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 Gluconeogenesis
  • Gluconeogenesis
  • In vertebrates, vigorously contracting skeletal muscles do not receive enough oxygen to meet the energy demand, and so they shift to anaerobic metabolism, converting glucose to lactate. The liver regenerates the glucose, using a process called gluconeogenesis. This process is not quite the opposite of glycolysis, and actually requires three times the amount of energy gained from glycolysis.

    Analogous to the above reactions, the glucose produced can then undergo glycolysis in tissues that need energy, be stored as glycogen, or be converted to other monosaccharides or joined into di- or oligosaccharides. The combined pathways of glycolysis during exercise, lactate's crossing via the bloodstream to the liver, subsequent gluconeogenesis and release of glucose into the bloodstream is called the Cori cycle.


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