The organelle responsible for energy production in most eukaryotic cells is the mitochondrion , often called the “powerhouse of the cell.”

What mitochondria do

  • Mitochondria generate most of the cell’s usable energy in the form of ATP through cellular respiration and oxidative phosphorylation.
  • They break down carbohydrates and fatty acids and convert the released energy into ATP, which powers essential cellular processes.

Why they’re called the powerhouse

  • Because mitochondria supply the majority of ATP, they effectively act as tiny power plants that keep cells functioning.
  • Cells that need a lot of energy, like muscle and nerve cells, contain especially high numbers of mitochondria.

Quick note on other organelles

  • The nucleus stores genetic information and controls cell activities but does not produce energy.
  • Organelles like lysosomes or vacuoles help with digestion and storage, not ATP production, which is the specialty of mitochondria.