Plant Cell.
respiration
If oxygen were not produced during photosynthesis then organisms could not perform cellular respiration. This means that they couldn't produce carbon dioxide which would make the plants unable to undergo photosynthesis.
ATP isn't created during the process of photosynthesis. Photosynthesis merely creates glucose, which is afterwards consumed to create the ATP. This ATP, however, serves the purpose all ATP does in the body: energy that the cell can use.
The plant food which is made by photosynthesis is called starch. This is usually in form of glucose which is used for purposes of respiration.
Gluconeogenesis, the production of glucose, occurs only in the liver and the kidney cortex. The process begins in the mitochondria, but a majority of the biosynthetic reactions take place in the cytoplasm. The ultimate metabolite of the pathway produces glucose 6 phosphate, which is transported into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and converted into glucose via the enzyme Glucose 6 Phosphatase. (Glucose is maintained as Glucose 6 phosphate to prevent it escaping from the cell.)
The plant produces sugar during the Calvin Cycle of photosynthesis. This is part of the "dark reactions" in the stroma, which reduce CO2 to C6H12O6, or glucose (simple carbohydrate). The Calvin Cycle is also known as the "Sugar Factory" of the plant.
It produces glucose for use in all life processes .
That is the respiration. It breaks down glucose.
No, they are not. In a plant cell, it is the chloroplasts that use sunlight to produce glucose during photosynthesis. The glucose produced is used by the mitochondria during aerobic respiration, the process which produces ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which is the energy-carrier molecule.
No, they are not. In a plant cell, it is the chloroplasts that use sunlight to produce glucose during photosynthesis. The glucose produced is used by the mitochondria during aerobic respiration, the process which produces ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which is the energy-carrier molecule.
Most of the cell's ATP is produced in the mitochondria.
Chloroplast is the site of photosynthesis. It produces glucose using CO2 and water.It also conuct photorespiration and produce some enzymes
During the light independent stage, some GALP (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate) molecules exit the chloroplast. They can be converted into glucose in the plant cell cytoplasm.
During the light independent stage, some GALP (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate) molecules exit the chloroplast. They can be converted into glucose in the plant cell cytoplasm.
cell respiration consumes oxygen and sugars and produces CO2, photosynthesis consumes CO2 and produces oxygen and sugars
It makes food for the plant cell. Also only in the plant cell.
If oxygen were not produced during photosynthesis then organisms could not perform cellular respiration. This means that they couldn't produce carbon dioxide which would make the plants unable to undergo photosynthesis.
Glucose is typically stored in starch molecules after photosynthesis. A large amount of glucose will make its way to the roots to be stored in starch nodules there. Glucose is also an essential part of plant growth. It provides energy but also forms the cellulose needed for cell walls.