Asked by CHRIS
Which organelles are labeled G?
centrioles
lysosomes
ribosomes
mitochondria
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can’t see the diagram, so I can’t identify G without more info. Please upload the image or describe what G looks like (shape, size, position, whether it has internal folds, is on the ER, is a small dot, is a short cylinder, etc.).
Identification tips you can use:
- Centrioles: short paired cylinders, usually near the nucleus/centrosome, arranged at right angles.
- Lysosomes: small, round membrane-bound vesicles; single membrane, look like little sacs.
- Ribosomes: very small dots; may be free in cytosol or studding rough ER (rough appearance).
- Mitochondria: oval/bean-shaped with an inner folded membrane (cristae), often shown with a double membrane.
If G is shown as tiny dots on the rough ER or scattered in cytoplasm → ribosomes. If G is an oval with internal folds → mitochondria. If G is a small round sac → lysosome. If G is a paired cylindrical structure near the nucleus → centrioles.
Identification tips you can use:
- Centrioles: short paired cylinders, usually near the nucleus/centrosome, arranged at right angles.
- Lysosomes: small, round membrane-bound vesicles; single membrane, look like little sacs.
- Ribosomes: very small dots; may be free in cytosol or studding rough ER (rough appearance).
- Mitochondria: oval/bean-shaped with an inner folded membrane (cristae), often shown with a double membrane.
If G is shown as tiny dots on the rough ER or scattered in cytoplasm → ribosomes. If G is an oval with internal folds → mitochondria. If G is a small round sac → lysosome. If G is a paired cylindrical structure near the nucleus → centrioles.
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