Yes but not quite sure which part of the cell
The Schwann cell forms a myelin sheath around the axon of the nerve.
During glycolysis, the net gain of ATP for the cell is 2 molecules of ATP.
In a cell that is respiring aerobically (i.e. using oxygen), the mitochondria are the site of most ATP production.They are scattered through the cytoplasm, but tend to concentrate where the cell requires energy.
No, uptake of cholesterol by a cell does not require ATP. Cholesterol enters the cell through receptor-mediated endocytosis, which does not consume ATP.
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the energy currency used in cells. It stores and releases energy for cellular processes through the hydrolysis of its high-energy phosphate bonds.
Mitochondrion
34-36 ATP are made in the Krebs cycle part of cell respiration.
genetics
Mitochondria are the "powerhouses" of the cell, responsible for generating energy in the form of ATP through a process called cellular respiration. They also play a role in regulating cell metabolism, cell growth, and cell death.
it is regulated by the allosteric inhibitors
Cellular respiration is the process by which food molecules, such as glucose, are broken down, and which forms ATP, the energy currency of the cell. Without ATP a cell would die.
A vesicle forms as a small sac from the cell's membrane.
It helps in the formation of ATP It takes part in Krebs cycle. It provides various intermediates for cell.
The answer is proteins.
Glycolysis is the process that is not part of cellular respiration pathway that produces large amounts of ATP in a cell. While glycolysis produces some ATP, the majority of ATP production occurs in the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation.
ATP is known as Adenosine TriPhosphate. Hence the abbreviation ATP. ATP is produced by the ribosome in a cell. ATP is energy for the cell.
Nucleus