Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex . . . mitochondrial matrix
Mitochondria
mitochondrial matrix
Oxygen and glucose are the reactants in cellular respiration. The cytoplasm and mitochondria are the location of the reactions. The purpose of cellular respiration is to convert energy from nutrients into ATP.
Cellular respiration in prokaryotes takes place in the cell membrane. This location is significant because it allows prokaryotes to efficiently produce energy in the form of ATP, which is essential for their metabolic processes and survival.
The Location of respiration is the mitochondria.
Cellular respiration takes place in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells. It is a process where glucose and oxygen are converted into ATP (energy) through a series of biochemical reactions. Mitochondria are often referred to as the "powerhouses" of the cell because they produce the majority of the cell's energy through cellular respiration.
Which location is closest to your work.
Aerobic cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells. The stages of aerobic respiration, including glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain, take place in various compartments within the mitochondria.
Respiration takes place in every living cell.
If an enzyme in a sequence of enzyme-controlled reactions is missing or defective then the process will stop at that point. So respiration could proceed until it reached the reaction which needed the missing or defective enzyme at which point it would stop.
I think it's in the brain.
A cell would manage to harvest the energy stored in glucose due to cellular respiration. I'm not sure about the second half of the question. Advice for the test on Chapters 6/7: You should know all of the steps in cellular respiration, the location, etc.