Exergonic reactions refer to those that are prone to losing energy whenever the reaction occurs. Activation energy is what facilitates such reactions to occur. Exergonic reactions can also be termed...
1 Answers 1 viewsProtein primary structure is the sequence of amino acid residues linked by peptide bonds in the polypeptide chain.Protein secondary structure is the local ordering of a polypeptide chain fragment stabilized...
1 Answers 1 viewsThe four levels of protein structure are primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary.Specific order of amino acid linked by peptide bond forms a primary structure.Polypeptides bend and fold to form a three-dimensional shape...
1 Answers 1 viewsResources for glycolysis: most monosaccharides, such as fructose, glucose, and galactose At the end of glycolysis, each molecule of glucose has yielded 2 molecules of pyruvate, 2 molecules of NADH,...
1 Answers 1 viewsSubstrate level phosphorylation is a form of metabolic reaction that leads to the formation of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and GTP. The reaction utilizes a higher energy level substrate to form...
1 Answers 1 viewsAnabolic pathways are the processes that require energy for the synthesis of large molecules, while catabolic pathways are the processes that produce energy during the breakdown of large molecules. Kinetic...
1 Answers 1 viewsExergonic
1 Answers 1 viewsNucleic acids are composed of nucleotides, each of which contains a pentose sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. Deoxyribonucleotides within DNA contain deoxyribose as the pentose sugar. DNA...
1 Answers 1 viewsA double replacement reaction is a chemical reaction where two reactant ionic compounds exchange ions to form two new product compounds with the same ions.Precipitation is any liquid or frozen...
1 Answers 1 viewsThe difference between aerobic glycolysis and anaerobic glycolysis is that aerobic glycolysis proceeds in the presence of oxygen and occurs in eukaryotic cells while anaerobic glycolysis proceeds in the absence of...
1 Answers 1 views