

When a ribosome finds a specific RNA segment, that segment may tell the ribosome to travel to the rough endoplasmic reticulum and embed itself.

The rough endoplasmic reticulum is so-called because its surface is studded with ribosomes, the molecules in charge of protein production. However, despite this vast range in size, shape, and function, all these little factories have the same basic machinery. Plant cells have protective walls made of cellulose (which also makes up the strings in celery that make it so hard to eat) while fungal cell walls are made from the same stuff as lobster shells. Nerve cells in giant squids can reach up to 12m in length, while human eggs (the largest human cells) are about 0.1mm across. Just like the organisms they make up, cells can come in all shapes and sizes. Cells make up every living thing, from blue whales to the archaebacteria that live inside volcanos. It’s sending electrical impulses, pumping blood, filtering urine, digesting food, making protein, storing fat, and that’s just the stuff you’re not thinking about! You can do all this because you are made of cells - tiny units of life that are like specialized factories, full of machinery designed to accomplish the business of life.

Right now your body is doing a million things at once.
