BI110 Lecture Notes - Lecture 22: Beta Oxidation, Chlorella, Plastid

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12 Dec 2017
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How other sugars contribute to glycolysis: the hydrolysis of some disaccharides produce glucose molecules, that directly enter glycolysis, monosaccharides, other than glucose, are converted into glycolysis intermediates that come later in the pathway. Beta oxidation: atp is not produced directly in beta oxidation, rather electron carriers and acetyl-coa are generated, which feed the etc and citric acid cycle. Regulation of glycolysis by pfk-1: activation, when atp levels are low, pfk-1 is activate, allowing glycolysis to continue. Inhibition: when atp or citrate levels are high, pfk-1 is inhibited and glycolysis slows. Where do the electrons used to reduce carbon dioxide come from: the oxidation of water results in the production of electrons, protons and oxygen. The chloroplast: the eukaryotic cells, photosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts, the photosynthesis electron transport chain is located in the thylakoid membrane, carbohydrate synthesis occurs in the stroma. Plastids: plastids are present in all plant cells, plastid types are interconvertible.

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