Days of Our Cells
Directions:
1. Use your "Cell Organelle Survivor" organelle for this blog conversation.
2. Give yourself a stage name you make up that reflects your job
ex. Mr. Breuer as "Know it All Nucleus"
ex. Mr. Breuer as "Know it All Nucleus"
4. Blog as your organelle character
- Remember your organelle is always doing something so...If possible, write about how your organelle will respond to what the organism is doing OR write about what another organelle is doing (or isn't doing) in response to the organism's actions OR write about what is going on in your everyday organelle life.
- You must have at least 2 blog posts in response to each event in the organism's life. At least 1 blog post should be a response to another organelle's blog post. Make your blog post follow this format:
blogging @ ______________________________ (the organelle or organism's name)
with this message ______________________________ ______________________________ _________
______________________________ ______________________________ _________
______________________________ ______________________________ _________
(what will happen/is happening to you)
Signed: (your real first name and last initial)
Organism's Blog Post #1 -
Just 8 a twinkie, heard they last on the shelf 4 1000 yrs w/o going bad. Wonder what it'll do to my cells?
No. 1 Hi! This is narwhale nucleus blogging @ nucleus with this message. My organelle is creating more cells in the body or wherever more cells are needed. I also control things that can keep the cell alive. I as a nucleus reproduce cells so all of your parts of cells don’t become dead and control things in the cell that keeps the cell alive. As a nucleus I respond to what the body is doing in a couple of ways. One way is I reproduce cells if you do something like eat a 4 thousand year old twinkie. If you eat that you need more cells so all of them don’t die and go away.
ReplyDeleteElise M
No. 2 Hi! This is narwhale nucleus blogging @ nucleus with this message. If you eat twinkies another thing that my cell will react to this in its life is by controlling the cell. The nucleus will control the cell and tell it the right thing to do if you have eaten the twinkie. The nucleus will do many things to help the cell stay alive.
Elise M
No. 3 Hi! This is narwhale nucleus blogging @ nucleus/cell membrane with this message. The nucleus helps regulate the entire cell. Also, it helps the cell reproduce and therefore helps the membrane do its job better.
Elise M
Hi, this is Mrs.Lunch Lady blogging at “Protein Producing Ribosome” with this message about how eating a twinkie will affect you. This might be a harder thing for you to make protein out of because there will be a lot of preservatives. It might be hard to find good things in the twinkie to make the protein out of. The DNA that the twinkie has might be broken if it is old and that could lead to the ribosomes hurting the cell if it tried to make protein out of it. “Protein Producing Ribosome” you will be OK but if other organelles are getting hurt and very affected by thind than you will too.
ReplyDeleteCaroline B.
My cell is the ER, and I kill some of the bacteria that gets through the Cell Membrane. After eating the old candy some of the bacteria will get though the Cell Membrane. I cant kill that much bacteria and that might kill the cell. That will, harm the other part of me that transports the protein, so no one could do their job. Eating something bad could kill the cell or harm it.
ReplyDeleteAbby N. Period 7
Hi, this is Energetic Mitochondria blogging at the mitochondria with this message. I am currently converting the eight Twinkies that our organism just ate into energy that the other organelles need in order to do their jobs. Since he ate so many Twinkies, we will need to produce a lot of energy so that the others can do their jobs easily. Once we have made some energy, it is sent to all of the other organelles to use in order to do their jobs. Without the energy, protein would not be packaged or sent along with all of the other really important jobs. In all, we have been spending a while producing energy today since our organism just ate eight Twinkies.
ReplyDeleteEmily W
Period 7
Hi this is Protective Cell Membrane, blogging at Cell Membrane with this message that one shouldn’t eat twinkies. When the twinkie is getting eaten, it’s hard to digest sugars. Since the cell membrane is the protective area of a cell, the membrane lets in the good things and lets out the bad things. It would be much harder to do this because there are so many bad things in twinkies and it would be hard to just filter out the bad things and let the good things in when there aren’t many. The clue that the twinkie could stay on the shelf for 1000 years without getting bad is not a good sign. It would take a long time to digest something that wouldn’t go bad for 10 centuries. On rare occasions the cell membrane will sometimes let in bad things, there would be a bunch of bad things that could potentially get let in which would not be good for your body.
