Carbohydrate
... and Polysaccharides
5 Nutrition
6
catabolism
7 See also
8 External links
... groups need to be removed from the blood.
catabolism
There are three metabolic pathways of carbohydrate
catabolism :
glycolysis
citric acid cycle
...
Cell metabolism
... such a creating cellular structure; and
catabolism , in which a cell breaks down complex molecules ...
1 Anabolism
2
catabolism
2.1 Carbohydrate
catabolism
2.2 ...
Citric acid cycle
... pathways that are involved in fuel molecule
catabolism and ATP production.
The citric acid cycle ... cytoplasm in prokaryotes .
Fuel molecule
catabolism (including glycolysis ) produces acetyl-CoA , ... acid cycle is the second step in carbohydrate
catabolism (the breakdown of sugars). Glycolysis breaks ...
Citric acid cycle
... pathways that are involved in fuel molecule
catabolism and ATP production.
The citric acid cycle ... cytoplasm in prokaryotes .
Fuel molecule
catabolism (including glycolysis ) produces acetyl-CoA , ... acid cycle is the second step in carbohydrate
catabolism (the breakdown of sugars). Glycolysis breaks ...
Metabolism
... molecules ( anabolism ) and their breakdown (
catabolism ). Metabolism usually consists of sequences of ... pathways
1.1 General pathways
1.2
catabolism
1.3 Anabolism
1.4 Drug metabolism
1.5 ... (Krebs cycle, tricarboxylic acid cycle)
catabolism
Catabolic pathways that breakdown complex ...
Cellular respiration
... per molecule of glucose (compare to the approximately 38 of aerobic respiration).
See also
Citric acid cycle
Carbohydrate
catabolism
External links
A detailed diagram of glycolysis
...
Glycolysis
... Glycolysis is the initial metabolic pathway of carbohydrate
catabolism . The most common and well-known form of glycolysis is the Embden - Meyerhof pathway. The term can be taken to include alternative pathways, such ...
Phosphorylation
... expense of solar energy by photophosphorylation in the chloroplasts of plant cells.
Phosphorylation of sugars is often the stage of their
catabolism . It allows cells to accumulate sugars because the phosphate group prevents the molecules from diffusing back across their transporter.
...
Protein
... every function performed by a cell, including regulation of cellular functions such as signal transduction and metabolism .
For example, protein
catabolism requires only a few enzymes termed proteases .
Mechanisms of protein regulation
Various molecules and ions are able to bind to specific ...
Thermoregulation
... of oxidationundergone not by any particular substance or in any one place, but by the tissues at large. Wherever destructive metabolism (
catabolism ) is going on, heat is being set free. When a muscle does work it also gives rise to heat, and if this is estimated it can be shown that the muscles ...