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Which molecule carries the energy produced during cellular respiration? Glucose carbon dioxide ATP

User Kosmos
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2 Answers

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I think it is ATP....
User Ivan R
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Answer:

ATP

Step-by-step explanation:

The reason we eat is to obtain energy, however, the body needs to convert the energy in these food molecules to a form it can use. The process of doing this is called CELLULAR RESPIRATION. Cellular respiration, which is a metabolic (catabolic) process common to all living things, is the biochemical process in which the cells of an organism obtain energy by breaking down glucose in the presence of oxygen (aerobic) or without (anaerobic) resulting in the release of Carbondioxide (CO2), water, and ATP (high energy molecule). Cellular respiration occurs in the cytosol of prokaryotes and in the cytosol and mitochondria of eukaryotes.

The energy stored in the glucose molecule is transferred to Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which is the chemical energy our body cells can use. Aerobic cellular respiration consists of Glycolysis, Kreb's cycle and Oxidative phosphorylation (ETC and Chemiosmosis), where a total of 38 ATP and 36 ATP molecules are produced in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells respectively.

Energy is stored in the bonds between the phosphate groups (PO4-) of the ATP molecule. When ATP is broken down into ADP (Adenosine diphosphate) and Pi (inorganic phosphate), the energy is released.

User Ara Yaghsizian
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