ReplyDeleteI have a lot to do on a daily basis. First off, the cell membrane has to keep all the other organelles of the cell together. Without me, the organelles and cells would all drift apart from each other, and that would be quite a predicament. Also, I protect the cells from all the things that could harm it. In other words, I assure that nothing will get hurt, but if it does, it won’t be harmed very bad. I am an outer shell for the cells and I am their gate that nothing bad can get past, just the good things. I am very important.
Chloe J.
@Chloe J.,
DeleteI do agree with you regarding the sugar; it would most likely be difficult for the cell to process that much sugar successfully. Also, the only true preservative used in twinkies is sorbic acid, which is used to prevent mold from growing (the other preservatives occur naturally). Though it prevents mold, sorbic acid does manage to damage different types of cell membrane, so the twinkie is, none-the-less, not good for the cell (even though some organelles are not affected by this preservative).
Hailey R. Period 7
Hi this is Protective Cell Membrane, blogging at Cell Membrane with this message that one shouldn’t eat twinkies. When the twinkie is getting eaten, it’s hard to digest sugars. Since the cell membrane is the protective area of a cell, the membrane lets in the good things and lets out the bad things. It would be much harder to do this because there are so many bad things in twinkies and it would be hard to just filter out the bad things and let the good things in when there aren’t many. The clue that the twinkie could stay on the shelf for 1000 years without getting bad is not a good sign. It would take a long time to digest something that wouldn’t go bad for 10 centuries. On rare occasions the cell membrane will sometimes let in bad things, there would be a bunch of bad things that could potentially get let in which would not be good for your body.
ReplyDeleteI have a lot to do on a daily basis. First off, the cell membrane has to keep all the other organelles of the cell together. Without me, the organelles and cells would all drift apart from each other, and that would be quite a predicament. Also, I protect the cells from all the things that could harm it. In other words, I assure that nothing will get hurt, but if it does, it won’t be harmed very bad. I am an outer shell for the cells and I am their gate that nothing bad can get past, just the good things. I am very important.
Chloe J.
This is “Power Plant Mitochondria” blogging @mitochondria with the message that I break down glucose and oxygen and convert it to energy for the cell. This process is referred to as “cellular respiration.” There are many of me in a cell to increase the outcome of my efforts so that the cell has an abundance of energy to survive off of.
ReplyDeleteIf I was given a twinkie, I would react the same way as if I were being given any other food. The only listed preservative that damages me (sodium benzoate) is not a part of a twinkie. I would simply pounce on the provided food (twinkies house lots of sugar - which is the same thing as glucose - so it would be almost the same thing as everyday food anyways). My reaction towards the given food would not change.
Hailey R. Period 7
Hi this is "Protein Producing Ribosome" blogging @ "Power Plant Mitochondria" and I think that we are in the same situation. All I have to do is my normal job and I wont be effected too much. I might have to work harder to things to make the protein out of but other than that I will be on my merry way. The type of food I am given wont hurt me normally.
DeleteHi this is "Protein Producing Ribosome" blogging @ "Power Plant Mitochondria" and I think that we are in the same situation. All I have to do is my normal job and I wont be affected too much. I might have to work harder to things to make the protein out of but other than that I will be on my merry way.
DeleteCaroline B.
Hi, this is Mighty Mitochondria! Blogging @ Mitochondria with this message of providing energy to the other organelles to do their job of keeping twinkies good and not spoiling them. When the organism starts eating this twinkie the Mitochondria is already doing there job of making energy to eat the twinkie and also making energy for the metabolism. Mitochondria is so mighty that every single day we make energy for the organelles to keep doing their job at a steady rate and to make the organelles not get tired. We so mighty! The Mighty Mitochondria!
ReplyDeleteSigned: Janine R.
