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Boreading Cell Biology

Write me an in-depth study guide for the midterm.

Bo
Study guideCell Biology · Midterm
Study guide·6 sections

This guide walks through how your cells turn glucose into usable energy, one stage at a time, then checks that it stuck.

2. The Krebs cycle

The cycle takes the acetyl-CoA from glycolysis and oxidizes it across eight steps, releasing carbon dioxide and loading the electron carriers NADH and FADH₂ that the next stage will spend on ATP.

Acetyl-CoA
the two-carbon fuel that feeds each turn of the cycle.
Oxidation
stripping electrons to bank energy as NADH and FADH₂.

Links back to glycolysis (§1) and feeds the electron transport chain (§3).

Lecture 7 · p. 9
Key takeaways
  • The Krebs cycle runs twice for every glucose molecule.
  • Its real job is loading NADH and FADH₂, not making ATP directly.
  • Those carriers are spent in the electron transport chain.

How Bo makes it.

01

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03

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Ordered sections, key concepts, and citations in seconds.

The guide

It teaches, it doesn't just list.

Pick how deep it goes. Each level adds more, just like in the app, from tight notes to a full guide with self-check questions.

Study guide·6 sections

This guide walks through how your cells turn glucose into usable energy, one stage at a time, then checks that it stuck.

2. The Krebs cycle

The cycle takes the acetyl-CoA from glycolysis and oxidizes it across eight steps, releasing carbon dioxide and loading the electron carriers NADH and FADH₂ that the next stage will spend on ATP.

Acetyl-CoA
the two-carbon fuel that feeds each turn of the cycle.
Oxidation
stripping electrons to bank energy as NADH and FADH₂.

Links back to glycolysis (§1) and feeds the electron transport chain (§3).

Check yourself

Glycolysis splits one glucose into two pyruvate molecules, and each becomes one acetyl-CoA. So the cycle runs once per acetyl-CoA, twice per glucose.

Lecture 7 · p. 9
Key takeaways
  • The Krebs cycle runs twice for every glucose molecule.
  • Its real job is loading NADH and FADH₂, not making ATP directly.
  • Those carriers are spent in the electron transport chain.
Study guide·6 sections

This guide walks through how your cells turn glucose into usable energy, one stage at a time, then checks that it stuck.

2. The Krebs cycle

The cycle takes the acetyl-CoA from glycolysis and oxidizes it across eight steps, releasing carbon dioxide and loading the electron carriers NADH and FADH₂ that the next stage will spend on ATP.

Acetyl-CoA
the two-carbon fuel that feeds each turn of the cycle.
Oxidation
stripping electrons to bank energy as NADH and FADH₂.

Links back to glycolysis (§1) and feeds the electron transport chain (§3).

Lecture 7 · p. 9
Key takeaways
  • The Krebs cycle runs twice for every glucose molecule.
  • Its real job is loading NADH and FADH₂, not making ATP directly.
  • Those carriers are spent in the electron transport chain.
Learn it, don't skim it

A summary tells you what. A guide teaches you why.

It checks you

It quizzes you as you learn.

In-depth guides add self-check questions to every section so you test yourself as you read, not just at the end.

0%
  • The Krebs cycleReview
  • GlycolysisSolid
  • Electron transportStrong
Why Bo

A study guide that teaches your course

A study guide generator that teaches, not just lists

Bo writes in teaching prose, explains each concept, and adds self-check questions so you actually understand rather than just reading.

Built from your lectures, cited to the page

Every section of the guide is drawn from your exact uploaded material and shows the source page, so you can verify and go deeper.

As deep as you need

Concise notes for a quick scan, standard prose for focused study, or full in-depth guides with self-check questions when you need to truly understand the material.

What you get

Everything, from your own course.

  • Ordered sections that build on each other
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  • Concise, standard, or in-depth
  • Export to PDF or Word anytime
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FAQ

Questions, answered.

A summary gives you the gist fast. A study guide teaches the topic. It walks through ordered sections that build on each other, names the key concepts, shows how they connect, and, in in-depth mode, quizzes you with self-check questions. Reach for a summary to refresh, a guide to actually learn it.

Concise gives you tight revision notes. Standard adds the big essential questions, the key concepts per section, and how sections connect. In-depth adds self-check question-and-answer pairs to every section for active recall.

Yes. Every section is grounded in your own lectures and links back to the page, like Lecture 9, p. 2, so you can open the source and check it instead of trusting a guess.

Yes. Export the whole guide to PDF or Word, or print it, so you can study offline, mark it up, or bring it into the exam hall waiting room.

Pick the topics and lectures it draws from, from a single topic to a whole unit. A guide can run up to many ordered sections, so it scales from one lecture to the full module.

Yes. Uploading your course and generating a study guide is free. Upgrade when you need higher limits or heavier exam-season use.

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