Results 271 to 280 of about 352,015 (307)
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Trends in Cell Biology, 1999
Plants have two, perhaps three, types of vacuoles with different functions, sometimes within a single cell. Each type is characterized by a different aquaporin, alpha, gamma or delta TIP (tonoplast intrinsic protein). These recently discovered extra destinations make targeting within the secretory system in plants much more complex than previously ...
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Plants have two, perhaps three, types of vacuoles with different functions, sometimes within a single cell. Each type is characterized by a different aquaporin, alpha, gamma or delta TIP (tonoplast intrinsic protein). These recently discovered extra destinations make targeting within the secretory system in plants much more complex than previously ...
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Golgi Bodies and Golgi Zones in Molluscan Oocytes
Nature, 1960IN the cytoplasm of the oocytes of Aplysia depilans L. (Mollusca, Opistobranchia), during the first phases of growth, a large quantity of Golgi bodies or dic-tyosomes can be found. Such bodies can be observed with the optical microscope with the silver impregnation methods and they are generally arranged along a bent line (Fig. 1).
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Golgi’s contribution to medicine
Brain Research Reviews, 2007The historical analysis of Golgi's research work reveals that his contribution to the progress of science is not confined to neurosciences and to cellular biology. In fact, Golgi was a passionate and a skillful student of medical problems, in particular of those posed by infectious diseases.
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Golgi Apparatus, TGN and Trans Golgi-ER
2010The Golgi apparatus is a highly dynamic organelle that changes its shape and architecture concomitantly with the continuous flow and extensive traffic across its compartments. Chemical fixation is too slow to resolve properly most of the rapid shape changes and moreover in multiple cases, obscures the critical view of ultrastructural details due to ...
Margit Pavelka, Jürgen Roth
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Camillo Golgi and the discovery of the Golgi apparatus
Histochemistry and Cell Biology, 1998Camillo Golgi (1843-1926) was born at Corteno, near Brescia, in northern Italy. After graduating in Medicine at the ancient University of Pavia, the former seat of great scientists and naturalists, Golgi continued a long-standing Italian tradition by studying the histology of the nervous system.
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The Golgi apparatus: defining the identity of Golgi membranes
Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 2005The Golgi apparatus is a stack of compartments that serves as a central junction for membrane traffic, with carriers moving through the stack as well as arriving from, and departing toward, many other destinations in the cell. This requires that the different compartments in the Golgi recruit from the cytosol a distinct set of proteins to mediate ...
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The Expressions ‘Golgi Apparatus’, ‘Golgi Body’ and ‘Golgi Substance’
Nature, 1953openaire +2 more sources
Recent advances in Golgi-targeted small-molecule fluorescent probes
Coordination Chemistry Reviews, 2022Caiyun Liu, Baocun Zhu
exaly

