About 71 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Glycolysis | Cellular respiration | Biology (article) | Khan Academy

    Glycolysis is the first step in the breakdown of glucose to extract energy for cellular metabolism. Glycolysis consists of an energy-requiring phase followed by an energy-releasing phase.

  2. Khan Academy

    Khan Academy ... Khan Academy

  3. Overview of glycolysis (video) | Glycolysis | Khan Academy

    Let's explore the process of glycolysis, the first phase of cellular respiration. Learn how this process breaks down glucose into two 3-carbon compounds, using two ATPs in the investment phase and …

  4. Steps of cellular respiration | Biology (article) | Khan Academy

    Cellular respiration is a metabolic pathway that breaks down glucose and produces ATP. The stages of cellular respiration include glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, the citric acid or Krebs cycle, and oxidative …

  5. Khan Academy

    Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again. Uh oh, it looks like we ran into an error. You need to refresh. If this problem persists, tell us.

  6. Regulation of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis - Khan Academy

    Dive into glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, and understand when each pathway dominates. Discover how the body maintains this balance using fast-acting regulation like Le Chatelier's Principle and slow …

  7. Steps of glycolysis (video) - Khan Academy

    Introduction to glycolysis. Role of glycolysis in producing ATPs and NADHs and converting glucose to pyruvates.

  8. Cellular respiration | Biology archive | Science | Khan Academy

    Learn about glycolysis, the process of breaking down glucose to produce energy, with interactive lessons and practice problems on Khan Academy.

  9. Fermentation and anaerobic respiration - Khan Academy

    Fermentation and cellular respiration begin the same way, with glycolysis. In fermentation, however, the pyruvate made in glycolysis does not continue through oxidation and the citric acid cycle, and the …

  10. Krebs / citric acid cycle (video) | Khan Academy

    So we already know that if we start off with a glucose molecule, which is a 6-carbon molecule, that this essentially gets split in half by glycolysis and we end up 2 pyruvic acids or two pyruvate molecules.