It is aerobic respiration. It produces energy in cell
No, fermentation occurs in the cytoplasm outside the mitochondria.
Mitochondria are considered to be eukaryotic organelles. They have their own DNA and ribosomes, and are thought to have evolved from engulfed prokaryotic cells in a symbiotic relationship with eukaryotic cells.
Cellular respiration occurs in mitochondria
Mitochondria and rough endoplasmic reticulum
Cellular respiration starts in the cytoplasm of the cell, and then enters the mitochondria.
Body will not get enough energy. So it will malfunction
it takes place in the mitochondria.
The Krebs cycle in bacteria occurs in the cytoplasm. Unlike in eukaryotic cells, where it occurs in the mitochondria, bacterial cells do not have mitochondria, so the Krebs cycle takes place in the cytoplasm.
Mitochondria are composed of two membranes. the inner membrane forms many folds called cristae, which provide a large surface area where chemical reactions take place. the number of mitochondria present in different cells is related to the rate of energy usage by the cell.
The mitochondria are the organelles that carry out aerobic cellular respiration. The initial step, glycolysis, occurs in the cytoplasm, but the rest takes place in the mitochondria. Mitochondria occur in all eukaryotic cells, not just animal cells.
In eukaryotic cells respiration occurs in the mitochondria. The reactions of the Krebs cycle occur within the liquid matrix of a mitochondrion. The carrier molecules of the electron transport chain lie on the inside of the inner membrane of a mitochondrion. Cristae increase the surface area of this membrane, increasing the rate of oxidation-reduction reactions. Hope this answers your question.
Respiration occurs in two compartments - glycolysis in the cytoplasm and the TCA cycle and electron transport chain in the mitochondria. However, cells that are actively photosynthesising do not need to respire because ATP is synthesised in the chloroplast.