What molecule is oxidized during cellular respiration?
what is Glucose
where does glycolysis occur?
what is cytoplasm
what powers atp synthase
what is H+ ion gradient that is made from the electrons donated from NADH
if Gibbs free energy (Delta G) is negative, then the reaction is
what is exergonic
where do the light reactions occur?
what is thylakoid membrane
What molecule is reduced during cellular respiration?
what is Oxygen
where does citric acid cycle occur
what is mitochondrial matrix
name the 2 ways atp is produced during CR?
what is substrate level phosphorylation and chemiosmosis
if Gibbs free energy is positive, the reaction is
what is endergonic
the purpose of the light reactions is to produce, along with oxygen:
what is NADPH and ATP?
what are the products of the citric acid cycle?
what is NADH, FADH, and ATP?
where are the photosystems located
what is thylakoid membrane
which stage produces the most atp in cellular respiration?
what is oxidative phosphorylation>
how do enzymes (catalysts) speed up reactions?
what is lowering activation energy?
which photosystem is directly responsible for producing nadph?
what 2 stages of CR use susbtrate level phosphorylation?
what is glycolysis and citric acid cycle?
where does atp synthase function in cellular respiration
what is inner mitochondrial membrane
what role does oxygen play in CR, specifically oxidative phosphorylation?
what is terminal electron acceptor?
after atp donates a phosphate in a coupled reaction, it becomes adp. the adp can be converted back to atp in a _____ reaction
what is endergonic reaction?
which is the purpose of rubisco in the Calvin cycle?
extra points: what stage of the Calvin cycle is this in?
what is an enzyme used to add CO2 to RuBP?
extra: what is carbon fixation?
which step of CR makes no ATP?
what is pyruvate oxidation?
what is the overall relationship between photosynthesis and cellular respiration?
products of one are the reactants of the other
what is the first law of thermodynamics?
what is energy can't be created or destroyed but it can be transformed/converted
why are enzymes highly specific
what is because their active site only fits certain substrates
how many cycles of the Calvin cycle does it take to produce 1 molecule of glucose?
what is 6