Answer:
The human body uses just 21 amino acids to make all the proteins it needs to function and grow. Because amino acids can be arranged in many different combinations, it's possible for your body to make thousands of different kinds of proteins from just the same 21 amino acids.
Vesicles are used to ship materials around, into, and out of the cell. Cell membranes can pinch off in places to form vesicles, as can lysosome membranes and golgi membranes. Because mitochondria and chloroplasts are practically tiny cells within cells, I wouldn't be surprised if they had their own vesicles. If you're asking literally which organelles have vesicles inside them, I'd say the mitochondria and chloroplasts, possibly Golgi (depends on your instructor), but the cell membrane, lysosomes, and golgi can definitely make vesicles. The rough ER uses vesicles but I wouldn't consider the vesicles a part of the ER.
Answer:
It is false
Explanation:
everyone's genetic code is similar...but very different.