Mitochondrion are the power plant of a cell. The mitochondria are cells based within a
cell that turn nutrients from chemical form into a more simple and usable substance for a
cell to use as energy.
These sausage-shaped organelles are not a true organelle, but more of a parasite that
invaded primordial cells and evolved along with them. A mitochondrian's main purpose is
to burn energy through a slow method of combustion, which will consume as much air to
burn as fire will, just to break down nutrients into simpler substances. These simpler
molecules then bond with the atoms that will need the energy to function. Then, enzymes
in the mitochondrion break up the atoms and then recapture them again. This time, the
energy atoms will be bonded in a different molecule to form ATP, or adenosine
triphosphate. ATP has an adenosine core and three phosphates attached to it, hence its
name.
These phosphates will store the new energy. ATP can travel throughout the cell freely
and allows the stored energy to then be distributed evenly in the cell. Other organelles
will find the ATP and break off the phosphates full of ready-to-use energy.Once the
adenosine has been stripped of phosphates it will travel back to the mitochondrion to be
reloaded with new phosphates.
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