That would be the Golgi Apparatus. Sorta like the post-office of the cell.
That would describe both the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus.
endoplasmic reticulum
a membranous complex of vesicles, vacuoles, and flattened sacs in the cytoplasm of most cells: involved in intracellular secretionand transport
The Golgi Complex are stacks of flattened vesicles that modifies and packages proteins for export from the cell.
The Golgi apparatus is composed of several membranous tubes that, under a microscope, usually look like a stack of flattened balloons. It is named after Camillo Golgi, the medical Doctor Who first identified it in 1898. The Golgi apparatus chemically changes the fats and proteins produced in the endoplasmic reticulum and then packages them in the vesicles. In many cases, the vesicles move through the cytoplasm, attach to the cell membrane, and release their contents into the exracellular fluid.
Transport Vesicles
with the exception of mitochondria, all membranous organelles in the cell are either interconnected or in communication through the movement of vesicles
The Golgi Apparatus or the Golgi bodies, named after Camillo Golgi.
the Golgi modifies and packages the proteins.
Golgi apparatus
No. That is the Golgi Apparatus. And if you're a student who has the same exact take home test from a horrible Anatomy and Physiology teacher, seeing your question made my day.
The Golgi apparatus packages them and the products exit within vesicles