Hi, this is Excellent Endoplasmic Reticulum! Blogging @Endoplasmic Reticulum with the message that I transfer all of the proteins that this twinkie. If this twinkie happens to have a lot of bacteria and if some of it get through the cell membrane, that is where I would come in. I would kill any of the remaining bacteria that gets through the cell membrane. Without our transportation, none of the other organelles would be able to get the proteins that are needed to be able to do their job. Without us, any bacteria that gets through the cell membrane would kill the cell! Therefore, if the twinkie was very old, we would help the cell membrane protect the cell and we would transport all of the proteins that it carries.
ReplyDelete-Bella F.
Hi, this is Productive Ribosome. Blogging @Ribosome with the message of providing protein to be turned into energy so that when the organelles get there energy the cell can keep the twinkie edible and not allow it to go bad or stale. When the organism starts eating this twinkie the Ribosome is already doing there job of making protein to be converted into energy for the other organelles. The Ribosome is so productive that it keeps making protein everyday for the cell so that the cell as an overall works and won’t die.
ReplyDeleteSigned Colin M. Period 7
Hi this is Mr. Sports guy blogging at Mitochondria with this message that Mitochondria basically does is that it pretty much produces energy for the metabolism. The metabolism is the thing that basically processes everything. So if I just ate a twinkie then it would affect the Mitochondria. What will happen is that it will wear down the Mitochondria and will not produce enough energy for the metabolism. So if the metabolism does not have enough energy it won’t process everything and the whole cell will die. So the Mitochondria is very important because it produces energy for everything to let you live. If you didn’t have mitochondria then you would die.
ReplyDeleteHi this is Chef Ribosome. Blogging @ Ribosome with this message, I am happy for this twinkie to come into the cell. It is giving me a job. When I get the twinkie, I use the twinkie to get proteins into the cell. I am the chef, the twinkie is my ingredients. I then use these "ingredients" to make proteins. These proteins from the twinkies that I will make will keep you alive.
ReplyDeleteLennon J.
Hi this is cookie eating cell, blogging @cell wall. I agree chief Ribosome! Twinkies provide lots sugar for the cell. When you get this you can convert it to energy. Ill make sure you only get the good parts of that Twinkie... Cell wall out.
DeleteJacob.V per.8
Hi, this is Protein Providing Golgi Body, blogging @ Golgi body, with this message. It's my job to package and transport proteins. I also combine molecules to make complex molecules that other organelles are dependent on.
ReplyDeleteIf my organism ate a Twinkie, I would react the way I react to most other foods: if there's protein in it, I'll be packaging and transporting it to the other parts of the cell.
Kami T. Per 7
Hi this is "Transporter ER" blogging @ProteinProvidingGolgiBody, with this message, the Endoplasmic Reticulum does pretty much the same thing when food or a twinkie is eaten except for I transport all of the proteins you make, to every other part of the cell. You make the proteins, transport them to me and then I transport them to all other organelles. Without your proteins the cell couldn't survive.
DeleteChloe H.
Period 3
Hi, this is Bamma Jamma, blogging at Golgi Apparatus. The message I have is if any organelle quits or dies, the whole cell will. Some people in my group said that is if you get voted out we can do your job. If we get voted out then the protein will get damaged. If the protein gets damaged it will eventually disinegrate.
ReplyDeleteMichael A.
Hi, this is the protective cell membrane blogging @cell membrane with this message. I am protecting my fellow cell organelles by keeping out the bad and letting in the good, such as water and oxygen.
ReplyDeleteSamantha K
If my organism ate a Twinkie, I would react by continuing to protect the cell. organelle's. If there was any proteins in the Twinkie I would be receiving protein from the Golgi Body.
ReplyDeleteSamantha K
Hello, my name is Caspian ER blogging @endoplasmic reticulum. I have the message of what I do and how the twinkie has effected us. As the beautiful endoplasmic reticulum I am, I am like a mummy to the rest of the organelles being I distribute protein to them. Now by eating the twinkie, you have just supplied me with more protein to give to the other organelles. That being my message, signing off,
ReplyDeleteAlaina B.
Hi this is Protein Maker Ribosome blogging at Ribosome with this message: If you vote me out, the whole cell dies because it needs the proteins that I make. Unfortunately, same is true with all other organelles. Not necessarily that they all make protein, but if any one of them is missing, the cell as a whole would not be able to function well, or at all. But some cells are able to survive without a nucleus, and there are more than one organelle that can package proteins so that they don't get damaged.
