The ribosome.
The organelles that is responsible for the production of proteins inside a cell is the ribosome. The ribosomes are protein builders and synthesizers.
DNA holds the instructions for the production of functional products (proteins) and is therefore responsible for the actions of the cell.
Transport proteins are not responsible for the secretion. Golgi vesicles transport proteins. Proteins synthesis occur in cytoplasm.
This mechanism is responsible for regulating gene expression, which involves controlling the production of specific proteins from DNA. It can influence cellular functions, development processes, and responses to environmental stimuli.
The rough endoplasmic reticulum makes proteins. The Golgi acts as the shipping department if the cell is understood to be a protein factory.
Ribosomes are responsible for assembling proteins in the cell by reading mRNA transcripts and facilitating the process of translation to produce the protein structures. Ribosomes are composed of proteins and RNA molecules and can be found in the cytoplasm or on the endoplasmic reticulum in eukaryotic cells.
The macromolecule responsible for directing growth in living organisms is DNA. DNA contains the genetic information that guides the production of proteins, which are essential for growth and development. Genes within DNA are transcribed into mRNA, which is then translated into proteins that carry out various functions, including those related to growth.
The nucleus in a neuron contains the cell's genetic material and controls the cell's activities by regulating gene expression. It is responsible for producing the proteins necessary for the neuron's structure and function.
Approximately 1-2 of DNA is responsible for coding proteins.
Genes code for proteins, but they do not produce proteins.
The Golgi body processes proteins.
RNA assembles amino acids into proteins.