It is found in eukaryotes.It is single membranous organell.It is made up flat membranous plates and tubules.
the intestints
to eat it
Of a eukaryotic cell
The Endoplasmic Reticulum moves things around the cell!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
is endoplasmis jaja
they somewhat protect the leaf. so the does the sell membrane. the endoplasmis relitculum form together with the golgi bodies, then attach to the ribosomes and mitochondria
The rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) has a bumpy appearance due to the presence of ribosomes on its surface. These ribosomes are responsible for protein synthesis, giving RER its characteristic rough texture. The RER is an extensive network of tubules and flattened sacs that are interconnected throughout the cytoplasm of a cell.
Cells excrete proteins via exocytosis, where the proteins are pinched of the Golgi apparatus in vesicles. These vesicles then fuse with the cell surface membrane, thus expelling them from the cell. The entire process is Protein Traffiking, where it starts by being absorbs into the RER (rough endoplasmis reticulum) and is modified and activated during its journey to the outside of the cell. You're welcome.
A eukaryotic cell is a cell that has a "true nucleus". This is because the genetic information is stored in a membrane called nuclear membrane. A prokaryotic cells do not have this "true" nucleus because their genetic information is suspended in a region called nucleoid. A eukaryotic cell also contains membrane-bound organelles, which are made up of phospholipid bilayer.
The rough endoplasmic reticulum is a network of membranesin the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells.The membranes enclose a continuous cavity, the lumen, that is separated from the cytoplasm. The lumen of the rough endoplasmic reticulum is continuous with that of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and with the nuclear envelope.The term "rough" applies to the appearance of the membranes under the electron microscope. They have small, more or less spherical spots attached to them; these are ribosomes. The ribosomes are the sites of polypeptide synthesis. All polypeptides are initially synthesized at free ribosomes in the cytosol, but certain amino acid sequences stimulate special molecules to transfer the ribosomes to the rough endoplasmic reticulum, where polypeptide synthesis continues, with the ribosome embedded in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, and the polypeptide formed in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum.Polypeptides synthesized in the rough endoplasmic reticulum form proteins that are destined for secretion or for certain locations within the cell, including the plasma membrane, lysosomes, or the endoplasmic reticulum itself.The rough endoplasmic reticulum also transports materialsthrough the cell. The lumen forms a series of channels through which these materials can move from one place in the cell to another without entering the cytoplasm.