Muscle requires a lot of ATP , mitochondria produces ATP
No, it's probably a better way of getting a muscle cramp.
lactic acid fermentation
Doubtful. One would think that any glycogen stored in muscle cells would be producing mitochondrial ATP for use in the sarcomere, the muscle contraction unit.
Mitochondria. Mitochondria are organelles specialized for synthesizing ATP.
Fueled by the metabolism of sugar, the ATP byproducts (ADP) are reconstituted into ATP molecules. Use of ATP energy requires no oxygen - when the ATP is depleted the muscle cells must use cellular respiration to obtain energy and once the muscle is at rest the ATP stores are replenished.
Muscle requires a lot of ATP , mitochondria produces ATP
the amount of ATP in the muscle cells
muscle cells use this myosin heads that use ATP to contract. the enery needed (ATP) is provided by the bast amount of mitochondria. Which is why muscle cells need so much of them.
ATP
Glycolosis (in the cytoplasm) and aerobic metabolism (in the mitochondria) are used to generate ATP from glucose in muscle cells.
Muscle cells running low on ATP, muscle cells running low on O2, and lactate build-up in the muscle cells.
ATP (adenosine triphosphate) carries energy to all living cells, including muscle cells. When you work out (or use your muscles), the muscle cells take up ATP and through a complicated biochemical process, they extract energy from it, and return it to other cells to replenish it. The amount of ATP is regulated by your body automatically, and is fairly constant.
ATP
no
fat
muscle cells produce ATP by cellular respiration through fermentation