golgi body
The endoplasmic reticulum looks like flattened stack of sacs.
The apparatus is the Golgi apparatus, which is responsible for modifying, sorting, and packaging proteins into vesicles for transport. It consists of a series of flattened, membranous sacs called cisternae that are involved in processing and distributing proteins within the cell.
In a plant cell, these are the thylakoid stacks located in the chloroplast. One stack is called a granum. They aid in the photosynthesis process.
stack of flat membrane enclosed spaces containing enzymes the process ,sort , deliver proteins
The organelle you are referring to is the Golgi apparatus. It modifies, sorts, and packages proteins into vesicles for transportation within or outside the cell. Its stacked structure gives it the appearance of a stack of pancakes.
The stacks of membrane-covered sacs that package and transport proteins to the outside of the cell are called Golgi apparatus or Golgi bodies. They receive proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum, modify them, and package them into vesicles for transport.
The endoplasmic reticulum is an organelle that looks like stack.
The Golgi apparatus is a stack of flattened membranes involved in processing, packaging, and distributing proteins and lipids for secretion or for use within the cell. It modifies proteins by adding carbohydrates and sorts them into vesicles for transport.
In a living eukaryotic cell the organelle called the Golgi apparatus stores and modifies proteins for specific functions and prepares them for transport to other parts of the cell. The Golgi apparatus consists of a stack of flattened sacs, and is usually located near the cell nucleus.
The endoplasmic reticulum is the organelle that's looks like a stack of sacs.
Proteins
A Golgi apparatus is the group of flattened sacs that detoxifies poisons that may be found in the body. The Golgi are grouped together like a stack of bowls.