Mitochondria are located in the tail of the sperm. They provide the sperm with that whip like energy to move. They can give the energy to the sperm because mitochondria are the "powerhouse" of the cell.
Mitochondria are organelles that produce energy. If the "midpoint" of a sperm is where the flagellum attaches to the head of the sperm, then the mictochondria are there to provide energy needed to move the flagellum, therefor moving the sperm.
No, the egg does not destroy the sperm's mitochondria. During fertilization, the sperm cell's mitochondria are typically destroyed, as the egg provides the necessary energy-producing organelles for the developing embryo.
Mitochondria are inherited from the mother through the egg cell. When a sperm fertilizes an egg, the sperm's mitochondria are typically destroyed, so the mitochondria in the resulting embryo come exclusively from the mother.
mitochondria, nucleus, cytoskeleton (but cytoskeleton should not count as an organelle since it is just a protein network in cytoplasm). Sperm cells probably also have some endoplasmic reticulum and some other organelles.
Mitochondria, which are present in the sperm's midpiece, are responsible for energy production through the process of oxidative phosphorylation. This energy is necessary for the sperm to swim and reach the egg for fertilization.
Mitochondria. It takes a lot of energy to swim as far as they have to.
The mitochondria provide energy to the sperm's 'tail' (flagellum) so that it can move, and propel the sperm cell forward.
Mitochondria are organelles that produce energy. If the "midpoint" of a sperm is where the flagellum attaches to the head of the sperm, then the mictochondria are there to provide energy needed to move the flagellum, therefor moving the sperm.
No, the egg does not destroy the sperm's mitochondria. During fertilization, the sperm cell's mitochondria are typically destroyed, as the egg provides the necessary energy-producing organelles for the developing embryo.
Sperm cells have no mitochondria.
The structures in the sperm that provide energy are known as mitochondria. They have a main function of producing motility for the human sperm.
A large concentration of mitochondria are present in the tail section of the sperm. The mitochondria are the energy components, and the tail needs the energy for it's journey to fertilization.
Mitochondria are inherited from the mother through the egg cell. When a sperm fertilizes an egg, the sperm's mitochondria are typically destroyed, so the mitochondria in the resulting embryo come exclusively from the mother.
mitochondria, nucleus, cytoskeleton (but cytoskeleton should not count as an organelle since it is just a protein network in cytoplasm). Sperm cells probably also have some endoplasmic reticulum and some other organelles.
Mitochondria, which are present in the sperm's midpiece, are responsible for energy production through the process of oxidative phosphorylation. This energy is necessary for the sperm to swim and reach the egg for fertilization.
sperm does
A large number of mitochondria power the flagella of sperm cells.