ReplyDeleteSean K
Actually, I am the only organelle that can package the proteins. The Endoplasmic Reticulum can only transport the protein. The proteins would never make it to any of the organelles without that packaging. So without me the cell would die from a lack of protein. The cell would also be misshapen and have no DNA. -Sergeant Golgi Body (Jack)
DeleteThis is the nucleus reporting to the ribosome and I know that some cells live without us but all the do is bounce around because they won't know what to do and if they figure it out you won't be able to do it. We don't only give directions we control what the cell does and how.
DeleteCason K.
I can totality see how the ribosome is a very vital resource in a cell. Without is the protein would not be made so the cells could not function as well.
Delete-Ian t
Hello "cell mates", this is your direction giver and control center, the nucleus. If you decide to vote me out, you will have no clue what to do and if you think you know what you need to do than you are wrong. I don't only give out the directions I control how you do it. You would not be able to function well or at all. Some cell mates may say that some cells live without a nucleus but all they do is bounce around. Without me though we would be a weak cell but with me we would be unstoppable. Some cells can leave without ribosome because we could just send plain proteins. You cell mates should keep me for I am very important.
ReplyDeleteCason Kurowski per.3
This is Productive Ribosome responding to the nucleus. I agree with you that if we vote you out it would be a bad decision because with out you we as a cell would not know what to do and as you said "we would just bounce around"
DeleteSigned: Colin M. Period 7
Hi this is the Gallant Golgi Body, blogging @GoliApparatus to tell you about what I do. I basically take protein that is made from other organelles, break it down, and then package it to send the protein off to the E.R, where it gets sent to the rest of the cell. I am also partially connected to the E.R as well.
ReplyDeleteWhat would happen if somebody ate a twinkie, I would do the same thing that would happen if I ate any other food, if there was protein in it, I would break it down and package it. However there probably wouldn’t be that much of it because of the fact that twinkies aren't very good for you, they are just meant to taste good.
Mitchell, A Per. 3
Hi this is Sergeant Golgi Body here telling you why I am extremely important to the cell as a whole. I call myself The Sergeant because I train the proteins and I send them off to a foreign country. My job is to package up proteins, and send them off to the rest of the cell. Without the packaging that I provide, the protein would be destroyed on the way to all of the other organelles. Eventually the protein would disintegrate and never reach its destination. Without that protein, the cell would be misshapen, have no DNA, and would die from lack of protein. In all, the Golgi Body is critical to a cells survival, and is arguably the most important organelle.
ReplyDelete-Jack L.
Hi, this is Sergeant Golgi Body
ReplyDeleteblogging @ Golgi Body
with this message,
Hi this is Sergeant Golgi Body here telling you why I am extremely important to the cell as a whole. I call myself The Sergeant because I train the proteins and I send them off to a foreign country. My job is to package up proteins, and send them off to the rest of the cell. Without the packaging that I provide, the protein would be destroyed on the way to all of the other organelles. Eventually the protein would disintegrate and never reach its destination. Eating that Twinkie wouldn’t really affect what I do in any way. I would just keep sending proteins making sure the packaging keeps the protein safe. That is the biggest part of my job is to make sure the proteins get to the other organelles safely. Without that protein, the cell would be misshapen, have no DNA, and would die from lack of protein. In all, the Golgi Body is critical to a cells survival, and is arguably the most important organelle.
-Jack L.
Hi, this is Sergeant Golgi Body
ReplyDeleteblogging @ Golgi Body
with this message,
Hi this is Sergeant Golgi Body here telling you why I am extremely important to the cell as a whole. I call myself The Sergeant because I train the proteins and I send them off to a foreign country. My job is to package up proteins, and send them off to the rest of the cell. Without the packaging that I provide, the protein would be destroyed on the way to all of the other organelles. Eventually the protein would disintegrate and never reach its destination. Eating that Twinkie wouldn’t really affect what I do in any way. I would just keep sending proteins making sure the packaging keeps the protein safe. That is the biggest part of my job is to make sure the proteins get to the other organelles safely. Without that protein, the cell would be misshapen, have no DNA, and would die from lack of protein. In all, the Golgi Body is critical to a cells survival, and is arguably the most important organelle.
