Yes. Granum is made up of stacks of membrane plates, or thykaloids.
Granum
A granum is a stack of thylakoids in the chloroplast and the stroma is the region outside the thylakoid membranes in the chloroplasts.
One stack is a granum. Two or more stacks are called grana.
The thylakoid (granum) lipid bilayer shares characteristic features with prokaryotic membranes and the inner chloroplast membrane. Thylakoid membranes are richer in galactolipids rather than phospholipids.
Membranes surround cells. There are no cells found in membranes. Membranes are composed mostly of lipids.
Phospholipids
Granum is a part of chloroplast
They don't, they have sacs called thylakoids that are layered to form a granum. You're probably talking about mitochondria, which has a folded inner membrane. The membranes are folded here for increased surface area. This then allows for more ATP to be produced.
It takes place in thylakoids.They are membrane stacks
Guttorm Granum was born in 1904.
Guttorm Granum died in 1963.
no