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Natali [406]
3 years ago
7

Drag each label to the appropriate position to identify whether the given reaction occurs in glycolysis, the CAC, or the ETC Gly

colysis Establishment of a chemiosmotic gradient in the intermembrane space Conversion of G6P to fructose 1,6-diphosphateATP synthase activity Oxidation of NADH at enzyme complex1 Citric Acid Cycle Conversion of malic acid to oxaloacetic acidConversion of acetyl-CoA to acetic acid Conversion of PGAL to pyruvic acid Electron Transport Chain Conversion of glucose to G6P Conversion of citric acid to isocitric acid Reset

Biology
1 answer:
Deffense [45]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Establishment of a chemiosmotic gradient in the intermembrane space -> ETC

Conversion of G6P to fructose 1,6-diphosphate -> GLYCOLYSIS

ATP synthase activity -> ETC

Oxidation of NADH at enzyme complex1 -> ETC

Conversion of malic acid to oxaloacetic acid -> CAC

Conversion of acetyl-CoA to acetic acid -> CAC

Conversion of PGAL to pyruvic acid -> GLYCOLISIS

Conversion of glucose to G6P -> GLYCOLYSIS

Conversion of citric acid to isocitric acid -> CAC

Explanation:

There are three boxes of three different cycles

Glycolysis: Here, the cell convert glucose to piruvic acid

Citric Acid cycle (CAC): Here the cell oxydates Acetil CoA to generate energy in form of ATP

Electron transport chain (ETC): Here the cell produced ATP from the NADH and the FADH of glycolysis and CAC

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When dividing the world into zoogeographical regions, Alfred Russel Wallace stipulated a set of criteria by which regions should be determined, foremost the use of generic rather than species distributions. Yet, recent updates of Wallace's scheme have not followed his reasoning, probably explaining in part the discrepancies found. Using a recently developed quantitative method, we evaluated the world's zoogeographical regions following his criteria as closely as possible.

Location

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Regions attained using genera (eight for mammals and birds and six for amphibians) strongly coincided with the regions proposed by Wallace. The regions for amphibians were nearly identical to Wallace's scheme, whereas we obtained two new ‘regions’ for mammals and two for birds that largely coincide with Wallace's subregions. As argued by Wallace, there are strong reasons not to consider these as being equivalent to the six main regions. Species distributions generated many small regions related to contemporary climate and vegetation patterns, whereas at the familial rank regions were very broad. The differences between our generic maps and Wallace's all involve areas which he identified as being uncertain in his regionalization.

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Despite more than 135 years of additional knowledge of distributions, the shuffling of generic concepts, and the development of computers and complex analytical techniques, Wallace's zoogeographical regions appear to be no less valid than they were when he proposed them. Recent studies re‐evaluating Wallace's scheme should not be considered updates as such because they have not followed Wallace's reasoning, and all computer‐based analyses, including this one, are subject to the vagaries of the particular methods used.

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