-Jack L.
Hi, this is Cellman17, blogging @golgibody, with this message, DNA. Without the Golgi Apparatus, or Golgi Body for short, you would loose your DNA! If you lost your DNA, you would unfortunately die. The Golgi body processes, packages, and transports protein, throughout the cell. Therefore, when the thousands of cells work together in the human body, the protein will have to be carried throughout the body, to sustain a healthy body for the human. The Golgi Body is a very important part of the cell. Not only do we help process proteins, but we transport the protein through the cell. Don’t even think about overthrowing me… I am a very important part of the cell, as is the rest of my cell mates. Therfore, I propose to work together, to keep our organism healthy, and happy.
ReplyDeleteSincerely, Joe R
Hi, this is cellbrain123, blogging @nucleus, with this message, Directions. Without the nucleus the cell wouldn't know what to do (that cell would be called Eukaryote cell.) If the cell didn't have any directions given from the nucleus; The nucleus is basically the brain of the cell and it and without it the cell would just sit there and but utterly useless and could possibly die. I believe I am very important to each and every cell :) along with every part in the cell.
ReplyDeleteSincerely, Rebecca B
Hi, this is queen of the ribosomes blogging @ribosomes here to tell all what would happen if someone or something ate a Twinkie. After something eats a Twinkie it gives me the resources that I need to make the proteins that the cell eats. Being a ribosome I am responsible for making the proteins that the cell needs to survive. Without the ribosome a cell wouldn't be able to survive because it wouldn't get the protein that it needs to survive.
ReplyDeleteAva K.
Hi, this is purple cell, blogging @cell wall, with this message protection. Without the cell wall anything could get into our cells and kill those poor cells. Without the cell wall we will lose our protection and be vulnerable to the outside world. The bad contents of this old Twinkie will destroy the cell! We need a cell wall to consume a deli shish old Twinkie.
ReplyDeleteJacob. V per.8
Hi, this is purple cell, blogging @cell wall, with this message protection. Without the cell wall anything could get into our cells and kill those poor cells. Without the cell wall we will lose our protection and be vulnerable to the outside world. The bad contents of this old Twinkie will destroy the cell! We need a cell wall to consume a deli shish old Twinkie.
ReplyDeleteJacob. V per.8
hi this is Mr. Ribosome, blogging @ribosome with the important message of ribosome not being voted off. WE are so vital in having the cell stay alive. I make protein so the rest of the cell can survive. Without us the rest of the cell would not be able to move or respond to things because the protein that is vital for energy is not there. But for us to operate we need every other organelle to be operating or everything would collapse.
ReplyDeleteIf the organism ate a Twinkie it would be great for me. I would take the fat and make that into protein and the rest of the cell would survive on that. Sense the Twinkie lasts so long it isn't a worry that the cell would get sick and die. Eating a Twinkie is a very good thing for me to stay operating.
-Ian t
hi this is Mr. Ribosome, blogging @ribosome with the important message of ribosome not being voted off. WE are so vital in having the cell stay alive. I make protein so the rest of the cell can survive. Without us the rest of the cell would not be able to move or respond to things because the protein that is vital for energy is not there. But for us to operate we need every other organelle to be operating or everything would collapse.
ReplyDeleteIf the organism ate a Twinkie it would be great for me. I would take the fat and make that into protein and the rest of the cell would survive on that. Sense the Twinkie lasts so long it isn't a worry that the cell would get sick and die. Eating a Twinkie is a very good thing for me to stay operating.
-Ian t
Hi, this is ribsome reporting this massage about how a twikie gives me a job in the human body every day. The twinkie gives me a job in the human body by giving me energy to make protien so the other cells stay alive. If the body did not have me, it would die really fast. This is how the simple twinkie gives me a job so the human body stays alive and healthy every single day.
