Mitochondria are involved in catabolism, specifically in the process of cellular respiration where they break down glucose and other molecules to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Perhaps catabolism, or respiration? The question is vague
It's called a catabolic process.
It's catabolic when talking about glycolysis and respiration, but anabolic when talking about other processes since you are adding a phosphate group.
Cellular respiration is a catabolic process. It involves breaking down complex molecules such as glucose to release energy in the form of ATP.
The three metabolic stages are catabolism, anabolism, and cellular respiration. Catabolism involves breaking down molecules to release energy, anabolism involves building complex molecules from simpler ones using energy, and cellular respiration is the process where cells convert nutrients into energy in the form of ATP.
Water and carbon dioxide are the end products, plus energy. The energy is used to make ATP molecules and the carbon dioxide is released through the lungs.
Anabolism is the process of building complex molecules from simpler substances, such as protein synthesis in muscle growth. Catabolism is the breakdown of complex molecules into simpler ones to release energy, like the breakdown of glucose in cellular respiration.
Catabolism is an exergonic process.
The process of catabolism is exergonic.
Carbon dioxide is a gas released as a metabolic product of catabolism in the body. It is produced during the breakdown of glucose and other nutrients in cells. Carbon dioxide is then exhaled from the lungs as a waste product.
-respiration