no they are the structural component of the organelle,called chloroplast
The organelle that contains thylakoids and chlorophyll is the chloroplast. Thylakoids are membranous structures within the chloroplast where the chlorophyll is located, and they play a key role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
PS1 (Photosystem 1) is located on the stroma thylakoids: the thylakoids floating around in the stroma. PS2 is located on the grana thylakoids, those thylakoids organized into stacks called grana!
Thylakoids are membrane-bound compartments found in chloroplasts, the organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plants. Thylakoids play a crucial role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis, where sunlight is converted into chemical energy.
Cyanobacteria were formerly known as blue-green algae which are photosynthetic. Thylakoids in the cyanobacteria are not separate organelles as we see in eukaryotic cell (eg:chloroplast). In fact the chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells were originated in a endosymbiotic event where cyanobacteria was taken up by the cell. Please read about enodsymbiosis.
In the thylakoids are proteins that
Thylakoids are membrane-bound organelles found within chloroplasts
The organelle that contains thylakoids and chlorophyll is the chloroplast. Thylakoids are membranous structures within the chloroplast where the chlorophyll is located, and they play a key role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
PS1 (Photosystem 1) is located on the stroma thylakoids: the thylakoids floating around in the stroma. PS2 is located on the grana thylakoids, those thylakoids organized into stacks called grana!
Thylakoids are membrane-bound compartments found in chloroplasts, the organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plants. Thylakoids play a crucial role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis, where sunlight is converted into chemical energy.
Cyanobacteria were formerly known as blue-green algae which are photosynthetic. Thylakoids in the cyanobacteria are not separate organelles as we see in eukaryotic cell (eg:chloroplast). In fact the chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells were originated in a endosymbiotic event where cyanobacteria was taken up by the cell. Please read about enodsymbiosis.
In the thylakoids are proteins that
Thylakoids contain chlorophyll.
Chloroplasts are specialized organelles which contain chlorophyll which absorbs energy from sunlight. The process of photosynthesis takes place in thylakoids which are organized in stacks called grana.
Grana, thylakoids, and stroma are components found in chloroplasts, which are organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plant cells. Grana are stacks of thylakoids where light reactions occur, while stroma is the fluid-filled space where the Calvin cycle (dark reactions) takes place. These components work together to convert light energy into chemical energy in the form of sugars.
No, mitochondria do not have thylakoids. Thylakoids are a membrane system containing chlorophyll found in chloroplasts, while mitochondria have inner and outer membranes but do not contain thylakoids. Mitochondria are involved in cellular respiration, not photosynthesis like chloroplasts.
granum are stacks of thylakoids. grana are several stacks of thylakoids. :)
The cell will have green organelles called chloroplasts. Inside the chloroplasts are thylakoids, which are stacks of discs called grana (singular granum). Chlorophyl is contained in the grana.