kloroplastik
Kloroplastik are double-membrane-bound organelles found in the cells of land plants, algae, and some protists. They are the primary site of photosynthesis, converting light energy into chemical energy, and they also participate in other essential metabolic pathways such as fatty acid and amino acid synthesis. The green coloration of many plants comes from chlorophyll, the main pigment within the chloroplast.
Structurally, kloroplastik contain internal membrane systems known as thylakoids, which are often arranged into stacks called
Functionally, chloroplasts perform light-dependent reactions that produce ATP and NADPH, and the Calvin cycle that uses
Origin and variation are linked to the endosymbiotic theory, which posits that chloroplasts originated from cyanobacteria
Kloroplastik are essential to photosynthesis, energy production, and primary metabolism in photosynthetic organisms, and their structure