried by ER or Golgi vesicles? How does Rb protein function? (know all the details). Is it a tumor suppressor gene or a proto- oncogene? What is the difference between a proto-oncogene and an oncogene? What are the features of tumor suppressor and proto-oncogenes?Explanation / Answer
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42.
Aerobic respiration is a pathway to produce ATP by eukaryotes and aerobic prokaryotes. The carbons in the glucose/ other sources are completely oxidized, producing CO2 and consuming oxygen in the process. This produces more ATP than anaerobic respiration. Anearobic respiration is glycolysis, where glucose is converted to pyruvate and a net gain of 2 ATP molecules. Fermentation is where pyruvate is further metabolized under anaerobic conditions to produce ethanol, acetone or lactic acid.
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