ReplyDeleteHi this is, Transporter ER blogging @EndoplasmicReticulum, with this message, I transport all energy to other parts of the cell. I am the “transporter” of the cell. All other organelles need proteins to survive. When the twinkie was eaten, I would get all of the proteins from the Golgi Body and send them to all other parts of the cell. This is important because without proteins organelles don’t have the energy to do their job. Without the help of the Endoplasmic Reticulum (me) other organelles wouldn’t get the proteins they need and therefore, the cell could die.
ReplyDeleteChloe H.
Period 3
Hi this is , blogging as @cellmembrane, with this important message. Those of you who think you can live wothout me you dead wrong. I am the procetion you all of the inside. if wouldn't have me you would get infected with harmfull bacteria. My avrage life is a simple and avarge one. When I get the ok from the microconderia I let in the oxygeon and let out the carbon dixoied. Also I block off the harmfull bacterias. -
ReplyDeleteSean. S
If my organism were to eat a twinkie I would first let in the few good protenies and sugers. then I would shoo away the harmfull sugers and outher cemical in that cream filling to be excreated out.
ReplyDeleteSean. S
Why hello there this is Mighty Mitochondria @mightymitochondria.com, reporting for duty. You have just ate a twinkie so we have probably already done our job. We have broken down the delicious twinkie and stored all the energy so we can send it to cells so they can do their job. We already have a DNA planted in us so we can send it to the right cells at the right time. We always provide energy every day which makes us so mighty! Its important that all the other cells have us because if not they all wouldn’t have any strength to do their jobs. As you can see we have broken down your twinkie and sent energy everywhere!
ReplyDelete~Cassidy J
Hi this is cookie eating cell, blogging @cellwall, with this message, OUCH. This old Twinkie almost got through me and into the cell, please don't eat another. This bad food is not good for the cell and I had to keep it all out. Right now I am guarding the cell, from Twinkies and much more.
ReplyDeleteJacob.V Per.8
Hi, this is the E.R the mover
ReplyDeleteblogging at E.R
With this message telling you not to worry. There are many processes before it comes to me. There should be no problems by the time it gets to me and I send out all of the cells. You and the rest of your cells should be safe from the slightly disgusting but supposidly yummy twinky.
Midori M aka E.R the mover
HI, this is Mitcho-energy, blogging @mitochondria, and I am here to say what I do, and why I should stay. I am important because I give energy to the cell. Without me, the cell would get slower and slower and eventually commit suicide. (meaning it will blow up sense it got so sick) And when I get oxygen from the body, I send some of the energy from it to the cell. Therefore, I am important because I make the cell have enough energy to stay alive.
ReplyDeleteHi, this is Productive Ribosome. Blogging @Ribosome with the message of providing protein to be turned into energy so that when the organelles get there energy the cell can keep the twinkie edible and not allow it to go bad or stale. When the organism starts eating this twinkie the Ribosome is already doing there job of making protein to be converted into energy for the other organelles. The Ribosome is so productive that it keeps making protein everyday for the cell so that the cell as an overall works and won’t die.
ReplyDeleteSigned Colin M. Period 7
Hi this is NoNoNucleus, blogging about the Nucleus. What the Nucleus does is grive directions to all other organelles. Therefore, without the Nucleus all the cells would not know where to go or what to do. The nucleus is creating more cells in the body or wherever more cells are needed. I also control things that keep the cell alive.
ReplyDelete2: Hi this is NoNONucleus blogging about, If you were to eat a twnkie. If you were to eat a twinkie, you would need more cells, which I could provide. The nucleus would also tell your body what to do if you ate a twinkie.
3: HI this is NoNoNucleus blooging to @cell membrane The Nucleus does a very good job of keeping the cell membrane alive. This is because, it keeps the cell in check and helps it reproduce.
Lauren G
Hi this is NoNoNucleus, blogging about the Nucleus. What the Nucleus does is grive directions to all other organelles. Therefore, without the Nucleus all the cells would not know where to go or what to do. The nucleus is creating more cells in the body or wherever more cells are needed. I also control things that keep the cell alive.
