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Explain the significance of the Krebs cycle in ATP formation, PLEASE?

the pyruvate produced in glycolysis is converted into a 2-carbon molecule, known as acetyl-CoA.... this
acetyl CoA binds to oxaloacetate, a 4-carbon molecule to produce a 6-carbon molecule, citrate..... during
the cycle, this citrate molecule loses 2 carbon molecules as carbon dioxide, to become oxaloacetate,
which will help to repeat the cycle again..... for a glucose molecule, 2 pyruvate molecules enter the
cycle, thus 4 CO2 molecules are produced, and during the process, 2 ATP along with 6 NADH and 2
FADH2 are produced..... the energy carriers NADH and FADH2 produced from this cycle help to yield
more ATP during oxidative phosphorylation, which only occurs during aerobic conditions, as the krebs
cycle does.....

so the most important thing to say is that glycolysis alone produces 2 ATP and 2 NADH per 1 glucose
molecule.... each NADH molecule produces 3 ATP molecules during oxidative phosphorylation, thus
glycolysis alone produces 8 ATP molecules.... and since oxidative phosphorylation is a process in which
ATP is produced only from previously formed NADH molecules, and since during a complete areobic
respiration process 36-38 ATP molecules are produced, this means that the krebs cycle is responsible for
producing about 30 ATP molecules from the whole process...

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