Questions: What is meant by the term "glycolysis"? The creation of ionic bonds between saccharide molecules Storage of energy in the form of ATP in the muscle tissues The breakdown of glucose for ATP generation The use of glucose to fuel Mitotic cell division

What is meant by the term "glycolysis"?
The creation of ionic bonds between saccharide molecules
Storage of energy in the form of ATP in the muscle tissues
The breakdown of glucose for ATP generation
The use of glucose to fuel Mitotic cell division
Transcript text: What is meant by the term "glycolysis"? The creation of ionic bonds between saccharide molecules Storage of energy in the form of ATP in the muscle tissues The breakdown of glucose for ATP generation The use of glucose to fuel Mitotic cell division
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Solution

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The answer is the third one: The breakdown of glucose for ATP generation.

Explanation for each option:

  1. The creation of ionic bonds between saccharide molecules: This is incorrect. Glycolysis does not involve the creation of ionic bonds between saccharide molecules. Instead, it is a metabolic pathway that breaks down glucose.

  2. Storage of energy in the form of ATP in the muscle tissues: This is incorrect. While glycolysis does produce ATP, it is not specifically about the storage of ATP in muscle tissues. Glycolysis is a process that occurs in the cytoplasm of cells to generate ATP from glucose.

  3. The breakdown of glucose for ATP generation: This is correct. Glycolysis is the process by which glucose is broken down in the cytoplasm of cells to produce ATP, which is used as an energy source by the cell.

  4. The use of glucose to fuel Mitotic cell division: This is incorrect. While cells do require energy for mitosis, glycolysis specifically refers to the breakdown of glucose to produce ATP, not directly to fueling mitotic cell division.

In summary, glycolysis is the metabolic pathway that involves the breakdown of glucose to generate ATP.

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