Glucose.
It is the glucose. It is a carbohydrate
Glucose (C6H12O6) is made by plants and burned in the mitochondria. It is a carbohydrate.
Glucose.
Yes it does as these plants contain mitochondria that put some of the glucose made by photosynthesis into the cellular respiration cycle in the mitochondria.
The mitochondria is used during the process of cellular respiration in which energy (ATP) is made so the body can function. Chloroplasts, only found in plants, is how plants go through photosynthesis, a process in which plants obtain food and energy from the sun.
The mitochondria are the "power plants" for the cell. No power, no products can be made. The cell will die.
You do find mitochondria in both plant and animal cells as eukaryote cells made this symbiotic bargain with free ranging bacteria that became mitochondria. Both plants and animals use the product of mitochondria, ATP, to do cellular work.
It is made in the mitochondria.
Plants have both intracellular and extracellular components. Intracellularly, plants have organelles like chloroplasts, mitochondria, and nuclei within their cells. Extracellularly, plants have cell walls made of cellulose that provide structural support and protection to the cells.
Nucleic acids are macromolecules composed of nucleotides.
They sure do! It gets a little crowded in a plant cell with chloroplasts, central vacuoles and more than enough mitochondria to burn some of the sugar made through photosynthesis.
proteins