nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, vacuoles (plants only), chloroplasts (plants only), golgi apparatus, lysosome, peroxisome, mitochondria, vessicles, and some say endosomes
2007-01-28 14:56:59
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answer #1
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answered by utchick128 3
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Lots of websites have complete lists of organelles, descriptions, and functions.
If you are just asking what an organelle is, it is a membrane-bound structure in the cell. Organelles have specific jobs to do for the cell. Eukaryote cells have organelles, prokaryote cells do not.
2007-01-28 14:02:19
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answer #2
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answered by ecolink 7
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The membranous organelles are probably the most memorable, so I'll lay those out for ya.
Nucleus - double membraned. Houses DNA and RNA, and the Nucleolus - makes rRNA
Rough ER - site of protein synthesis
Smooth ER - site of lipid synthesis, detoxification (liver cells)
Golgi apparatus - prepare and package products of Rough and Smooth ER, store products in vesicles and ship out to other parts of the body
Mitochondria - site of ATP synthesis
Lysosomes - digest cell wastes
This should get you started.
2007-01-28 14:34:59
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answer #3
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answered by askmeno?s 1
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specialized macromolecule structure that is within most cells such as the mitochondria, the Golgi apparatus,endoplasmic reticulum, lysosomes, and centrioles
2007-01-28 14:05:10
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answer #4
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answered by Dave aka Spider Monkey 7
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nucleus-center(where the dna is at yo)
ribosome
mitochondria-energy
er
smooth er
chloroplast
plase
cell membrance
lysosome
golgi aparatus
and many other little things
2007-01-28 14:03:34
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answer #5
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answered by smile 2
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