ReplyDelete2: Hi this is NoNONucleus blogging about, If you were to eat a twnkie. If you were to eat a twinkie, you would need more cells, which I could provide. The nucleus would also tell your body what to do if you ate a twinkie.
3: HI this is NoNoNucleus blooging to @cell membrane The Nucleus does a very good job of keeping the cell membrane alive. This is because, it keeps the cell in check and helps it reproduce.
Lauren G
So or in other words not only does the nucleus control its own cell but other cells? Also can't some cells survive even if there is no nucleus for a short while?
DeleteArik m.
Hi this Golgi 6 step blogging @ Golgi body. I am here to tell you why I or the Golgi Apparatus is so important to each cell. The Golgi apparatus does a 6 step process to package up proteins and then transport the proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. I am a stack of membrane bound disks that modify, sort, and package various large molecules produced in the cell. These large molecules are proteins. At the end of Golgi, new vesicles bud off to transport the macromolecules around the cell. The Golgi apparatus is also important because it is the central organelle mediating or settling proteins and liquid transport within the eukaryotic cell. The Golgi compartments or the variety of morphologies, the Golgi manifests in different cell types. If I was not in the cell in the organism, my organism would not have any DNA. If my organism doesn't have any DNA, I would die. If my organisms ate a Twinkie I would not have to do my job. There are no protein(s) in Twinkies. If my organism only ate Twinkies, my organism would die. All cells need protein.
ReplyDeleteSincerely,
Emma K, per. 3
Hi this Golgi 6 step blogging @ Golgi body. I am here to tell you why I or the Golgi Apparatus is so important to each cell. The Golgi apparatus does a 6 step process to package up proteins and then transport the proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. I am a stack of membrane bound disks that modify, sort, and package various large molecules produced in the cell. These large molecules are proteins. At the end of Golgi, new vesicles bud off to transport the macromolecules around the cell. The Golgi apparatus is also important because it is the central organelle mediating or settling proteins and liquid transport within the eukaryotic cell. The Golgi compartments or the variety of morphologies, the Golgi manifests in different cell types. If I was not in the cell in the organism, my organism would not have any DNA. If my organism doesn't have any DNA, I would die. If my organisms ate a Twinkie I would not have to do my job. There are no protein(s) in Twinkies. If my organism only ate Twinkies, my organism would die. All cells need protein.
ReplyDeleteSincerely,
Emma K, per. 3
Hi this is Mr.Chef Ribosome blogging @ ribosome with this message. I am the organelle that creates the protein. If you eat a twinkie that is 1000yrs old then the protein I create will attack any viruses or bacteria that the twinkie contains. Hopefully the protein will be able to get rid of any viruses or bacteria the twinkie contains before it can hurt the other organelles.
ReplyDeleteLove, Renzo F
Hi, this is The Excellent Endoplasmic Reticulum blogging @endoplasmicreticulum signing in for this message. You have just eaten a twinkie and with the twinkie, we are about to do our job. For my job, I basically take the protein to other organelles after the Golgi Body has packaged it. The E.R. is needed in the cell because without us, the other organelles wouldn’t have food.
ReplyDeleteBecause you have eaten the twinkie, the Golgi Body is packaging up the protein inside that before they give it to me. When they give it to me, I will send it to the other organelles so they can eat the protein, even though twinkies aren’t very good for you!
Chloe Schilling per. 8
Hi, this is cell 121, blogging @Cell Membrane, with this message I am telling you why cells and people can't live without cell membrane. The top reason why a cell can't live without a cell membrane because the cell membrane works as a barrier controlling what enters and what leaves; things from the cell could easily harmful substances and destroy it. The cell membrane also protects the cell so nothing bad nor good won't enter. Sincerely, Maria R
ReplyDeleteGolgi Body here telling you why I am extremely important to the cell as a whole. I call myself The Sergeant because I train the proteins and I send them off to a foreign country. My job is to package up proteins, and send them off to the rest of the cell. Without the packaging that I provide, the protein would be destroyed on the way to all of the other organelles.
