mitochondria

(noun)

in cell biology, a mitochondrion (plural mitochondria) is a membrane-enclosed organelle, often described as "cellular power plants" because they generate most of the ATP

Related Terms

  • citric acid cycle
  • Krebs cycle

Examples of mitochondria in the following topics:

  • Mitochondria

    • One of the major features distinguishing prokaryotes from eukaryotes is the presence of mitochondria.
    • Mitochondria are double-membraned organelles that contain their own ribosomes and DNA.
    • These features all support the hypothesis that mitochondria were once free-living prokaryotes.
    • In mitochondria, this process uses oxygen and produces carbon dioxide as a waste product.
    • In addition to the aerobic generation of ATP, mitochondria have several other metabolic functions.
  • The Evolution of Mitochondria

    • One of the major features distinguishing prokaryotes from eukaryotes is the presence of mitochondria.
    • Mitochondria arise from the division of existing mitochondria.
    • However, mitochondria cannot survive outside the cell.
    • These features all support that mitochondria were once free-living prokaryotes.
    • Despite the transfer of genes between mitochondria and the nucleus, mitochondria retain much of their own independent genetic material.
  • Endosymbiotic Theory and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    • This mechanism is an aspect of the Endosymbiont Theory, which is accepted by a majority of biologists as the mechanism whereby eukaryotic cells obtained their mitochondria and chloroplasts.
    • This mechanism has also been used to explain the double membranes found in mitochondria and chloroplasts.
    • Another hypothesis, the nucleus-first hypothesis, proposes the nucleus evolved in prokaryotes first, followed by a later fusion of the new eukaryote with bacteria that became mitochondria.
    • The mitochondria-first hypothesis, however, proposes mitochondria were first established in a prokaryotic host, which subsequently acquired a nucleus (by fusion or other mechanisms) to become the first eukaryotic cell.
    • The theory that mitochondria and chloroplasts are endosymbiotic in origin is now widely accepted.
  • ATP Yield

    • Another source of variance occurs during the shuttle of electrons across the membranes of the mitochondria.
    • The NADH generated from glycolysis cannot easily enter mitochondria.
    • Thus, electrons are picked up on the inside of mitochondria by either NAD+ or FAD+.
  • Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    • Ivan Wallin extended the idea of an endosymbiotic origin to mitochondria in the 1920s.
    • More detailed electron microscopic comparisons between cyanobacteria and chloroplasts combined with the discovery that plastids (organelles associated with photosynthesis) and mitochondria contain their own DNA led to a resurrection of the idea in the 1960s.
    • A eukaryote with mitochondria engulfed a cyanobacterium in an event of serial primary endosymbiosis, creating a lineage of cells with both organelles.
  • The Evolution of Plastids

    • Like mitochondria, plastids appear to have a primary endosymbiotic origin, but differ in that they derive from cyanobacteria rather than alpha-proteobacteria.
    • There is also, as with the case of mitochondria, strong evidence that many of the genes of the endosymbiont transferred to the nucleus.
    • Plastids, like mitochondria, cannot live independently outside the host.
    • In addition, like mitochondria, plastids derive from the binary fission of other plastids.
  • Excavata

    • Until recently, these protists were believed to lack mitochondria.
    • A second Excavata subgroup, the parabasalids, also exhibits semi-functional mitochondria.
  • Connecting Lipids to Glucose Metabolism

    • Fatty acids are catabolized in a process called beta-oxidation that takes place in the matrix of the mitochondria and converts their fatty acid chains into two carbon units of acetyl groups, while producing NADH and FADH2.
  • Characteristics of Eukaryotic Cells

    • numerous membrane-bound organelles (including the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, chloroplasts, and mitochondria)
    • Mitochondria are oval-shaped, double membrane organelles that have their own ribosomes and DNA.
    • Mitochondria are also important in cellular respiration.
  • Comparing Plant and Animal Cells

    • Each eukaryotic cell has a plasma membrane, cytoplasm, a nucleus, ribosomes, mitochondria, peroxisomes, and in some, vacuoles; however, there are some striking differences between animal and plant cells.
    • Like mitochondria, chloroplasts have their own DNA and ribosomes, but chloroplasts have an entirely different function.
    • Like mitochondria, chloroplasts have outer and inner membranes, but within the space enclosed by a chloroplast's inner membrane is a set of interconnected and stacked fluid-filled membrane sacs called thylakoids .
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