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Cloud [144]
3 years ago
15

>> how is atp produced in the mitochondria?

Biology
2 answers:
dimulka [17.4K]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Most of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesized during glucose metabolism is produced in the mitochondria through oxidative phosphorylation. This is a complex reaction powered by the proton gradient across the mitochondrial inner membrane, which is generated by mitochondrial respiration.

Explanation:

- Eijiro <3

svlad2 [7]3 years ago
5 0

Answer: Most of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesized during glucose metabolism is produced in the mitochondria through oxidative phosphorylation. This is a complex reaction powered by the proton gradient across the mitochondrial inner membrane, which is generated by mitochondrial respiration.

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Why would increasing the synthesis of fetal hemoglobin result in alleviating the symptoms of sickle cell anemia?
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Cell anemia, the increased synthesis of Hb F allows the patient to use Hb F
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3 years ago
In a bacterial cell the enzymes involved in glycolysis are located.
OLga [1]

In a bacterial cell the enzymes involved in glycolysis are located in the <u>CYTOPLASM</u>

6 0
2 years ago
Describe the general flow of energy through an ecosystem beginning with the Sun and going through a third order consumer.
Illusion [34]

Answer:

1) Autotrophs transform solar energy into chemical energy.

2) Herbivores and omnivores (primary consumers) eat producers, make use of some of the energy, making from it their biomass.

3) Following, carnivores or predators (secondary, tertiary, and other consumers) eat herbivores, using only 10% of the flowing energy.

4) Decomposers (last order in the chain) recycle all the dead organic material and make use of some of the stored energy.  

Explanation:

<u>Energy flow: </u>From the whole quantity of energy that reaches the earth's surface, only 0.1 or 1% is absorbed by autotroph organisms or producers.  

From this input of solar energy, it begins a unidirectional energy flow through all the organisms in the ecosystem, from autotrophs to heterotrophs, until it is finally dissipated in the environment.  

Organisms that can use light, and turn it into organic matter according to their own needs are producers, and they are called autotrophic organisms. These organisms are by excellence all plants, algae, and bacteria that photosynthesize. Organisms that are incapable of producing their food are called heterotrophic. They depend on other organisms from the trophic chain such as plants or other animals to feed on, so they can get proteins and energy.  In the trophic web, heterotrophic organisms occupy the first, second, or third consumer level, after producers.  There are different types of heterotrophic animals: carnivorous, herbivorous, omnivorous, hematophagous, ichthyophagous, and etcetera. All of them depend on autotrophic organisms.

At each trophic level, it occurs an energy transfer from one level to the next, with only 10% being usable in each of them. This assessment is called <u>"The 10% rule".</u> This is, as a general rule, only about 10% of the energy stored as biomass at one trophic level, per unit time, ends up as biomass at the next trophic level, in the same unit of time.

The progressive reduction of energy determines the number of trophic levels in the chain (4 or 5).  

1) Autotrophs use water, CO2, and solar energy to produce O2 and glucose, by the process of photosynthesis and convert it into biomass. Producers transform solar energy into chemical energy.

2) Herbivores and omnivores (primary consumers) make use of some of this energy to survive, making from it their biomass. The rest of the energy is lost.

3) Following, carnivores or predators (secondary, tertiary, and other consumers) eat herbivores, using only 10% of the flowing energy. The rest of the energy is lost.

4) When different organisms die, decomposers (last order in the chain) recycle all the organic material and make use of some of the energy stored in their tissues. The rest is lost.

4 0
3 years ago
How does a sarcomere function?
Sergeu [11.5K]

The structure of the sarcomere affects its function in several ways. The overlap of actin and myosin gives rise to the length-tension curve, which shows how sarcomere force output decreases if the muscle is stretched so that fewer cross-bridges can form or compressed until actin filaments interfere with each other.- wikipidiea

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3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What type of behavior was among the first to evolve among the earliest(most primitive) animals?
Vlad [161]

Solution:

Primitive animals are ones that have not changed dramatically over the millennia and remain very similar to their ancestors.

The first members of the human lineage lack many features that distinguish us from other primates. Although it has been a difficult quest, we are closer than ever to knowing the mother of us all. Until recently, the evolutionary events that surrounded the origin of the hominin lineage — which includes modern humans and our fossil relatives — were virtually unknown, and our phylogenetic relationship with living African apes was highly debated. Gorillas and chimpanzees were commonly regarded to be more closely related to each other due to their high degree of morphological and behavioral similarities, such as their shared mode of locomotion — knuckle-walking. But with the advent of molecular studies it has become clear that chimpanzees share a more recent common ancestor with humans, and are thus more closely related to us than they are to gorillas (e.g., Bailey 1993, Wildman et al. 2003). The similarities between the living African apes were thought to have been inherited from a common ancestor (=primitive features), implying that the earliest hominins and our last common ancestor shared with chimpanzees had features that were similar, morphologically and behaviorally, to the living African apes (Lovejoy 2009). With the discoveries of the earliest hominin species discussed below, it is now possible to critically examine these assumptions.


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3 years ago
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