ReplyDeleteHello future friends and enemys this is your body gaurd, The Cell Membrane, blogging @cellmembrane with these few words. If you kick out, off of the island you would basically be kicking out your safty itself. We are the glue that keeps all the membranes together (litterally) and without us you would be scrambled all throughout the body, not knowing where your natural place is. You also wouldn't have any protection, and would die automatically from the sick germs, because lets face is guys, you just don't have the muscles to fight off such big germs, unlike me and my fellow Cell Membrane allies. We can keep all of the organelles safe, and in your rightfull place! Lets face it fellow organelles, you NEED the Cell Membrane!!!
ReplyDeleteCourtney L.
Hi,this is Endoplasmic Reticulum,blogging @ Endoplasmic Reticulum,with this message,we are important!Endoplasmic Reticulum is important because it packages and transports protein to the rest of the organelles. We also help the ribosomes by holding a place for them to work.The ribosomes do a big part in the cell,without us they would die and eventually the rest of the organelles.
ReplyDeleteHi, this is Mr. Mitochondria @Mitochondriamojo and I am about to blog about the wonderful subject of How I help the body survive and live. Actually for many reasons I am really helpful, don't want to brag. Although first of all there is the variable that if you did not have me the cell would technically die off and would never really be able to do what a regular cell is able to do. This includes me being able to transfer the energy that I make to the cell and if I, Mitchocondrea died off the cell would well eventually just, well die
ReplyDeleteBen J.
Hi this is Cell Membrane your body gaurd blogging @cellmembrane with these few words... Do you ever wonder why the president has a lot of body gaurds? For protection! Do you ever wonder why the body has cell membranes? For protection! If you had the flu bug in your system and it was coming to kill all the organelles, what would you do? Well thank goodness you have the Cell Membrane to protect all our organelles, or else you all would be in a pretty deep situation. The Cell Membrane fights off any desiese, and helps keep all the organelles safe, and in the places they need to be. We hold all the organelles together and protect them from harm! So my fellow organelles if you ever are having second thoughts about the cell membrane, just remeber that you will never survive without us.
ReplyDeleteSincerely, Courtney L.
ReplyDeleteRaquelR
Hi this is Mighty Mitochondria blogging @mitochondria with this message. You’ve just eaten a twinkie that has been on your shelf for quite some time. With the twinkie you have just eaten, my job as Mighty Mitochondria is to take in the energy from that tasteful twinkie. For the energy in that twinkie, it goes through to the cell and into me so I can have energy and share it with the other organelles. It was very important that you ate that twinkie, because without the energy you’ve given me so that I’d given it to everybody else, the others would be paralyzed in place with no energy to move and do their job. Even though twinkies are a little unhealthy, that energy you’ve given us organelles make us work in your cells so that you’ll be able to move all day long! So thank you.
Sincerely Raquel R.
This is the mitopower house, @mitochondria to say you know how coal miners get energy to the people from the mines? that's what I do! I give the power to the cell! life would be gone without the power of the the mitochondria. Although I do know that without even one of us the cell would die.
ReplyDeleteHi this is jerin blogging @ Mitochondria with this message that when the cell just a a twinkie then I would just act like it is a normal food. The Mitochondria basically provides energy for the whole to do it’s job. So if the cell just ate a twinkie then I would turn the oxygen, and sugar thats in the twinkie into energy. So if the cell eats a twinkie then really nothing would change. I would just react to the twinkie the same to any other food.
ReplyDeleteJerin Crum
I agree with you Courtney, without the cell membrane, we would have no protection, but same is true if we were missing any one of those organelles, the cell as a whole would fail, or die. Every organelle is important to the to the well being of the cell. Every organelle has to work correctly and efficiently in order for the cell to survive.
ReplyDeleteSean K Per 2
Hi, this is Ribosome. Blogging @Ribosome with the message of making and providing protein which is turned into energy so that when the organelles get there energy the cell can keep the twinkie edible. When the organism starts eating this twinkie the Ribosomes are doing there job of making proteins to be converted into energy for the other organelles. The Ribosome is very productive it makes protein everyday of you're life so that the cell won't die because it has energy from proteins.
ReplyDeletesincerely- Noah Abbott.