You die
it would stop the production of cancer cells
A 128 x 4 memory chip consists of 128 rows and 4 columns. Each column corresponds to a memory cell, so there would be a total of 4 memory cells. In terms of registers, it would depend on the organization of the memory chip - typically, there would be additional registers for addressing, data input/output, and control signals.
They would be shriveled.
No. the skin cells wouldn't be capable of producing other skin cells. No nuclei are found in the cells of the outermost layer of your skin. A company claims that its moisturizer can restore and rejuvenate these cells.
Organic would be the type of memory people have, made of living cells. Artificial would be like computer RAM (Random Access Memory) or a computer hard drive, something that is created by people instead of occurring naturally.
Lack of memory B cells for a specific antigen would primarily impact the secondary humoral response. Memory B cells play a critical role in mounting a more rapid and robust immune response upon re-exposure to the antigen during a secondary response.
I would say muscle cells and sperm cells. The mitochondria is the power house of the cell producing the energy need for the cells. Our muscles use up a lot of energy doing everyday activities and sperm cells need the energy for the movement of its flagella.
swollen
Doubtful. One would think that any glycogen stored in muscle cells would be producing mitochondrial ATP for use in the sarcomere, the muscle contraction unit.
Mitochondrion because they are responsible for producing energy
Eumelanin is typically found in specialized cells called melanocytes, which are located in the skin, hair follicles, and eyes. These cells are responsible for producing and distributing the pigment eumelanin, which gives color to these structures.
The idea of immunisation is that you expose the immune system to the pathogen, ennabling it to recognise the pathogen and produce mature memory Helper T cells. This means that upon its second exposure the immune system is activated faster and more efficiently, allowing the immune system to kill off the pathogen quicker. In some cases antibodies are produced that can neutralise toxins, preventing their damaging effects. If memory T cells were not produced then the immune system would have to re-learn how to fight a pathogen every time.